Originally posted by Guest
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Justi B at PacNW - confirmed
Collapse
X
-
Guest
-
Guest
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
I think it says XF has a huge pool of kids and mediocre coaches which take credit for kids doing the majority of the work on their own. Also reference the previous poster that says she hunts for good teams to take over at the older ages. Just about anyone can coach a motivated group of XF kids and produce results. I am still failing to see the argument where Justi is a brilliant coach. Mediocre yes, great coach. no.
And I do enjoy buckets of sour grapes. They turn into good wine.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostWhile coaches have a role and can have both negative and positive impacts on developing players- most of a child's development is dependent on self.
Stop being a victim.
Justi was good at developing and attracting top talent. She is the #1 reason the girls program at crossfire is where it is at.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Agree. Most the time I hear people rant about coaches not developing players, they fail to see that their kid sitting on the couch eating cheatos is a factor in their development. My kid trains, on his own free will, an average of 10-15 hours a week outside of team practice. It shows. He’s not better than anyone else…he works harder. The coach creates the team, not the player.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Agree - coaches handle tactical aspects, everything else is on the player. Imagine if your coach said "Okay, we're practicing 6 days a week - 3 tactical, three physical training". While some might welcome it, I imagine most parents would lose their minds. Mine does cone drills, shooting, wall work, stadium runs, suicides, miles and Coerver in her "off" time - all her choice because she wants to be better.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostAgree - coaches handle tactical aspects, everything else is on the player. Imagine if your coach said "Okay, we're practicing 6 days a week - 3 tactical, three physical training". While some might welcome it, I imagine most parents would lose their minds. Mine does cone drills, shooting, wall work, stadium runs, suicides, miles and Coerver in her "off" time - all her choice because she wants to be better.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Agree. Most the time I hear people rant about coaches not developing players, they fail to see that their kid sitting on the couch eating cheatos is a factor in their development. My kid trains, on his own free will, an average of 10-15 hours a week outside of team practice. It shows. He’s not better than anyone else…he works harder. The coach creates the team, not the player.
if he is training 10-15 hours on "average" you are taking him to some training. Then the question becomes what is "free will". Training an extra hour each day, outside of practice is still only 7 hours. You are saying that your son trains greater than an average of 2 hours a day, 5 days a week outside of practice?
Stop with the BS.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
BS. Your kid isn't training 10-15 hours "on his own free will".
if he is training 10-15 hours on "average" you are taking him to some training. Then the question becomes what is "free will". Training an extra hour each day, outside of practice is still only 7 hours. You are saying that your son trains greater than an average of 2 hours a day, 5 days a week outside of practice?
Stop with the BS.
- Quote
Comment
Comment