Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only hope I can offer is that we had a lot of Dad wanna be coaches on our team a few years back. At various points during the season, each one decided that the coach wasn't good enough for their child (which was why they were coaching from the sidelines), and then they left the club. The sidelines have been outstanding ever since. While the children of these dads were pretty good, the reduction in sideline toxicity led to a significant improvement in play over the long-term. Part of that was also new players trying out, seeing our parents aren't crazy, and then deciding to move to our club. It's interesting to see how some of the toxic dads ended up in the same clubs, which tells me something about the culture of the different clubs for our age group.
Great POV and I've seen the same. Funny how they all end up together eventually.
They the toxic ones also don't realize their reputation precedes them in this small dmv soccer community
Not PP but definetly self aware enough to know I'm potentially one of these parents who talks to much. This comment is always rich to me, they know who you are at these clubs, do they? Or, do they care if your kid can ball. But you know what? Offers are always there each spring if DC decides to seek them out, so if I am such a burden why would other clubs give offers? Don't see correlation just whiney lil beaches on this thread
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only hope I can offer is that we had a lot of Dad wanna be coaches on our team a few years back. At various points during the season, each one decided that the coach wasn't good enough for their child (which was why they were coaching from the sidelines), and then they left the club. The sidelines have been outstanding ever since. While the children of these dads were pretty good, the reduction in sideline toxicity led to a significant improvement in play over the long-term. Part of that was also new players trying out, seeing our parents aren't crazy, and then deciding to move to our club. It's interesting to see how some of the toxic dads ended up in the same clubs, which tells me something about the culture of the different clubs for our age group.
Great POV and I've seen the same. Funny how they all end up together eventually.
They the toxic ones also don't realize their reputation precedes them in this small dmv soccer community
Anonymous wrote:Let’s be real though. Coaching from the sidelines is only part of the toxicity of youth soccer. The moms who chum up to the coaches to get special advantages for their kids are also just as toxic. They just aren’t out in the open like the sideline dads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only hope I can offer is that we had a lot of Dad wanna be coaches on our team a few years back. At various points during the season, each one decided that the coach wasn't good enough for their child (which was why they were coaching from the sidelines), and then they left the club. The sidelines have been outstanding ever since. While the children of these dads were pretty good, the reduction in sideline toxicity led to a significant improvement in play over the long-term. Part of that was also new players trying out, seeing our parents aren't crazy, and then deciding to move to our club. It's interesting to see how some of the toxic dads ended up in the same clubs, which tells me something about the culture of the different clubs for our age group.
Great POV and I've seen the same. Funny how they all end up together eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Only hope I can offer is that we had a lot of Dad wanna be coaches on our team a few years back. At various points during the season, each one decided that the coach wasn't good enough for their child (which was why they were coaching from the sidelines), and then they left the club. The sidelines have been outstanding ever since. While the children of these dads were pretty good, the reduction in sideline toxicity led to a significant improvement in play over the long-term. Part of that was also new players trying out, seeing our parents aren't crazy, and then deciding to move to our club. It's interesting to see how some of the toxic dads ended up in the same clubs, which tells me something about the culture of the different clubs for our age group.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll reply to all of you at the same time. Your situation or situations is not my situation. Believe if another parent, coach or my kid told me to be quiet I'd have no problem doing so. Obviously I can't without going 20 paragraphs go into what I say and at what times but I'm not the annoying guy. Believe me or not 🤷🏼
If you are a parent calling out instruction from the sideline you are by definition the annoying guy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care the parent is more effective than the coach! Coach has no command- where do you want to play? And confused the kid bc they sub every moment they get and switches them in different positions!
Then why don't you coach?
Not the pp but some of us do actually know what we're talking about. I honestly echo what the coach wants like I know he wants his winger to stay wide I'll remind them to get wide or stay wide. I'm not disrespectful or wrong so I've never heard anything from any of the other parents or the coach. I've actually been asked to be an assistant but my full time job schedule doesn't allow it. The biggest issue I've always seen is when parents are loud and wrong or don't know when to be quiet.
Every parent that coaches from the sidelines think these exact things.