Scrimmage intrasquad game. Player hits a routine fly ball but doesn't hustle and run it out hard and to the coach's expectations.
Coach has the entire team run suicides because of the player's infraction.
Me? I get it. I'm defending the coach to those who are upset over the move. This is how I am explaining it:
This is Coaching 101. It's the oldest play in the book and used by coaches in every sport: Baseball, Basketball and Football.
While these kids are dying running suicides, the kid who caused it is hearing everything from "Thanks a lot Charlie!" to "Charlie, if we ever have to do this again because of you, I will personally rip off your nads and stuff them down your throat."
It's peer pressure to make sure the kid never does it again and it's a warning shot to everyone else that you better run it out or else 39 of your teammates are going to suffer badly and want to kill you.
Others see this as the coach is punishing innocent kids and potentially causing physical injury to those who are already sore and aching and now have to run suicides.
I guess there are other ways to send a message? Maybe the coach could bench the player for the next 3 scrimmages or something more individually focused but also visible to the entire team?
From a coaching, player or other perspective, what's the best way to handle this type of situation?
For the record: Not my kid who hit the fly. But, he is one who is really pissed that he had to run because the other kid didn't hustle.