So I've not coached anything in three years since I took over Athletic Director duties and needless to say I'm seriously missing it. This spring I've decided to be an assistant with our softball team and while I've been enjoying it I can honestly say it's not the same. Hopefully in the near future I can get back to baseball. Anyway, this post isn't about my not coaching but what I'm noticing and it's really irritating.
Since when do parents think they have ANY business near the dugout, bench area or anywhere near the team / coaches area before, during or after a competition????? Get the fudgesicle out of there. Cut the umbilical cord. Let your children actually succeed or fail on their own merit. Stop coaching from the stands because you're not getting paid by us to do it. Look I get it that sometimes a parent is a great coach and I'm all in favor of parents coaching their kids EXCEPT during OUR games. You want to coach them in the car on way home - fine. You want to coach in the back yard - fine. You want to coach at the dinner table - I'm still fine with that. You spend WAY more time with your kid than I will so let us do our job when we have them. Don't stay away from practice when we put everything in and then show up at the game when you have no FREAKING clue as to what we are doing and then try to tell your child differently.
Seriously, how does it help your child? You're putting a target on your child for a coach to not play them. Coach says this and player does that BECAUSE daddy / mommy says something different. So why should we play your kid when they won't listen. Look I'm not stupid - I realize I have nowhere near the influence over your kid like you do because they're yours. They will listen to you over me everyday of the week because there is that loving bond that comes with being family. But that doesn't give you the right to coach from the stands. You are hurting your child. Let's say a college coach shows up at the game and sees you coaching from the stands or tending to every whim? Do you truly think that's appealing to them to want to pick your child? Why choose your kid when they can find 10 other kids JUST as good as your's and out of that 10 they can find 2 or 3 who have parents that know their role. At the high school age you can help your child the most by STEPPING BACK. Be a safety net when they fail (because they will fail), be a good source of how to approach things or phrase things when talking to adults (because at some point they will have to go in and ask their boss for a raise / promotion), be an advocate if your child is truly getting hurt physically, mentally or emotionally BUT let them learn to be on their own two feet instead of doing everything for them.
I don't care how much you paid for private lessons. I'm sure that whatever private coach so and so is teaching is correct but so is what we are teaching. Teach your kid to take what they can get from each of us and use it to mold their own way instead of being a freaking robot that can only do something one way. Remember - that private coach wants you to keep coming back so you keep paying them. That right there creates the possibility they won't give you everything they can because they want repeat customers (honestly I think these people are extremely rare). We give instruction free of charge. Which brings me to this - I'm realistic and will admit we have some high school coaches who are idiots. It saddens me to say this but when you look at how many coaches are out there then odds are there will be some who absolutely stink at this. It's still not the end of the world. Your child doesn't have a right to a successful season. I read the Constitution before I taught it and people say we have a lot of rights that I don't actually see in there. Having a winning season isn't one of them - you have to earn it. If the team stinks or the coaches stink then teach them to deal with it. Teach them to be a leader and help those they can help. Don't flip your nose up at everyone because they are beneath you. Being negative is easy. Being destructive is easy and neither one accomplishes anything worthwhile. That's why it's easy because you're not earning anything. Being a leader is hard but it can be done.
Let's talk travel ball, AAU, the Super Duper Wonderful All Stars. I'm all in favor of it and think you're crazy for NOT playing it but are you playing for the right people? Yeah we've established the fact dad has coached you since you were in diapers and he's the only coach you know and he's your travel coach.......but does he actually KNOW what he's talking about? If he is then YAHOO because you'll be fine but maybe sometimes they're the coaches who stink. What I'm noticing in ALL our sports is we have a lot of athletes who PLAY travel whatever but based on how they PLAY nobody has TAUGHT them the game. Basic fundamentals you get in youth ball are not with these kids. So now we have to teach them the first steps of a sport at the same time we are trying to teach them higher level concepts to help the team win. Stop playing to be playing and TEACH them the game. TEACH them strategies they need to know at the early stages so we can build on them. I get sometimes we as high school coaches may do something different than your travel coach and you forget and do what they want. Well as long as it's correct fundamentals / strategies I'm not going to lose my mind over it. We will discuss it and figure something out. What I'm talking about is not knowing who the cut / relay people are with a runner on second and basehit ANYWHERE on the field. If they are playing 10,000 travel games in the summer then how do they not know this? Maybe you're not that good of a coach as you think you are? If that's the case then STOP COACHING FROM THE STANDS because you've proven you don't know what you're doing.
It just boggles my mind you think you have any right to coach from the stands or interfere in OUR sport. Know your role and support ALL the kids. I get you're going to be proud of your kid who just went 4 - 4 in a loss. You should be proud because you're kid has a great game. I'm proud of them too but let's not forget the most important thing - WE JUST LOST THE GAME. The TEAM is what matters most. Your kid is important and valuable but they just part of the team and not the focal point.
Seriously just back off because you are in the wrong in EVERY situation when you coach from the stands.