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The comment about "hiding" in the stands struck me.  I've tried hard not to have my child worry about whether he ever disappointed me during a game with his play (although he did sort of question an ump once and we did have a talk about that).

If your kid looks for you in the stands after striking out, that may be a sign that he is under a little too much pressure.  Don't have any great solutions, but did want to highlight that one comment.

I was just discussing this.  This past weekend my sons team played in a game that it was a 99.9% certainty that they would win....but they lost.  Some parents didn't say anything but there were a couple that did LOUDLY...then their kid said something on the field LOUDLY....this was during the first inning....do people not understand that they can create a loss with their bad attitude?

When my son started playing 9u travel I encountered some insane parents. I started reading books about the psychology of coaching kids and dealing with my own. A very good book was 101 Ways To Be A Good Sports Parent by Dr Joel Fish. He's the head of the Center For Sports Psychology. They work with professional athletes, professional teams and various Team USA's. 

Despite his background he didn't realize he was becoming one of "those" parents. Now the Center's largest individual client base is travel players whose parents are driving them over the edge. 

The best advice in the book is when your kid gets in the car don't start analyzing. Let him/her talk first. Maybe the game is the last thing they want to discuss. 

Dad it doesn't help when:

You talk bad about my coach or coache's decisions.

Are critical of other players on my team or the opposing team. "unless they are displaying a negative attitude."

Create excuses for my play.

Criticize the umpire.

Conduct a negative autopsy of my performance on the drive home.

Allow your mood & reaction to me to be dependent upon my performance on the field.

Are verbally critical when I make a mistake during a game.

Issue negative feedback telling me "what not to do."

 

Dad it helps when you:

Offer positive encouragement.

Look for & discuss at least 3 positives game actions before even approaching a subject for "improvement."

Compliment my effort.

Focus on team results first.

Remain silent during my games.

Refrain from criticizing the coach, umpires & other players on my team.

Are the same person in your approach to me regardless of the results of my performance in a game.

 

 

 

 

My kid doesn't listen to me at home.  No way is he going to listen to me during a game.  Told me long ago, he doesn't hear a thing I say. 

One time when he was pitching, the bastage had the gonads to tell the coaches to get me out from behind the backstop.  Right in the middle of the game.  I wasn't even doing anything.  Just standing there.  So now, whenever he pitches I go to the first base side so he can't see me at all.  But you would know I'm his dad because I'm pacing around mumbling to myself.    

Admittedly took me a while to fully learn this lesson (around 13u; ok, maybe 14u).  I was the jackwagon giving rapid fire advice having never played pee-wee ball well.  

Was surprised to hear as much pitch-by-pitch daddy commentary in (D III) college ball this year.  "Johnny:

[2-0 count] you are way ahead."

[0-2 count] time to battle."

square it up."

you can do it."

do your job."

trust your hands."

Probably much ado about nothing; as said above, these sons aren't listening.

I had a very very big failure recently.  Very tight game and my son missed a block (Hes a catcher).  Run scored.  He threw down to third and over threw, run scored....    I barked quite loudly from the stands that those runs were on him.  I really really upset him (which I didnt realize how much till after).  

I sat down and was thinking how I was roasting in that damn heat and what the hell he was doing.....

It took a moment and I pretty much called my self asshole.  That was what I was.    He 19 innings out of the 27 we played that weekend.  The block he missed was a fastball on the outside part of the other batters box.  Would have been amazing to stop it as is and he did get a good piece of it (went left off his pad instead of the back stop).  And then he DID make an error on the throw.   SO WHAT.

I felt like a total shit.  Not even sure why I reacted like that.  I was actually feeling the pressure.  I had parents coming up and they were like.....T needs to be in there...T needs to be in there....He stops everything....    I was actually worried what the parents would think....  

I walked down to the dugout and he was one of the last ones....  I immediately apologized to him...Called his coach the next day and apologized too.    We talked about it on  the way home.    Thought it was over and done with... 

Just this Tuesday during the JV came a ball snuck away from him on a strike three....   He rushed the throw instead of taking an extra step out and threw it over the first basemans head.  Sorta kept the inning alive.   SHorty there after it was a bases loaded dribbler...First to home and he stepped out to launch it to first...Guy was about half way....He shook his head and held it....Never threw it...

I asked him when he came in and he said he was worried about throwing it away again with a guy on third.....            Was his thinking partly due to my rant two weeks before?   Cant rule it out.

 

Folks......Take it from the asses (me) who made the mistakes......  DON'T bark at your kids ( I have one exception.....Disrespecting umps, players, coaches game ETC gets a serious chewing out).  Support them...  Be supportive.....  If you cant help but ride umps, sit in left field.  If your kid isn't perfect ( he never will be) and you start to hear little comments from the self righteous parents  do you best to ignore them.  With TB you are going to have that.  If you find a team where ALL the parents are supportive and kids are supportive..>STAY.... Even if they may not be winning all the time....As long as the kid is improving and the coach is able to teach him the next level skills, screw the win loss record.   I have to apologize to the parents yet at our next tournament....   There was a step dad there who everyone thought was a total richard.  I can only imagine their surprise when I went off....

Dont be the reason your kid gives up a sport.  Your more likely the reason why he likes the sport to begin with!  Dont do what I did!

Kevin A posted:

I had a very very big failure recently.  Very tight game and my son missed a block (Hes a catcher).  Run scored.  He threw down to third and over threw, run scored....    I barked quite loudly from the stands that those runs were on him.  I really really upset him (which I didnt realize how much till after).  

I sat down and was thinking how I was roasting in that damn heat and what the hell he was doing.....

It took a moment and I pretty much called my self asshole.  That was what I was.    He 19 innings out of the 27 we played that weekend.  The block he missed was a fastball on the outside part of the other batters box.  Would have been amazing to stop it as is and he did get a good piece of it (went left off his pad instead of the back stop).  And then he DID make an error on the throw.   SO WHAT.

I felt like a total shit.  Not even sure why I reacted like that.  I was actually feeling the pressure.  I had parents coming up and they were like.....T needs to be in there...T needs to be in there....He stops everything....    I was actually worried what the parents would think....  

I walked down to the dugout and he was one of the last ones....  I immediately apologized to him...Called his coach the next day and apologized too.    We talked about it on  the way home.    Thought it was over and done with... 

Just this Tuesday during the JV came a ball snuck away from him on a strike three....   He rushed the throw instead of taking an extra step out and threw it over the first basemans head.  Sorta kept the inning alive.   SHorty there after it was a bases loaded dribbler...First to home and he stepped out to launch it to first...Guy was about half way....He shook his head and held it....Never threw it...

I asked him when he came in and he said he was worried about throwing it away again with a guy on third.....            Was his thinking partly due to my rant two weeks before?   Cant rule it out.

 

Folks......Take it from the asses (me) who made the mistakes......  DON'T bark at your kids ( I have one exception.....Disrespecting umps, players, coaches game ETC gets a serious chewing out).  Support them...  Be supportive.....  If you cant help but ride umps, sit in left field.  If your kid isn't perfect ( he never will be) and you start to hear little comments from the self righteous parents  do you best to ignore them.  With TB you are going to have that.  If you find a team where ALL the parents are supportive and kids are supportive..>STAY.... Even if they may not be winning all the time....As long as the kid is improving and the coach is able to teach him the next level skills, screw the win loss record.   I have to apologize to the parents yet at our next tournament....   There was a step dad there who everyone thought was a total richard.  I can only imagine their surprise when I went off....

Dont be the reason your kid gives up a sport.  Your more likely the reason why he likes the sport to begin with!  Dont do what I did!

Kevin, Nice work man. Don't beat yourself up too much, just learn from it which is obviously what you are doing! I think it's important to admit that most all of us parents watching our kids perform feel the same way. "When mine strikes out, a little piece of me dies inside" I always tell my buddy standing next to me We all are conscious of what other parents think when our kid screws up & when you sneak a glance at the parents of the kid who just made a mistake, remember that the other parents are looking at you the same way.

It is an ego thing down deep. Your child fails, this reflects poorly on YOU, in your mind, & you want to lash out. It's a false flag & a lie. Don't buy into it. Think about it this way. Think about a kid on the team you know is an exceptional player (not yours). Now think about an awful game he had. I mean his worst. Struck out 4 times, booted balls, got rocked on mound or walked everyone. Now think about your reaction to that performance. It was probably something like' "yeah he had a tough game, don't really remember the details but he is a great player & will be fine next time." This is how the world, other than you, sees this performance when it is your kid. You are over there about ready to have cardiac arrest & want to climb the fence. Walk way out to CF or do whatever you have to do to keep it cool. It's his turn to play & a privilege & a joy to get to watch. Also remember that he is probably much better than you ever were anyway so just shut up!

Kevin A posted:

I had a very very big failure recently.  Very tight game and my son missed a block (Hes a catcher).  Run scored.  He threw down to third and over threw, run scored....    I barked quite loudly from the stands that those runs were on him.  I really really upset him (which I didnt realize how much till after).  

I sat down and was thinking how I was roasting in that damn heat and what the hell he was doing.....

It took a moment and I pretty much called my self asshole.  That was what I was.    He 19 innings out of the 27 we played that weekend.  The block he missed was a fastball on the outside part of the other batters box.  Would have been amazing to stop it as is and he did get a good piece of it (went left off his pad instead of the back stop).  And then he DID make an error on the throw.   SO WHAT.

I felt like a total shit.  Not even sure why I reacted like that.  I was actually feeling the pressure.  I had parents coming up and they were like.....T needs to be in there...T needs to be in there....He stops everything....    I was actually worried what the parents would think....  

I walked down to the dugout and he was one of the last ones....  I immediately apologized to him...Called his coach the next day and apologized too.    We talked about it on  the way home.    Thought it was over and done with... 

Just this Tuesday during the JV came a ball snuck away from him on a strike three....   He rushed the throw instead of taking an extra step out and threw it over the first basemans head.  Sorta kept the inning alive.   SHorty there after it was a bases loaded dribbler...First to home and he stepped out to launch it to first...Guy was about half way....He shook his head and held it....Never threw it...

I asked him when he came in and he said he was worried about throwing it away again with a guy on third.....            Was his thinking partly due to my rant two weeks before?   Cant rule it out.

 

Folks......Take it from the asses (me) who made the mistakes......  DON'T bark at your kids ( I have one exception.....Disrespecting umps, players, coaches game ETC gets a serious chewing out).  Support them...  Be supportive.....  If you cant help but ride umps, sit in left field.  If your kid isn't perfect ( he never will be) and you start to hear little comments from the self righteous parents  do you best to ignore them.  With TB you are going to have that.  If you find a team where ALL the parents are supportive and kids are supportive..>STAY.... Even if they may not be winning all the time....As long as the kid is improving and the coach is able to teach him the next level skills, screw the win loss record.   I have to apologize to the parents yet at our next tournament....   There was a step dad there who everyone thought was a total richard.  I can only imagine their surprise when I went off....

Dont be the reason your kid gives up a sport.  Your more likely the reason why he likes the sport to begin with!  Dont do what I did!

What about when the other parents do it to your kid?  Kid's team last year had parents who had little clue about baseball and less clue about catching.  And where not afraid to make the loud comments about the kid's performance.

Heck we had one mother, from a snooty rich suburb, actually throw a water bottle at the fence and scream "are you kidding me" when her little johnny struck out.   

Steve A. posted:

Kevin, Nice work man. Don't beat yourself up too much, just learn from it which is obviously what you are doing! I think it's important to admit that most all of us parents watching our kids perform feel the same way. "When mine strikes out, a little piece of me dies inside" I always tell my buddy standing next to me We all are conscious of what other parents think when our kid screws up & when you sneak a glance at the parents of the kid who just made a mistake, remember that the other parents are looking at you the same way.

It is an ego thing down deep. Your child fails, this reflects poorly on YOU, in your mind, & you want to lash out. It's a false flag & a lie. Don't buy into it. Think about it this way. Think about a kid on the team you know is an exceptional player (not yours). Now think about an awful game he had. I mean his worst. Struck out 4 times, booted balls, got rocked on mound or walked everyone. Now think about your reaction to that performance. It was probably something like' "yeah he had a tough game, don't really remember the details but he is a great player & will be fine next time." This is how the world, other than you, sees this performance when it is your kid. You are over there about ready to have cardiac arrest & want to climb the fence. Walk way out to CF or do whatever you have to do to keep it cool. It's his turn to play & a privilege & a joy to get to watch. Also remember that he is probably much better than you ever were anyway so just shut up!

Steve-  Thanks...I definitely know better... 

And while I will never admit it to him, he is a much better ball player than I was and a HELLUVA lot better hitter than I was.   Shhh....Dont tell him.

Golf-  I would love to say the water bottle is just ridiculous but I really have no credibility currently to bark at another parent for a failure.. LOL.

One thing I am VERY careful of when the dads start circling up and barking about this or that.  Why isnt the coach bunting...what the hell is he doing...etc.   I stay well away from that.  When they start commenting about struggles of other kids....I won't partake.  I'll say...Yea he had a rough game but he will bounce back in game two or something like that.  And I will NEVER single another kid out EVER unless its a positive.  We only had 20 hits last tournament in 4 games.  Dads were bitching about the hitting and I said ..." WE have to stop popping up.  WE are struggling at the plate and it's killing us.  My KID included...."   

In reality he popped up once that weekend, had two doubles and went 5-9 with a walk and HBP. The other catcher was 4-10.  They had almost half the hits between them.    BUT THE TEAM needed to swing the bat better and he is a member of that TEAM.  When he has a rough weekend, someone will help pick HIM up....  Law of averages and all...  But I will never ever single a kid out unless its to compliment them.      Cant believe there are people out there who actually think its ok to "undress" a kid that isnt their own.  I have seen it too...

I'll add one more question to ponder. What would you say are the top 3 reasons that kids play baseball?

#1: It's fun.

#2: Be with my buddies.

#3: Make my Dad / Mom proud / happy. "Hey Dad, watch this"

Is it fun when my Dad crushes me from the stands when I make a mistake? Is it fun when I hear my parents crushing the coach on the way home? Is it fun when I get clobbered on the car ride home about my play?

The kid begins to think, subconsciously: "When I play baseball, I fail a lot (this is a game of failure). When I fail at baseball, my parents become upset & criticize me me in front of crowds of people & on car rides." If I eliminate baseball, I end the criticism & can still be with my friends. My parents will be "Happier," & the pain will stop.

CmassRHPDad posted:

I read the story. The parents say nothing.
Really? Nothing?

Chatter is part of the game. It would seem weird to me if the stands were full of ppl sitting silently like they were at the opera.

I think you are taking it out of context. They will say nothing directly to their own child during a performance. Verbal team support, cheer & good will for others is fine & appreciated. If Johnny hits a Dinger Mom still jumps up & claps.

Steve A. posted:
CmassRHPDad posted:

I read the story. The parents say nothing.
Really? Nothing?

Chatter is part of the game. It would seem weird to me if the stands were full of ppl sitting silently like they were at the opera.

I think you are taking it out of context. They will say nothing directly to their own child during a performance. Verbal team support, cheer & good will for others is fine & appreciated. If Johnny hits a Dinger Mom still jumps up & claps.

OMG it's all I can do to sit silently and watch my kid pitch without having to run behind the bleacher and puke my guts out. Never mind holler at him. I am a nervous wreck when he gets the start.

You are right though. Especially in HS (this is HSBBWeb). They are beyond what mom and dad can do for them.

Steve A. posted:
CmassRHPDad posted:

I read the story. The parents say nothing.
Really? Nothing?

Chatter is part of the game. It would seem weird to me if the stands were full of ppl sitting silently like they were at the opera.

I think you are taking it out of context. They will say nothing directly to their own child during a performance. Verbal team support, cheer & good will for others is fine & appreciated. If Johnny hits a Dinger Mom still jumps up & claps.

Steve - I do have to point out that basically all of your examples can fall under the category of general "chatter".  Some unacceptable "chatter" might include...

- That was at your eyes!

- Get your bat off your shoulder!

- Stop watching strikes!

- Tuck your shirt in!

Any comment that highlights the last at bat's  failure is definitely unacceptable (Don't strike out again!) as is belittling the opposition (You can hit this little kid!).  

As for all your other input, I appreciate you laying it out so nicely.  I think there may be some parents reading this as we speak thinking to themselves about how baseball is shaping their relationship with their son.

2017LHPscrewball posted:
Steve A. posted:
CmassRHPDad posted:

I read the story. The parents say nothing.
Really? Nothing?

Chatter is part of the game. It would seem weird to me if the stands were full of ppl sitting silently like they were at the opera.

I think you are taking it out of context. They will say nothing directly to their own child during a performance. Verbal team support, cheer & good will for others is fine & appreciated. If Johnny hits a Dinger Mom still jumps up & claps.

Steve - I do have to point out that basically all of your examples can fall under the category of general "chatter".  Some unacceptable "chatter" might include...

- That was at your eyes!

- Get your bat off your shoulder!

- Stop watching strikes!

- Tuck your shirt in!

Any comment that highlights the last at bat's  failure is definitely unacceptable (Don't strike out again!) as is belittling the opposition (You can hit this little kid!).  

As for all your other input, I appreciate you laying it out so nicely.  I think there may be some parents reading this as we speak thinking to themselves about how baseball is shaping their relationship with their son.

That is what I was implying too. I should have been clearer.

 

Guilty on all accounts!  My 2019 told me I could go coach his younger brother's team one summer when he was 12. He was tired of me always "helping" him learn from his mistakes during games...I cried all the way home!  Thankfully he let's me be his hitting coach now. So I video his at bats when he's struggling and we go over the video and talk about things after the game together.

He's got a playoff game tonight so I'll try to remember to not bark at the umpires too much

Steve A. posted:

I'll add one more question to ponder. What would you say are the top 3 reasons that kids play baseball?

#1: It's fun.

#2: Be with my buddies.

#3: Make my Dad / Mom proud / happy. "Hey Dad, watch this"

Is it fun when my Dad crushes me from the stands when I make a mistake? Is it fun when I hear my parents crushing the coach on the way home? Is it fun when I get clobbered on the car ride home about my play?

The kid begins to think, subconsciously: "When I play baseball, I fail a lot (this is a game of failure). When I fail at baseball, my parents become upset & criticize me me in front of crowds of people & on car rides." If I eliminate baseball, I end the criticism & can still be with my friends. My parents will be "Happier," & the pain will stop.

This. 

I am about 90% where I want to be. This article pointed out a couple of things I chuckled about. My most recent personal win is that I now only talk shop when we actually practice. Not before or after the game. 

Coincidentally, my son actually used those exact words to me 3 weeks ago when I came up with a code phrase that I thought would help him "center". Lol. The next week, I practiced zen silence in the stands. 

Here's a wrestling story that may shed some light on whether coaching tips from the stands are helpful.

High school wrestling mats have a circle with a 28-foot diameter. During matches, each wrestler is supported by a coach sitting on a folding chair in a corner of the mat just outside the circle.

The coaches yell exhortations and suggestions to their wrestlers, who are never more than 30 feet away from them and are often only 3 or 5 feet away from them.

After one match, I asked my son about a suggested move his coach had yelled out for him to perform.

"Oh, I never listen to what the coaches say during matches."

"Never?" 

"Never. I have never heard a coach yell out a move and then done it. By the time he sees it and says it and I do it, it's already too late. Besides, wrestling is all a matter of reflex and feel. I can't listen to somebody and feel what to do at the same time. So I don't listen."

Last edited by Swampboy

>I went away and talked to a couple of players from our club who had played for Australia and in the MLB minor leagues. They said their fathers always watched them quietly and never said a thing. Let me say that again: never said a thing.<

Then my son should be a HOF'er.

My dad in most ways was a "salt of the earth" person. But I excelled at sports and he got caught up in it. I remember the last days of rec I was so relieved to be done with baseball. Could have played HS easy. Who knows, being a big hard throwing lefty maybe more, but I was just done.

So now I sit there and keep my mouth shut. We talk, even have our arguments about his play, but never in the heat of the moment.

b i g m a c posted:

Admittedly took me a while to fully learn this lesson (around 13u; ok, maybe 14u).  I was the jackwagon giving rapid fire advice having never played pee-wee ball well.  

Was surprised to hear as much pitch-by-pitch daddy commentary in (D III) college ball this year.  "Johnny:

[2-0 count] you are way ahead."

[0-2 count] time to battle."

square it up."

you can do it."

do your job."

trust your hands."

Probably much ado about nothing; as said above, these sons aren't listening.

I'll admit that I say that kinda stuff. But I say it while I'm 40 rows back watching the pros play too. Nobody's listening to me in either situation.

Excellent article. 

I do remember asking my son if he heard us in the stands (he was in HS at the time) and his comment was, "Yeah, but I'm not listening."  He more or less was focused on the game and could care less what was coming from outside the fence.

I'll admit it took me a while to stop "coaching" from the stands, but eventually I learned to shout encouragement to the team, applaud good plays (even by the opposing team) and just enjoy the game. 

 

SomeBaseballDad posted:

>I went away and talked to a couple of players from our club who had played for Australia and in the MLB minor leagues. They said their fathers always watched them quietly and never said a thing. Let me say that again: never said a thing.<

Then my son should be a HOF'er.

My dad in most ways was a "salt of the earth" person. But I excelled at sports and he got caught up in it. I remember the last days of rec I was so relieved to be done with baseball. Could have played HS easy. Who knows, being a big hard throwing lefty maybe more, but I was just done.

So now I sit there and keep my mouth shut. We talk, even have our arguments about his play, but never in the heat of the moment.

Perfect illustration of perception here. Awesome Dad with great intentions. Kid loves Dad. Dad loves kid. Dad is vocal & over the top offering, in his mind, "suggestions & helpful comments." The problem is that this is not what the kid hears. What the kid hears is, "don't disappoint me again."

Steve A. posted:

 

SomeBaseballDad posted:

>I went away and talked to a couple of players from our club who had played for Australia and in the MLB minor leagues. They said their fathers always watched them quietly and never said a thing. Let me say that again: never said a thing.<

Then my son should be a HOF'er.

My dad in most ways was a "salt of the earth" person. But I excelled at sports and he got caught up in it. I remember the last days of rec I was so relieved to be done with baseball. Could have played HS easy. Who knows, being a big hard throwing lefty maybe more, but I was just done.

So now I sit there and keep my mouth shut. We talk, even have our arguments about his play, but never in the heat of the moment.

Perfect illustration of perception here. Awesome Dad with great intentions. Kid loves Dad. Dad loves kid. Dad is vocal & over the top offering, in his mind, "suggestions & helpful comments." The problem is that this is not what the kid hears. What the kid hears is, "don't disappoint me again."

VERY VERY true!  Like the kid doesn't have enough pressure staring at a 85mph fastball and trying to do something with it.

My kid is in 9th grade, so everything I have heard is 14u and under and I have heard:

-"UNACCEPTABLE *kids name*"....as a kid struck out.

-"DAMN IT *kids name*"...as a kid grounded out.

-"SON, SERIOUSLY!"....as a kid hit a pop fly to center...that kid ran through first and dropped an F bomb on his way through.

Not sure when these parents lost sight of it being a GAME because 14u and under it IS a GAME!

CaCO3Girl posted:
Steve A. posted:

 

SomeBaseballDad posted:

>I went away and talked to a couple of players from our club who had played for Australia and in the MLB minor leagues. They said their fathers always watched them quietly and never said a thing. Let me say that again: never said a thing.<

Then my son should be a HOF'er.

My dad in most ways was a "salt of the earth" person. But I excelled at sports and he got caught up in it. I remember the last days of rec I was so relieved to be done with baseball. Could have played HS easy. Who knows, being a big hard throwing lefty maybe more, but I was just done.

So now I sit there and keep my mouth shut. We talk, even have our arguments about his play, but never in the heat of the moment.

Perfect illustration of perception here. Awesome Dad with great intentions. Kid loves Dad. Dad loves kid. Dad is vocal & over the top offering, in his mind, "suggestions & helpful comments." The problem is that this is not what the kid hears. What the kid hears is, "don't disappoint me again."

VERY VERY true!  Like the kid doesn't have enough pressure staring at a 85mph fastball and trying to do something with it.

My kid is in 9th grade, so everything I have heard is 14u and under and I have heard:

-"UNACCEPTABLE *kids name*"....as a kid struck out.

-"DAMN IT *kids name*"...as a kid grounded out.

-"SON, SERIOUSLY!"....as a kid hit a pop fly to center...that kid ran through first and dropped an F bomb on his way through.

Not sure when these parents lost sight of it being a GAME because 14u and under it IS a GAME!

Caco, Absolutely on target! My first list of "helpful suggestions" seem mild & well intentioned. Seemingly innocent comments such as, "hey, lets go, base hit!" "throw a strike!" "don't walk this guy!" "keep your head down!"

What the parent is really saying is, "Don't hurt my feelings in front of all of these people." Don't embarrass me in front of all of these people." They do not realize they are doing it, ever. They think they are rooting for their kid, they are not. They are rooting for THEMSELVES.

Your other examples are absolute poison to success for the player. These comments are simply the parent lashing out after the fact. They are giving pain back for the pain caused. It's human nature, unfortunately, but it does not have to be this way.

This is why I love this site! Such a great reminder. I am a HS football coach and had coached HS baseball until my son started playing baseball (I teach/coach at same school). He politely asked me if I could stop coaching while he was playing. It was just too much for him to have Dad in his ear 24/7. I definitely understood and honored his request. However, I still find it hard sometimes to keep my mouth shut while he is playing so this was a great reminder. 

On a side note, I have found a great way to help me keep my mouth closed when he pitches. I now use a pocket radar along with a couple of charts and track all of his pitches for him. He has been working hard on making some in-season changes to improve command/velo. The velo chart, along with type of pitch, and tracking balls/strikes are one of the first things he wants to see later that evening or next day. Keeps me busy and I am actually doing something that he finds beneficial. I still check with him the day before each game to make sure he wants me to continue (I get worried that he can see me). He has stated that the only time he has ever noticed me (once or twice) was when he was warming up. Not sure this would work for others but working great for us right now.

As a youth coach I've mostly had great, supportive parents on the team, but there is always that guy who   wants to "help' his son when he comes up to bat, and gives advice  every second pitch or so. Even if the guy knows what he is talking about, it doesn't help, but then there are the guys who you can tell don't have a clue about baseball.

  The last thing any batter needs is distraction up there, but what some of the parents are doing is flat out undermining and destroying their kid's confidence.

   Then there is the crazy guy, who paces behind homeplate, and acts like an uncaged Gorilla reacting to some very bad drugs. Those guys...you try to not too make eye contact, and wait for them to get booted by the umpire. God help their kid.

   I try to limit myself to, "Let's go, _____" about twice a game, if even that. I also say the same for other guys on the team...if not coaching i'm usually yakking it up with someone. Usually miss about half the plays.

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