Anonymous wrote:Not making a baseball team is often a blessing in disguise. Baseball is a huge time suck, particularly if you are a bench player. I enjoyed watching my kids play up until middle school, but was glad they didn't want to try to do baseball in high school.
It is so much better for mental health to do a sport that is more physically active like track or swimming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t thread this gracefully. You think your son worked harder and she’s ridiculous and you don’t want to stick your neck out the tiniest bit for her.
Sounds exactly like the politics-based baseball leagues in DC with overlord parents you *thought* were friends and liked your kids.
Can you explain how you think this should go down, at the high school level? A parent should take a coach aside on behalf of an angry friend and insist that another kid be placed on a team? And should she apologize or feel sorry that her son made it?
Tragedy is horrible. But you don't do a child any favors by snow-plowing their life. Where do you draw the line? You have no idea which gifted kids on the team are being beaten, neglected by alcoholic parents, suffering from depression or anxiety, etc. Should one of those kids, who made the team, be displaced to accommodate another child? The family needs counseling, the kid needs to find a sport where he can make the team on his merits (or do a no-cut sport), and community is essential, sure. But bulldozing your way onto a team five years after a tragedy isn't the answer. That isn't "politics." Politics is cutting a first-grader from little league.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone whose sibling faced a similar loss of sports community at the same time as a major family tragedy, I think it is worth it for you to be aware of this kid's need for community during times like this. It isn't about the sport, it is about the kid having community with consistent eyes on him and keeping him busy. It could literally save his life.
But none of that will get this kid on the team and don't know why his mother would expect OP to step in and talk to the coach.
This also does more harm than good. Being the worst kid on a team does a number on a kid’s self-esteem.
Tryouts are one day and the coaches do not know the kids he’s no more likely to be the worse kid on the team than any other kid