Originally posted by Anonymous
1) Fans who scream at opposing players because they believe their child's opponent is obtaining an unfair advantage due to aggression and playing outside the rules
2) Fans who rail at referees about judgment calls or who believe that the ref is favoring one team over the other. Frequently these fans do not understand the laws of the game.
3) Fans who criticize (usually subtly but sometimes loudly) their child's teammates and who increasingly believe during the course of a game that their child is being "cheated" on the field by her teammates
4) Fans who criticize their child's coach, again, subtly or loudly, for one and/or two reasons: a) their child is not playing enough, b) their team is losing, c) the team system of play
5) Fans who rail at offside determinations even though they are completely out of position to make such a judgment. It is like trying to call balls and strikes based on MLB camera positions in center field (they are off center)
6) Fans who encourage players on their child's team to "take out" an opponent to make up for something a ref didn't call
I have spent the last 20 years as a spectator, coach, player, official and I have seen one or more (and with alarming frequency, all) of the behaviors described above, displayed. Every tournament I have been to I have seen at least one out of control situation that was at a minimum embarassing and sometimes, frightening. Yet here we have guests and trolls who respond with incredulity and deny that a problem exists. I would not be such a one note wonder on this issue if I could at least get the feeling that SOME of you understand that we are facing a turning point in youth sports. It is rapidly becoming a pure business with parents turning their children into statistical athletic assets. Mercenaries who team-shop to find the holy grail that will deliver a scholarship or resume accolades. Increasingly it has become a playground dominated by the well to do. Personal trainers, personal coaches, 3 trips per year to National tournaments. The posts defending and justifying Hope Solo's shocking and disgraceful and to put a finer point on it, poor teamsmanship and poor sportsmanship; really shocked me. But they also drove home the point to me that many many parents truly lack a fundamental understanding of what sports is and should be about. In their world Hope Solo's needs as an athlete were more important than her teammates, her coaches, or her team. These posters supporting here are merely projecting how they would react if placed in the same situation or how they would encourage their daughter to act if placed in the same situation. You, the parent, are NOT partners in your childs athletic experience, you are a facilitator, nothing more and nothing less. Until this concept is driven home and accepted youth sports will continue to decline into a boutique product that is driven primarily by money. Somewhere down on the bottom end of the hierarchy - passion and enjoyment of competition will languish as a quaint afterthought. If you think that I am a jerk and a blowhard or WHATEVER for believing this and standing up for it then I stand accused.
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