Originally posted by Unregistered
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MIAA rules and fall practice
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI agree it is lame and over reaching for them to make this a rule, but the idea isn't ridiculous. Do 9th-10th graders really need to be playing hard core soccer 7 days a week? A full HS schedule plus a tough Sunday club game or practice could be a bit unhealthy at that age. I agree it should be you and your kids choice, but sometimes, as this Board proves, kids need some protections from "responsible" adults and sometimes their own parents are far from responsible or even rational.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostGood points -- when do you as parents step up for your kid and stop letting the uneducated coach run your kid into the ground. Stop being fooled by the "you must come or you won't get the college scholarship" line. It has been documented over and over again on here that most, read close to all, are getting small dollars.
Stop trying to turn your kid against HS soccer. They RESENT you for it.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostGood points -- when do you as parents step up for your kid and stop letting the uneducated coach run your kid into the ground. Stop being fooled by the "you must come or you won't get the college scholarship" line. It has been documented over and over again on here that most, read close to all, are getting small dollars.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI agree it is lame and over reaching for them to make this a rule, but the idea isn't ridiculous. Do 9th-10th graders really need to be playing hard core soccer 7 days a week? A full HS schedule plus a tough Sunday club game or practice could be a bit unhealthy at that age. I agree it should be you and your kids choice, but sometimes, as this Board proves, kids need some protections from "responsible" adults and sometimes their own parents are far from responsible or even rational.
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Unregistered
What right does a state athletic association have to tell parents and players what they can do or not do in their spare time? I think this is the view that MIAA actually holds. They have no right, so they basically control the situation through the Bonafide Member Rule. I know some don't like the rule, but I view it as a pretty fair means of dealing with the problem.
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Unregistered
Back to an earlier post on people who will rat out those who cross the MIAA rule and go to their club practice after already practicing with their high school team. If my kid goes and someone decides to tell on them does that really jeapordize the high school team??
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostBack to an earlier post on people who will rat out those who cross the MIAA rule and go to their club practice after already practicing with their high school team. If my kid goes and someone decides to tell on them does that really jeapordize the high school team??
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat right does a state athletic association have to tell parents and players what they can do or not do in their spare time? I think this is the view that MIAA actually holds. They have no right, so they basically control the situation through the Bonafide Member Rule. I know some don't like the rule, but I view it as a pretty fair means of dealing with the problem.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostBack to an earlier post on people who will rat out those who cross the MIAA rule and go to their club practice after already practicing with their high school team. If my kid goes and someone decides to tell on them does that really jeapordize the high school team??
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The MIAA rules are, IMHO, insane, archaic and a tremendous incursion into my family and its freedom of choice. I have a vitriol dislike for them.
That said, when you signed up, tried out and accepted a position at a HS team, you did so accepting the rules and these are the (probably unconstitutional) rules. Its like a drug test for employment in a company, it is probably an illegal search but while your fighting that someone else has the job you want. It is what it is and it is what you signed up for.
And be sure, the small little bitter man whose daughter has no athletic talent beyond the ability to smile at daddy and gets no field time at all will serve your daughter on a platter at the first chance he gets as much out of bitterness as a deluded hope that with YOUR daughter out of the way HIS daughter may get 30 seconds ... maybe even a whole minute of field time.
Lastly, the club coach should make the practice as optional as possible making it very clear even to those on the lower end of the team scale how really optional the practice(s) are. There should be no pressure to make the practices pother than a desire to see friends and teammates again and enjoy the session.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIt's not your "spare time" if you have a scheduled HS sports activity. Not defending MIAA but their rule doesn't impede your free time, only times when there is practice or a game for HS. Outside of those times, you can run marathons if you want.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Beachbum View PostThe MIAA rules are, IMHO, insane, archaic and a tremendous incursion into my family and its freedom of choice. I have a vitriol dislike for them.
That said, when you signed up, tried out and accepted a position at a HS team, you did so accepting the rules and these are the (probably unconstitutional) rules. Its like a drug test for employment in a company, it is probably an illegal search but while your fighting that someone else has the job you want. It is what it is and it is what you signed up for.
And be sure, the small little bitter man whose daughter has no athletic talent beyond the ability to smile at daddy and gets no field time at all will serve your daughter on a platter at the first chance he gets as much out of bitterness as a deluded hope that with YOUR daughter out of the way HIS daughter may get 30 seconds ... maybe even a whole minute of field time.
Lastly, the club coach should make the practice as optional as possible making it very clear even to those on the lower end of the team scale how really optional the practice(s) are. There should be no pressure to make the practices pother than a desire to see friends and teammates again and enjoy the session.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Beachbum View PostThe MIAA rules are, IMHO, insane, archaic and a tremendous incursion into my family and its freedom of choice. I have a vitriol dislike for them.
That said, when you signed up, tried out and accepted a position at a HS team, you did so accepting the rules and these are the (probably unconstitutional) rules. Its like a drug test for employment in a company, it is probably an illegal search but while your fighting that someone else has the job you want. It is what it is and it is what you signed up for.
And be sure, the small little bitter man whose daughter has no athletic talent beyond the ability to smile at daddy and gets no field time at all will serve your daughter on a platter at the first chance he gets as much out of bitterness as a deluded hope that with YOUR daughter out of the way HIS daughter may get 30 seconds ... maybe even a whole minute of field time.
Lastly, the club coach should make the practice as optional as possible making it very clear even to those on the lower end of the team scale how really optional the practice(s) are. There should be no pressure to make the practices pother than a desire to see friends and teammates again and enjoy the session.
You sure come across as the bitter one in that post BB!
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou sure come across as the bitter one in that post BB!
To me this is like the SRI rule of only 5 players state transfers will be signed in the RI Thread.
The MIAA has the rule because they know what happens if they do not and it doesn't end well for them. You only need rules like this because you know without them you are screwed.
Its not a matter of which is more important or should have priority, it is the lack of choice I as a parent have had taken away from me. The MIAA believes it has the right to tell me how to raise and what are the appropriate priorities from my daughter. I find that highly offensive and totally overreaching.
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