quote:
Originally posted by BIG JW:
I have seen some real honest ones here.So here we go.
My son is an average player with good potential.The coach is so overbearing it makes him play way tight.Now I want to avoid being "That dad" but,players and parents see how he rides my boy.Coach has his golden boys and treats them differently.There is a history on this coach doing this in previous years.Should I meet with him and call him on this?
No, do not go talk to the coach under the circumstances you described. As Danny Boydston points out above, if the abuse starts to effect your son in other areas then it would be time to coinsider either going to a private school or moving or not playing baseball for the school. Because short of you having pictures and or audio of this man either physically hitting your son or verbally abusing him in away that no Administrator could over look nothing good would come out of the conversation and in fact you would hurt his long term chances to particapate at a significant level at the school.
Talk to your son, build him up, help him learn the life lesson of dealing with adverse criticism.
Maybe you should look into having him go through one of Coach Taub's clinics it just might make his mental approach to the coach a positive.
I provide this advice as a parent who wanted to do the right thing and I tried but in the end it has cost my son. I now define the "right thing" a little differently than I did then. My experience was in another sport but it's effects have carried over to baseball. Unfortunately in most high school sports programs and especially in "winning" programs, coaches can be very abusive and the AD stands their and back's up the coach. And don't count on the other parents stepping up to help you confront an abusive coach because they are still looking for the prize of having their sons play on the Varsity team. So unless the entire Booster Club agrees that the coahc should go then just grin and bare it.
I have a deep dislike for abusive coaches but in the end parents are almost powerless against the coaches and all we can hope to do is counsel our sons to overcome the adversity.
In the end they are in God's hands anyway and everything works out.