He sees that Cabell is imperfect and human and capable of embarrassing himself by making big mistakes.
Anonymous wrote:I am not a PR firm or friend of Cabell - and I'm not Cabell. I'm a parent of a lacrosse player who has been with (basically) the same group of boys playing Madlax for several years. VLC does not have the talent at his age group and from what we have observed, they have coaching inconsistencies that have hurt them. Talk to a parent of a VLC U13AA/rising U15AA player. Blackwolf is a great program from what I understand. The cost is about the same. My son was invited to play and has considered playing for the 2018 team. But what it comes down to for him right now is that he is having a great time playing with a great group of boys and he has made friendships that are important to him. To me that is what team sports are about. My son is old enough to form his own opinions about people and their behavior. We have discussed what happened, but I don't feel the need to preach to him about Cabell's bad behavior; he is able to see it for what it is. We have left the decision to him. If he wanted to leave madlax because of what Cabell did, that would be fine with me. This is a great life lesson for him as he will unfortunately encounter people like Cabell his whole life. He sees that Cabell is imperfect and human and capable of embarrassing himself by making big mistakes. I understand that some people get more outraged over this kind of behavior. This is just our way of handling it.
Anonymous wrote:Kids play with Madlax because they are talented and want to play with other talented kids. It offers something many rec programs simply can't. Kids don't necessarily play with Madlax because of Cabell. To many of them, Cabell's public meltdown is embarrassing, but it doesn't affect the bonds they have formed with their teammates, and it has zero to do with how they play. At some age group levels, it is the best program around. So, as a parent, I can understand the desire to leave the program on principle, but in the end, is it fair to take a kid away from a team he loves? For me, the answer is no. We can put up with Cabell for another year.
Anonymous wrote:Kids play with Madlax because they are talented and want to play with other talented kids. It offers something many rec programs simply can't. Kids don't necessarily play with Madlax because of Cabell. To many of them, Cabell's public meltdown is embarrassing, but it doesn't affect the bonds they have formed with their teammates, and it has zero to do with how they play. At some age group levels, it is the best program around. So, as a parent, I can understand the desire to leave the program on principle, but in the end, is it fair to take a kid away from a team he loves? For me, the answer is no. We can put up with Cabell for another year.
Anonymous wrote:Kids play with Madlax because they are talented and want to play with other talented kids. It offers something many rec programs simply can't. Kids don't necessarily play with Madlax because of Cabell. To many of them, Cabell's public meltdown is embarrassing, but it doesn't affect the bonds they have formed with their teammates, and it has zero to do with how they play. At some age group levels, it is the best program around. So, as a parent, I can understand the desire to leave the program on principle, but in the end, is it fair to take a kid away from a team he loves? For me, the answer is no. We can put up with Cabell for another year.
Anonymous wrote:Kids play with Madlax because they are talented and want to play with other talented kids. It offers something many rec programs simply can't. Kids don't necessarily play with Madlax because of Cabell. To many of them, Cabell's public meltdown is embarrassing, but it doesn't affect the bonds they have formed with their teammates, and it has zero to do with how they play. At some age group levels, it is the best program around. So, as a parent, I can understand the desire to leave the program on principle, but in the end, is it fair to take a kid away from a team he loves? For me, the answer is no. We can put up with Cabell for another year.
Anonymous wrote:Kids play with Madlax because they are talented and want to play with other talented kids. It offers something many rec programs simply can't. Kids don't necessarily play with Madlax because of Cabell. To many of them, Cabell's public meltdown is embarrassing, but it doesn't affect the bonds they have formed with their teammates, and it has zero to do with how they play. At some age group levels, it is the best program around. So, as a parent, I can understand the desire to leave the program on principle, but in the end, is it fair to take a kid away from a team he loves? For me, the answer is no. We can put up with Cabell for another year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG. I am SO GLAD my kid isn't interested in lacrosse.
Seriously! I've never been happier to have a SN kid who will never play a team sport. If it means I can avoid all of these people, I happily will. Oh, and this Coach guy sounds horrible.