Quote: batleyrhino "Its great that Leeds and Wakefield are doing some of this (Wakefield are the local SL club to Upton and we've not seen them there recently), but my point is all teams should be doing it. The standard of coaching at amateur clubs is usually woeful, mainly around the points you raised, and here is where we need to see improvements. Personally, at the younger end, I think it's all about team ethics, skill education and development, and making it fun, however even at this age the coaching seems to be as you describe with the big kid skittling the little ones and eventually they lose interest. Parents don't help sometimes either, as the kids can hear them from the touchlines, complaining about this kid or that kid "being crap", its so disheartening.
Forgive the pun, but the amateur game needs to professionalize sooner rather than later to keep kids interested and provide them with the skills necessary to develop. The professional game has a responsibility to make sure that the "production line" is in good health.'"
Couldn't agree more. It's about getting the right people involved at club level, and then them not being willing to just stand still.
Coaches have to learn as much as players to stay ahead of the game. Parents with all due respect need to buy in and to a certain extent get out of the way, but as a coach control what you can control, yourself and your players.