Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Sports Parenting - Best Practices

Best Parental Practices (Team) – parents of youth

athletes have a choice. They can be an asset or

detriment to team chemistry and development. Be a

“team” parent and find out how you can best support

the team and coaches. This goes a long way on the

coaching tree.

Like any other profession, the coaches talk. Make no

mistake on this point. Coaches (from rookie up to high

school varsity) know and talk to each other about who

the team-oriented parents are and who the problem

parents are from previous seasons. Once you get

tagged as a problem parent that can be a hard label to

shake. Take the long view and work hard to be a

parent the coaches look forward to working with every

season.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Players Play; Coaches Coach & Parents Support

Easy rules; complex roles.
If you want to work with your child on technique outside of practice, definitely talk to the coach beforehand and find out what to focus on so you are in step with the coach’s expectations. 
Teaching your child a skill set that contradicts what the coaches expect just creates confusion, frustration and divided loyalty – don’t put a twelve year old in the position of deciding whether to disappoint mom/dad or the coach with performing what has been taught. 
As a football coach, I’ve watched inexperienced sports parents with good intentions working with their sons before practice teaching “wrong” technique. 

Talk to the coach.

Zero Offseason: Divoce, Youth Sports & Tips for the Insanely Busy Sports Moms available @ Amazon.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Who Needs a Helmet?

Believe it or not, helmets were not "required" in professional football until 1939.  With roughly 3.9M reported concussions every year due to recreational sports, it can safely argued that helmets are...a good thing.

Lots of concussion prevention and management advice available at USA Football and the Centers for Disease Control.  Also your state's governing body for high school sports will have free advice as well.

I also cover concussion awareness in my sports parenting book for divorced moms new to youth sports.

Zero Offseason: Divorce, Youth Sports & Tips for the Insanely Busy Sports Mom

http://www.amazon.com/Zero-Offseason-Divorce-Sports-Insanely-ebook/dp/B00PLY51RW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1416491953&sr=8-1&keywords=zero+offseason

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

.08%? So You're Saying There's a Chance...

Hit the Books!  Only .08% of high school football players will make it to the NFL four years later. 

Zero Offseason:  Divorce, Youth Sports & Tips for the Insanely Busy Sports Mom now available at Amazon.com:

http://www.amazon.com/Zero-Offseason-Divorce-Sports-Insanely-ebook/dp/B00PLY51RW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1416409108&sr=8-1&keywords=zero+offseason

Monday, November 17, 2014

Sports Parenting Guide for Divorced Moms - Available on Kindle

Just published a new book titled, Zero Offseason: Divorce, Youth Sports & Tips for the Insanely Busy Sports Mom, at Amazon.com.

This book is written for busy sports moms burning the candle at both ends.

Zero Offseason covers how to deal with the uncooperative ex, how to stay of the coaches' "Blacklist," parenting plans and sports schedules, child support and expenses, and tips for developing student-athletes.

Link below:

 http://www.amazon.com/Zero-Offseason-Divorce-Sports-Insanely-ebook/dp/B00PLY51RW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1416233631&sr=8-1&keywords=zero+offseason