Truthfully, I think many of you are being overly nostalgic pining for the days gone past. If you will go back and remember, they had their share of issues back then as well. The world isn’t all that much different today, we just have difference issues and parameters to deal with. Self interest has always been the motivator. After all, even a selfless person ultimately has selfish reasons for their benevolence.
This is where my concept of the "Shared Mission" comes into play. In my mind the issue really comes down to trying to convince the pain in the butt parent “WHY” it is in their best interest to participate with the team. It is an education thing where everyone has to understand what they get out of the situation for accepting the role the coach has assigned them. The problem is this is pretty hard to do, and not everyone is capable of figuring things out or seeing their potential benefit. Then too, you do just have selfish people who don’t really care about other people. All they are concerned with is accumulating things. The truth of the matter though is that type of person has never really been what most of us would admire as winner. That has never changed. Even on the most successful teams in history you are going to find the same petty issues we are talking about here. What makes them different is someone was able to get all of the players to buy in and support the mission.
One thing that everyone seems to do on bad teams is point fingers. Even here everyone assumes that the problem is always the pain in the butt parent. The situation could be just as likely that the team problem is the sweet sideline parent who doesn’t push their child to get better. I have experienced just as many problems caused by the ego maniac parents that everyone seems to hate as I have the pleasant parents everyone seems to love. If you want to be associated with a successful team ultimately everyone has to accept responsibility their child’s role and their performance in it. One sure way to destroy a team is not “buying in” to that role and not accepting the accountability that goes with it. The personality issue many of you are writing about are really just irritants. It really comes down to playing nice with other people. If, as a group, you can’t all “play nice” together, then your kids will never play well together as a team.
This is where my concept of the "Shared Mission" comes into play. In my mind the issue really comes down to trying to convince the pain in the butt parent “WHY” it is in their best interest to participate with the team. It is an education thing where everyone has to understand what they get out of the situation for accepting the role the coach has assigned them. The problem is this is pretty hard to do, and not everyone is capable of figuring things out or seeing their potential benefit. Then too, you do just have selfish people who don’t really care about other people. All they are concerned with is accumulating things. The truth of the matter though is that type of person has never really been what most of us would admire as winner. That has never changed. Even on the most successful teams in history you are going to find the same petty issues we are talking about here. What makes them different is someone was able to get all of the players to buy in and support the mission.
One thing that everyone seems to do on bad teams is point fingers. Even here everyone assumes that the problem is always the pain in the butt parent. The situation could be just as likely that the team problem is the sweet sideline parent who doesn’t push their child to get better. I have experienced just as many problems caused by the ego maniac parents that everyone seems to hate as I have the pleasant parents everyone seems to love. If you want to be associated with a successful team ultimately everyone has to accept responsibility their child’s role and their performance in it. One sure way to destroy a team is not “buying in” to that role and not accepting the accountability that goes with it. The personality issue many of you are writing about are really just irritants. It really comes down to playing nice with other people. If, as a group, you can’t all “play nice” together, then your kids will never play well together as a team.
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