If you think your child is better than
the other children on the team, congratulations -- you probably fall into the
majority of soccer parents. However, this is largely irrelevant. (see #1
above)
If you want your child to improve
his/her skills and performance, then leave it to the coaches. The parents'
jobs are to: pay, drive and offer positive support.
If you think you can offer good advice
to one of the coaches, then see the team manager and arrange to take the
coaching certification exam. If you want to coach from the touchlines without
coming to team practices, team meetings, team camps, coaches clinics, coaches
meetings....., keep the thought to yourself until you can watch soccer on TV.
Although coaching advice from parents
is generally not appreciated, communication is very important. If anything at
all is bothering your child, let the coach know as soon as possible so that
he/she has an opportunity to adjust if possible to make your child's
experience more rewarding and enjoyable. If you really want to destroy a team,
tell everyone...but the coach about your child's problem. Talk about it and
complain about it with the other parents all season and never let the one
person who can fix it know there is a concern.
If you think you can offer good advice
to a game official... see #5 above.
A soccer match is not won or lost by
any child (see #1 above).
To play well during the season, our
children must come together as a team and support, communicate with and trust
each other. The coaches and children will accomplish this if we don't
undermine their efforts. However, if you disagree with the foregoing
statements, undermining can be accomplished by using any of the following
tactics: criticizing the efforts of your child, telling your child he/she is
the most/least important and best/worst player on the team, telling your child
that another child on the team is lousy or has deficiencies, yelling negative
comments during practices or games, criticizing the decisions or strategies of
the coaches, claiming that victory or defeat was the responsibility of any
child.
Follow the rules and use good
judgment, and everyone will have a great season.
This letter apparently first appeared
as an anonymous "letter to the editor" in a youth hockey magazine. A
soccer fan has subsequently changed a few words here and there to make it
applicable to soccer.