On a glorious Sunday
morning last October, one of those days where there is nowhere else you’d
rather be than by the side of a soccer pitch, I was coaching my son Abe’s
Under-13 soccer team. With about five minutes gone in the game, one of the
opposing strikers broke through. He was bearing down on goal when our sweeper
tried and failed to bring him down. As the boy stayed on his feet and had just
the keeper to beat, the referee played advantage. His subsequent shot flew
narrowly wide and that’s when the opposing coach jumped up.
“Next time he does that
to you, you punch him in the face,” he roared at the top of his voice, veins
bulging in his neck, eyes popping. It would have been comical if it wasn’t so
serious and so normal around here. The coach received a yellow card from the
ref and play resumed. No big deal.
A couple of weeks
later, we were 2-1 down against one of the better teams in our league. For most
of the second half, they battered us. Our keeper made a few good saves. Our
defenders and midfielders performed heroics under severe pressure. As the final
minute dawned, I was proud of how bravely we’d battled and relieved we were
going to escape without a morale-sapping hiding. That was about the moment we
lifted the siege. A couple of nifty passes were strung together and, totally
against the run of play, we managed to grab an equaliser. The kids were
thrilled and so was I. Inevitably, the
opposing coach wasn’t.
He ran onto the field
as our boys were celebrating and shouted maniacally at his own team, “Horrible,
that’s just horrible. How do you let that happen?” Hands gesticulating wildly,
he was roaring this at 12 year olds who, as you can imagine, were already kind
of gutted at conceding a late goal and turning what should have been a
fully-deserved win into a draw that felt like a defeat. And he just kept at it.
When the final whistle
went seconds later, he took his team into a corner of the field and berated
them for another ten minutes as their parents watched and listened 20 yards
away, none of them at all appalled by the spectacle. These fellows were 12,
playing in the lower divisions of the Long Island Junior Soccer League. This is not
elite sport. What is wrong with this picture?
I’ve asked that
question a lot in recent months. More and more I’ve grown appalled by the
behavior I witnessed from men charged with the job of coaching young boys. I’ve
seen kids substituted for misplacing passes (surely page one in the “how not to
teach the game” manual). I’ve seen a grown man take the ball out of an opposing
12 year old’s grasp on the touchline and kick it away in order to waste time
while his team fought to preserve a “crucial” lead.
I’ve seen kids reduced
to tears by the harsh comments of their own coaches and, more than once, those
children happened to be suffering this abuse at the hands of their own fathers.
Half the time, the antics I’ve witnessed
have been so outrageous that I’ve felt like laughing at the absurdity of it all.
But, mostly, it just made me sad and disillusioned with the dreadful culture
surrounding children’s sport in America.
So, when the autumn
season ended prematurely because of SuperStorm Sandy, I made the decision to
walk away from coaching soccer. I’ve
worked with kids for the past nine years and I’ve been with this particular squad
of players since some of them were seven. I often thought I’d coach them all
the way to Under-18s. But I’ve had enough.
I’ve had enough of the
referees having to halt the games to ask the hyena parents to stop abusing the
opposing kids. I’ve had enough of coming up against clipboard-holding clowns
who think this is all way more important than it actually is. I’ve had enough
of coaches who spend 95 per cent of every game shouting criticism rather than
offering encouragement to their players. I’ve had enough of those who think
winning a match involving 12 year olds is more important than giving every kid
significant playing time and helping them develop basic skills.
Most of all, I’ve had
enough of having to shake hands at the end of matches with opposing coaches I’d
much rather punch some sense into. Not the beautiful game.
I agree with most of what you've said, although I cannot say that I agree with the decision to walk away. Coaching youth sports isn't always about sports, as you must know, it's about lessons. What lessons about sportsmanship, about what kind of person you should be, did you teach them by walking away? You taught them that jerks win, that sports is NOT a place for the good guys. I cannot fathom the idea of walking away in that circumstance.
ReplyDeleteIf you leave, you surrender the sport (and the kids) to the bad guys.
ReplyDelete