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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou are really quite a rotten human being if you feel the need to blame the loss of a game, a team sport on a 12 year old girl who is playing a position she hasn't practiced at and barely played in.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou are really quite a rotten human being if you feel the need to blame the loss of a game, a team sport on a 12 year old girl who is playing a position she hasn't practiced at and barely played in.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI never blamed anything on her, I am just saying that CFC is a very good team and would've easily won if they had their keeper.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSince you brought it up. The Cfc goalie was not that good. She was the weak link of that team. She is the shortest kid on the team, and i dont want to be rude, so I will not say more about her. So dont use that excues if you lost. Could have picked up Bteam goalie.
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Problem #1: Parents who won’t let the game belong to kids
Problem #2: Athletes need to OWN their decisions, both good and bad
Problem #3: Coaches who fail to respect the kids and the sport, and ignore the massive impact they have on athletes’ lives
Problem #4: Youth Sports Organizations that Serve Adults, Not Kids
Too many of us coach from the sidelines and make the car ride home the most miserable part of the youth sports experience.
Too many of us treat youth sports as an investment in a future scholarship, and thus push for more and more at younger and younger ages.
Too many of us have our children specialize early in spite of the preponderance of evidence that it is physically and psychologically harmful, and has a detrimental effect upon their long-term chances of athletic success.
Too many of us allow our kids to participate in sports clubs that make cuts and form “elite” teams at 7 years old.
Too many of us ask our kids after a game “Did you win?” instead of “Did you have fun and learn a lot today?”
Too many of us have deemphasized free play and replaced it with organized activities governed by adult values, needs and priorities.
The list could go on and on.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostProblem #1: Parents who won’t let the game belong to kids
Problem #2: Athletes need to OWN their decisions, both good and bad
Problem #3: Coaches who fail to respect the kids and the sport, and ignore the massive impact they have on athletes’ lives
Problem #4: Youth Sports Organizations that Serve Adults, Not Kids
Too many of us coach from the sidelines and make the car ride home the most miserable part of the youth sports experience.
Too many of us treat youth sports as an investment in a future scholarship, and thus push for more and more at younger and younger ages.
Too many of us have our children specialize early in spite of the preponderance of evidence that it is physically and psychologically harmful, and has a detrimental effect upon their long-term chances of athletic success.
Too many of us allow our kids to participate in sports clubs that make cuts and form “elite” teams at 7 years old.
Too many of us ask our kids after a game “Did you win?” instead of “Did you have fun and learn a lot today?”
Too many of us have deemphasized free play and replaced it with organized activities governed by adult values, needs and priorities.
The list could go on and on.
Parents peak crazy at u12/u13 girls. Then it starts to get better as parents mellow.
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