Youth Sports: A Call to Action & How You Can Help!
by Bob Bigelow - copyright
2006
What’s
happening to Our Kids?
Picture the typical youth sports game
– a blur of motion and sound. Some parents are busy cheering positively
or just chatting among themselves, enjoying the day. Others are prowling
the sidelines. The prowlers mean business. These parents become field
generals, barking orders and commanding their children to excel.
In this world of high volume and hyperventilating,
one parent stands out. You can hear him from the parking lot. "Mark
your man," he screams to his little boy. Red-faced and nearly
breathless, this father runs up and down the sidelines, keeping pace
with every play. "Get to the ball," he growls. The louder
he screams, the more he seems to expect from his son. Just then, an
opposing player steals the ball from his son, dribbles around him and
heads straight toward the goal. Score!
He is the reason his wife doesn't enjoy
going to the games anymore. This is too often the case in youth
sports. More dramatic and disturbing examples of how far adults stray
from their proper roles in youth sports occur every day-from assaults
on coaches and officials to brawls among parents.
There is a disconnect between what adults
say versus what children want and need to hear. What adults want and
need from youth sports is often not what children want and need.
Today, over 35 million children ages
4 through 14 participate in some form of organized youth sports.
The vast majority of programs are staffed by very well-meaning volunteers.
In fact, over 70% of kids drop out of organized youth sports by age
13 – missing opportunities for charter development, socialization,
character development, exercise and fun (source: National Alliance for
Youth Sports). While kids do migrate to other activities as they get
older, the number one reason children drop out is pressure from adults,
and no longer finding their sports experiences fun. Kids need
exercise, and the fun and values participation brings. The high
drop out rate only contributes to America’s problems of childhood
obesity.
The solution to these problems is not
for children to figure out how to meet adult expectations. Rather it’s
for the adults to look at youth sports through the eyes of the children,
and to serve their wants and the needs while they are being children
at play. This will require not only a change in adult attitudes,
but changes in the very sports systems themselves.
I don't offer this guidance lightly or
without the credentials to back it up. I was a first-round draft pick
and played in the National Basketball Association for four years, toe-to-toe
and elbow-to-elbow with the stars of the game. I played basketball
at an Ivy League college, in high school and in the driveways of my
hometown, where children of my generation got the best education in
sports there is: from each other.
Today I'm a lecturer, an occasional professional
scout, a youth sports coach and an administrator. I'm the father of
two sons who have played youth sports since first grade. These days
I travel the country talking to parents, coaches and other youth sports
administrators about what is wrong and how to give youth sports back
to our children.
I also take what I have learned from
the best people in physical education, sports science and child psychology.
I apply their work to what is happening in the gyms and on the playing
fields all over America. I travel to wherever schools and sports organizations
can find a room. I look parents and coaches right in the eye and tell
them much of what they are doing IS wrong.
Not only can the youth sports systems controlling our children's lives ruin their fun, but also they often deny individual children fair opportunities to reach their full potential through excessive use of elite teams. With the cruelest irony, these systems can rob us of young athletes who, had they been given a fair chance as children, might have been terrific players as high school seniors or as adults.
There are frankly though way too many
serious youth sports issues that have been well documented in the major
media over the past 10 to 15 years. These include recent articles
in Time, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, The New York Times,
research publications by many organizations such as National Alliance
for Youth Sports (NAYS), and books including Just Let the Kids Play
(co-authored by Bob Bigelow) and Reforming Sports: Before the
Clock Runs Out (authored by Dr. Bruce Svare).
Some of the more serious issues include:
Understanding the
Root Causes Provides the Direction for Change
The root cause is simply too many adults
who watch, or are actively involved in youth sports, experience the
tension of watching their children perform “on stage” every week.
They eagerly hope their child will perform well and succeed (and what
parent doesn’t), and dread that their child may fail. Parents
experience strong and natural parental emotions, in the context of their
children in a competitive situation. This often brings to the
surface the innate and intense emotions many parents (and parent coaches)
feel on behalf of the most precious things in their world, their kids.
This is specifically based on my review and analysis of Dr. Shane Murphy’s
recent watershed book, “The Cheers and the Tears”.
I believe that simply overlaying a “veneer”
of training and behavior pledges does not reduce the primal feelings
that occur as parents and coaches see their children “on stage”.
This very consideration is absolutely crucial to identifying the real
solution! Rather than “Band-Aid” fixes, the solution lies
in changing the way youth sports programs are run. The current
focus on using competitive adult sports models for kids is just not
in their best interests. More games, tournaments and play-offs
do not make for better kids’ sports. More emphasis on learning new
skills, participation, fun and properly managed competition is
what will best meet children’s needs and keep them coming back!
The Fundamental Problems
in Youth Sports Call for New
Solutions
The vast majority of today’s efforts
to improve youth sports involve educating parents, coaches, and administrators,
with the hope that education will change behavior. While of value,
I believe changes must be made to the very way youth programs are
structured – that is, by changing the very play models.
This is based on the continued proliferation
of problems in the face of over 20 years worth of education and training
programs, my review of numerous studies conducted by key youth sports
researchers, and pilot programs that I have been involved with.
These all provide very insightful perspectives on why parents and coaches
become over-involved in youth sports and what the real solutions must
be.
I truly believe that by actually changing
the way youth sports programs are structured, that adults’ underlying
emotions will be minimized, and much of the resulting over-involvement
will disappear. In addition, the kids will learn better skills
and have more fun!
My
mission is to dramatically reduce this appalling figure in communities
that implement programs that improve the way kids play sports.
I have the programs to do that. I would love the opportunity to
pilot these in your community! (See below for my Programs and
Services).
My catch phrase is simply “Youth Empowerment through Sports” or Y.E.S. for Kids! “Empowerment” simply means giving youth sports back to kids so they can have greater opportunities and involvement in their sports experiences.
My programs and services can generate
measurable improvements across critical factors, including fair playing
time, balanced games, better skill development, an improved play environment,
and greater retention of players. The core focus is to encourage
play models within community youth sports programs that produce these
improvements. Please
click the link located on the sidebar for an example framework of measurable
improvements.
STEP 3: IMPLEMENT A PILOT PROGRAM.
I have several types of programs available for both basketball and soccer.
These programs structure skill building and game activities that put
learning new skills and FUN before anything else. These programs
really work and are easy to start and administer. When you contact
me, I’ll explain how!
STEP 4:
FOLLOW-UP COMMUNITY SUCCESS EVALUATION. Following implementation
of specific programs, I perform a Community Success Evaluation.
This focuses on measurable and quantitative results versus criteria
established in the change process, as well as qualitative assessments
using interviews and on-line surveys.
How Communities Can
Take Advantage of My Services
Communities can initiate the change process
through sponsorships provided by
local organizations that support
change. This enables communities to get underway with only a reasonable
outlay of funds. Change processes and models are ultimately funded by
very reasonable per-player fees built into new youth sports programs.
Fee sharing is provided to local community organizations that sponsor,
support and assist the change process. Please contact me for more
information.
Bob Bigelow, 52 Jefferson Road, Winchester, MA 01890
or by telephone at 781-729-6134.