Very good topic! I don’t think we will solve the problem here but it’s interesting to toss it around. I think two things factor in here. First the nature of youth sports has “evolved” to where it stirs real emotions in parents, players and coaches. Some of the emotions are good but many can be harmful. Understand too that all parents “coach” their children whether they officially do it on a field or do it at home at the kitchen table so it’s not really about just those that were LL coaches. When you mix in today’s parenting methods that justbaseball describes you have a very volatile situation.
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But what you have described has become far more commonplace in all aspects of child-raising...it isn't just baseball. Hopefully your friends find a way to free themselves of this need to be on the front line and learn to enjoy things as they are and as they should be!
Something has to happen to enable youth sports and parenting to coexist. Someone or something has to keep the participants in their respective sand boxes. The person that is the most effective in doing this is the player but he has to “grow” into that capacity which leaves the situation volatile well into the high school years. O44 describes how this happens.
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The sooner players get the opportunity to deal with a variety of non parent coaches, and politics on their own, without being "saved", or created by well meaning but enabling parents...the stronger and more able they become to handle the increasingly challenges of the next levels on their own...which is inevitable.
Youth coaches fuel the fire by trying to remove the parenting aspect of this scenario by taking the position that svgbaseball stated:
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As a coach, I wish parents would just come to the game and enjoy the game itself.
Coaches need to understand that fans come to games to watch the games ------ parents come to games to watch their child. When you try to relegate a parent to being just a fan you miss the point and actually insult their very purpose of being there. This deep-seated desire to be a parent alone is not the problem ---- but it sure helps.
We need to educate parents on how to blend their child’s sports and their parenting. I think I personally handled it (as most of us do) but I don’t know how to help others that have a real problem with it. A code of ethics? Do we have an officer assigned to a baseball field to keep the parents in check? I don’t know.
But I’m not surprised that this is happening either. We speak out of both sides of our mouth. On one hand we say this is just a game and we should all have fun ----- then we celebrate, cry, spend, pray, manipulate, fight and scream over our son’s baseball like it was the most important thing in life. All these self preservation tactics God instilled in us to survive starvation, attacks, and the harshness of nature is being focused on the game of baseball.
Fungo