When is the culture of youth sports going to change for the better?

Posted 1 CommentPosted in Athlete, Coach, Organization Executive, Parents

 

In the last few weeks, there has been a lot of press that has had me shaking my head in utter disbelief regarding the current culture of youth sports. The very fact that harassment has come to light to this extent makes me ask the question over and over again, when will the culture of youth sports change for the better?

What should be a positive, amazing experience for today’s youth to not only learn the skills of the game, but the skills of life as it was when I grew up, has evolved to a culture of winning at all costs, a multi-billion industry where only the haves can afford to pay to play and yet no accountability for protection of the very same youth to have a safe to fail experience or safe from any forms of all harassment.

The first part of this post will highlight the issues regarding current youth sports culture, the second 1/2 will provide recommendations on what we can do to change the culture for the better.

THE ISSUES

A few of the incidents that made the headlines since the fall include;

St. Michaels College Sex assault scandal

Cost of Coaching Abuse – The Province

Hockey Players part of alleged bullying, assault at North Shore Winter Club

13 Year Old Pens resignation Letter from Abbotsford Hockey Team, alleging bullying

The latter three happened in Minor Hockey Associations in the lower mainland of Vancouver so it was very close to home and had my head spinning as a result.

This is my take on the ones that happened in the lower mainland;

  1. COACHING ABUSE:

Coaches are required to take a number of courses to ensure that they DO NO HARM, no different than that of teachers, social workers or other adults that work with those in the vulnerable sector.  Most organizations now require all those that would be interacting with kids to do criminal record checks (CRC), respect in sport (for coaches or parents), concussion awareness, NCCP clinics that include making ethical decisions for the competitive stream.

Although I believe that CRC’s are needed and have had no issues when requested to do, there are few issues with them we still need to work out;

  1. Only if the coach had actually been prosecuted of assault will it show up even if there were legal proceedings pending (takes years for cases to get thru the system).
  2. It can be a lengthy process and many organizations have trouble enforcing as a result.
  3. I have also heard several coaches (which includes myself) asking for better ways to manage if you are involved in various roles with the vulnerable sector to do ONE CRC per year, one year I had to do four with overlapping sports and charities I was involved with.

Even with all of the certification requirements including CRC’s now mandatory for all hockey associations, the very fact that a young man could not cope with the abuse from a coach he had sustained while playing hockey that led to mental health issues, alcohol/drug abuse, dropping out of school when he had been a straight-A student and attempted suicide made me cringe.  In lieu of developing life skills that include resiliency, this coach crossed the line with abusive old school coaching tactics and pushed this player beyond the tipping point regardless if he and the minor hockey association he still coaches for argued there was no cause and effect.  Even the players Dad admitted regrets he should have done something at the time when his son was being berated over and over again by the coach.

What really was a tipping point for me is that the model for competitive hockey in the lower mainland had shifted in recent years, and many (not all) of the larger organizations are offering stipends from 1.5K to 10K to “recruit” non-parent head “quality” head coaches for their competitive rep teams.  In this instance, the coach in question would have been one of those “paid” (aka professional) quality coaches, many of which are very young, inexperienced who were motivated to coach by the honorariums offered.

It takes YEARS of development and lifetime learning to become a great coach, plus it has increased team budgets so parents are on the hook for same, adding to the costs to the most expensive team sport in Canada for what should be a cost-effective option for players to play at a high level vs. the major midget/academy model that has evolved the last 10 years.

Had I been a parent of player on that team, or that of the player in question, as coaches are now paid by parents on the team (not by the associations directly), I would have been calling for the coaches immediate termination for the way he was treating players as the coach is under contract to DO NO HARM.

  1.  NEVER CRITICIZE YOUR TEAMMATES (RESPECT)

The fact that players in three of the above incidents are harassed their very own teammates in my day was totally unacceptable and is the way I have coached every team as a result.  John Wooden, arguably the greatest coach of all time, had 3 rules, one Never criticizing your teammates – translation, respect your teammates, coaches, officials, other teams, classmates, teachers, parents, elders etc.

This is a direct reflection of the lack of respect now prevalent in youth sports in its current culture that some coaches are not enforcing the value of respect on their teams, worse yet the organizations or sports as a whole they are involved with.

Kudos to the young man of the Abbotsford Minor Hockey Team for taking the brave stance by standing up against the current culture and resigning from his team due to the harassment he received from a few of his teammates. This should have lead to an apology from the association, coaches but over a week later after it was released the association has merely issued a statement that they take harassment seriously and no communication to the parent or player.

  1. DO NO HARM – 2 DEEP RULE

Since the article was posted in the Province outlining the abuse players took at North Shore Winter Club, the head coach has received praise for stepping down due to the decision of the executive after review reinstating the offenders on his team in lieu of suspensions he and his assistant (now head coach) for the remainder of the season, there was a MAJOR error in omission in the article.

For as long as I can remember there has been a 2 Deep Rule in Hockey, evolving as a result of Graham James abuse of Sheldon Kennedy and Theo Fleury and other major junior players under his watch.

The rule means that there must be 2 adults in the dressing room at all times to ensure players are safe, there was no mention if the head and assistant coaches or any other adults were present in the dressing room when the incident occurred.  This has been one of the main issues that I have seen with the “paid” non-parent competitive stream model, as they have no kids to bring to or after games, many will arrive well after the requested time to arrive at practices or games and leave soon after their post-game or practice debriefs leaving the dressing rooms abandoned

Had they enforced the 2 Deep rule, this NEVER would have happened in the first place.

In recent 3 part series released by CBC on sexual abuse that has taken place in youth sports, , the sport with the highest number of charges and convictions, twice that of the second amateur sport with high enrollment in Canada, Soccer (now the #1 youth sport in terms of registrants), was Hockey (approximately 50K less registrants than Soccer).

 

 

Ironically, my favorite sport as both a player and coach, Rugby, has had only one charge and conviction of sexual assault the last 20 years which one of the writers of the series attributed to the number of charges and convictions were proportional to the level of enrollment in particular sports.

Having played and coached many sports, I would argue the contrary, it is due to the current culture of many sports, the one with the highest number of charges in convictions is Hockey, which is now the second largest team sport in Canada in terms of registrations (Soccer is number 1 by approx 50,000 registrants).  The sport that I loved the most as a player and coach was Rugby, where officials are still called sir and although it is a hooligans game, it is played by gentlemen (and now ladies thanks to growth of female teams)  whose registrations have grown significantly due to success of our 7’s teams but only have one charge and conviction the last 20 years.

I naively thought when Graham James incident came to the forefront it would have credited the awareness and shift in culture necessary to ensure did not happen again but sadly the last decade has seen other incidents across the globe come to light including;

2012 – Penn State Football – Jerry Sandusky

2016 – English Football – 839 alleged victims of 294 suspects

2017 – USA Gymnastics – over 350 girls abused by Larry Nasar

2018 – Canadian Gymnastics – Dave Brubaker

2018 – USA Swimming – Sean Hutchinson Cover Up

2018 – Canadian Alpine Skiing – Bertrand Charest

2019 – South Korea skating

2019 – Multiple Canadian Sports since 1998 – over 600 victims and 222 convictions

In the CBC 3 part series, Sandra Kirby, former Olympic Rower, and Professor Emerita at the University of Winnipeg was cited as sexual abuse is an underreported crime (as is many other forms of harassment), “this is just the tip of the iceberg” there could be thousands of cases where no one has come forward.

As far as I am concerned, ONE is too many, the current culture of youth sports MUST change for the better to ensure that no other child is a victim of any form of harassment.

  1. CURRENT SYSTEM: INTERNAL REPORTING AND REVIEWS

The very fact that abuse of any kind continues to run rampant across all sports is due to the fact that the majority of sports organizations have internal reporting mechanisms that lack anonymity for the victims of harassment and internal review boards more often than not will try to save face (cover it up) vs. doing the right thing (being accountable and owning up for the incident and implementing the necessary steps to ensure it never happens again). Perfect example, USA Gymnastics, even after the scandal came to light, the leadership group was still trying to cover up evidence and as a result the US Olympic Committee is in the process of removing their sanctions as a National Governing body.

The reviews at local organizations (if they take place) are done by board members (the majority of which have kids in the same organization) that are untrained volunteers with limited expertise (if ANY) in the subject matter.

  1. NO BOARD/COACH/PARENT OR PLAYER EDUCATION REGARDING SEXUAL ABUSE

 There is currently not a universal system in place to educate the stakeholders on how to identify and prevent sexual abuse so that we can protect children BEFORE it happens.

Board members are left on their own accord to implement policies, procedures and continue building on so that all stakeholders understand the process.

 

SO … HOW DO WE ENSURE THAT WE DO CHANGE YOUTH SPORTS FOR THE BETTER?

 

  1. FINALLY – AN ACKNOWLEDGEMENT WE HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THE CULTURE OF AMATEUR SPORTS

Thanks to recent press bringing the issue of harassment to light on so many fronts and mediums (print, digital, radio, TV and podcasts) and subsequent response by the highest levels involved in sports acknowledging WE do have a problem, we can now check this box off (although I and many of my colleagues in the space have been saying the same for YEARS) and the time for much-needed activation of systematic change of the current culture is the next step.

Joint Statement issued by the COC/CPC in response to the CBC 3 Part Series on Sexual Abuse in Amateur Sports

  1. IMPROVE COACHING EDUCATION/ENFORCE THE 2 DEEP RULE:

One of the biggest challenges I run up against is organizations feel that the initial certification coaches get is sufficient, which may varies by sport, some have extensive certification, others have none or very little.  Every sanctioned National Sport should ensure their Provincial, regional and local organizations comply with the minimum coaching education requirements including ongoing professional development.

Had the 2 Deep Rule (2 adults in the dressing room or areas where players are in contact with coaches) been enforced leading to suspensions/termination of coaches if did not adhere to many of these kids would not have become victims.

Almost every board member I have talked to in recent years is they are getting push back from coaches due to the up-front time commitment to become certified, if it only requires a CRC and respect in sport as the bare minimum, being out of pocket for fees until they complete all the requirements, and push back against any other courses once they complete their initial certification.  Many coaches are stating if they have to do any more they will quit as “they have all the certification they required”, they don’t have the time” or “I have been coaching for years” excuses.

Translation – the coaches got in it for the wrong reasons. Whatever has been asked of me by organizations if I had not done so already, I took the time and spent my own dime to do the education and certification without hesitation as it was all about the kids.

Initial certification and ongoing professional development is a requirement for teachers, social workers, physicians who interact with the vulnerable sector so the same should hold true for coaches, even volunteers.  A perfect example is volunteer firemen, who do regular training to stay current as it is required, not optional.

  1. IMPROVE BOARD/EXECUTIVE MEMBER EDUCATION AND POLICY STATEMENTS:

Just as coaches need to take certification, courses, clinics, so should new board members in key roles like President, VP, Risk Managers for local organizations.  More often than not, they put their hand up, get voted in as they either have no others vying for the same role OR they have support from membership aspiring for their political agenda’s.

In a study conducted with sports stakeholders across Canada where 27 sports were represented, administrators acknowledge they lacked the specialized resources in this area and was even greater in local clubs than in national federations. None of those surveyed stated they had received training on sexual abuse in particular. There is a need for training, information dissemination, awareness-raising, and clear rules and procedures.

Full accountability and transparency via policy statements and discipline for offenses should not be a wish, but an expectation from all key stakeholders of the membership to be met.

The time has come for no more cover-ups, not turn a blind eye, sweep under the rug, put up our hands in the air as don’t know how to deal with and so on.  Per Albert Einstein, if we keep doing the same things over and over again and expecting different results is insanity.

  1. INDEPENDENT REPORTING/REVIEW BY 3rd PARTY ORGANIZATIONS

We need to ensure that all members in sports organizations have a safe reporting and review mechanism independent from that of sports organization from the grassroots all the way to national level to ensure that issues do not get covered up to the point where hundreds, potentially thousands of youth athletes become victims as have in past.

According to the Canadian Minister of Sport and Science, Kirsty Duncan, this is her top priority, “I have one goal, it’s close the gap, and do the hard systemic change and this right going forward, to do everything we can to protect our athletes and our kids.”

Kirsty acknowledged in the same press release that the federal government is working on a third party that would be independent of the sports organizations to ensure reporting and discipline mechanisms are put in place.  She subsequently shared this tweet a few days later while meeting members of various sports bodies at the 2019 Winter Canada Games.

Now that the need for a change in current culture has not only been acknowledged, but those at the highest levels governing sport collaborating to develop the Red Deer Declaration to prevent harassment and discrimination of any kind will no longer be condoned in sport.  The much needed PARADIGM Shift is FINALLY on the horizon.

  1. PARENT AND PLAYER EDUCATION:

We need to educate parents and players on the various forms of harassment that can take place in youth sports, prevention is 99% of the cure, let’s not wait until more kids are abused.

Majority of parents that I have talked to regarding harassment issues that impact their own or kids on their kids teams either were unaware it was, in fact, a form of harassment in the first place (either denial or ignorance), they remain silent due to fear of being ostracized by other parents, coaches or the organization OR fear that their child’s chances to continue playing on top level teams will be jeopardized (due to perceived meal ticket their kids will get a scholarship or play professionally).

Although there are education programs for kids in schools regarding various forms of harassment and how kids can safely report or ask questions, there currently is no mandate for youth athletes to learn what are the various forms of abuse in a safe way (i.e. going to someone to ask questions, advice without potential repercussions) and better yet, how to prevent it.

The buck stops here, in order for the much-needed change to the culture of youth sports, we all have to accept ownership to collaborate to make the changes necessary.

This is the responsibility that we all have in youth sports, whether it be adult leadership at the National, Provincial, local association or respective coaches, official, board member or parents is to develop youth into adults.

Per Kristy Duncan when she responded to the CBC 3 part series regarding sexual abuse in amateur sports in the last 20 years;

“One athlete, one child is too many”. 

I could not agree more.

It is our responsibility as adults to provide kids with a safe environment for them to develop, without fear of verbal, physical or sexual abuse.

Let’s all work together to bring the game back to the kids … where it belongs.

 

 

 

 

Back to the Drawing Board

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Athlete, Coach, Organization Executive, Parents

 

I must confess, I, like many of those I have talked to since Sunday, are still recovering from this year’s SuperBowl, not from the bevies, but from the fact that one of the top offensive teams the past two seasons only touchdown they scored was when their plane landed in Atlanta.

Many I talked to felt it was the worst Super Bowl they had seen as a result, which they shared and agree with in part but felt it was not …

… because the Patriots, under Bill Belichick and the ageless wonder Tom Brady, winning their 6th Super Bowl together in 9 tries since they became the tandem that turned the Patriots into one of the all-time dynasties in the NFL

… because CBS, Tony Romo, and Jim Vance were chosen to be the commentators for the game vs. Fox,  Joe Buck, and Troy Aikman as had been the case for many years prior

… because the Halftime Show was “Just OK” from one of the top pop bands in music today, Maroon 5, which one of the only highlights was the drones with balloons forming the shape of words Love and One, but two different rap artists intertwined where one had to have several profanities omitted in the live broadcast. Even Adam Levine tried to play the part of Rap artist with the heavy chains around his neck, and showing off all of his tats when he removed his shirt (What was up with that?)

… because it was shared after the fact that Maroon 5 was a last minute replacement for other musical acts turned the offer to do so from the NFL, Rhianna and Carbi B, due to the ongoing controversy pertaining to Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling at the anthem to protest inequality in the USA towards black and other minority groups and resulting lawsuit filed by Kaepernick for exclusion since he last played in 2017.

… because Jim and Tony joked at one point that one of the plays of the game that people will be talking about was not one of what should have been numerous TD’s, field goals with two of the NFL’s top offences matching up in the NFL but instead a 65 yard punt of the multiple the Rams Kicker was forced to make as their offense was shut down by the Patriots Defence.

… because the perceived underdog according to Tom Brady and company was in fact the Patriots and relished the role even though the Vegas bets were heavily in their favour.

… because we finally were able to see all of the infamous Super Bowl Commercials live in Canada during the game vs. being replaced with Canadian Content but none I felt were on par with past ones that people talked about for days, weeks after the game.

… because after 3 quarters of play, the score was 3-3, the equivalent of what happened last night as does in many NFL games and the winner of the 4th quarter or OT (if it had gone there) would win the game.

Like many others, the 4th quarter Tom Brady did what he has done for years, took control and threw short passes to MVP winner Edelman, the long bomb to Gronk to set up the game-winning touchdown.

… because my son, who is not a fan of football, actually sat and watched the game from start to finish with me for the first time EVER and it left him with such a sour taste in his mouth he probably will never watching another Super Bowl (although a D-Man in Hockey, does not appreciate that defense wins championships in Football).

… because the announcement of the NFL player who received the most prestigious award amongst players, the Walter Payton Award, for their contributions not only to the game but their community involvement away from the game that was awarded to Philadelphia Eagles player Chris Long did not permit him to say a few words to the crowd humbling accepting for the amazing work he does off the field.

This not only included Founding Waterboys to provide safe drinking water for kids in Tanzania 4 years ago and donating his salary for an entire season to funding scholarships and literacy programs, the epitome of giving back.

Below is induction for the award and his full acceptance speech.

 

I suspect his Dad, NFL Hall of famer and now Fox commentator Howie Long, was a very proud Daddy for all the great work Chris is doing off the field.

It was because of the news articles and interviews up to and after the game focused on how Tom Brady and company were the underdogs and how much adversity they had over come this season to get to the game, how much it meant to Tom Brady more than the past 5 and so on.

In lieu of it being touted as underdogs (one could argue Rams were due to how Vegas laid down the bets) for me it was a battle of the old guard (Belichick and Brady) vs. the new guard (McVay and Goff) and it truly was disappointing to me that Sean and company could pull it off with the offense they built to get the needle to swing in their favour

For me, the Superbowl happened early in the season, when the Chiefs and league MVP Patrick Mahomes dueled it out with the Rams (what I was hoping to be the Super Bowl Match-up) for the total opposite, 54 (Rams) to 51 (Chiefs) where it truly showed the offensive upside of both teams and lack of defense.

This was the epitome of the amazing transformation that Sean McVay had done since he became the youngest NFL head coach of all time at 31 years of age.

In just the two years under his watch, he has taken the Rams with much of the same nucleus of players who were coached by long term Jeff Fischer in 2016-17, from 4-12 record to reach the playoffs in the first time with a record of 11-5 in 2017-18 losing to Matt Ryan and the Falcons in the Wild Card Round, to 13-3 and getting a bye then wins against the Cowboys and Saints to reach the Superbowl this year.

As a result of making the playoffs last year with the Rams, Sean McVay was awarded the coach of the year award in just his FIRST year as a head coach in the NFL.

How then, has he transformed the Rams?

Be developing a culture of excellence with what has become known as the 4 McVayism’s that are now posted in the  Rams Dressing Room.

 

In essence, his key standards/rules like John Wooden and other great coaches have implemented with their teams to develop their own cultures of excellence.

What do they mean?

  1. The Standard is the Standard = the players set the bar for themselves and there are no excuses, the accept ownership for how they perform on the field.

      2. Situational masters – meaning the players capitalize on the opportunities as they present themselves in games, whether it be creating turnovers or fighting for that extra inch to get that first down

     3. We not me – equates to the there is no I in team, under Sean McVay, it is all about the team, not the achievements of individual players. The same analogy holds true when you play for the crest in front of your jersey, not the name on the back.

  1. Our Rule – be on time – this is very similar to one of John Wooden’s top 3 rules, his first of three, was be on time. He, like Sean, and many other coaches that have developed cultures of excellence on their teams believe in the importance of starting practices on time, ending on time, being on time for any team events so that they can accomplish everything set out in practice and game plans.  I learned the expression for a coach years back that I share with all of my colleagues, staff all the time – If you are not early, you are late.

Another thing that Sean has done has incorporated in the team is shared ownership, in lieu of old school coaches at times being dictators (AKA my way or the highway), he believes in an open door policy and communication and input from all players on the team how they (as a team) can become better so everyone shares in the success or in this case the misfortune of losing and having to got back to the drawing board.

Although the current rendition of the Rams struggled in the Super Bowl 53, under Sean McVay I don’t suspect they will be back, I KNOW they will be back, possibly as early as next season as Sean has now gone back to the drawing board to make the necessary adjustments not just during half time but throughout games as those in the Old Guard have shown can do time after time.

I suspect he and his coaching staff are already started to brainstorm how they can continue to improve their culture of excellence and build on the 4 McVayisms in the dressing room.

As the old cliché goes, 3 times a charm, in year 3 under the leadership of Sean McVay I am picking the Rams to not just make it to the Super Bowl, but be holding that trophy at the end of the game and hope like many others, that there truly will be a change of the guard in the AFC for someone other than the Patriots for them to face, the Kansas City Chiefs.

Don`t be a kids last coach

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why Officials Quit (2019)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Athlete, Coach, Organization Executive, Parents

A couple of years back I posted Why Officials Quit and have continued to do a lot of research on the subject due to the fact that every sport organization that I work with is not only having challenges with player attrition, they also are losing officials to the point where many say they have to scale back on number of teams or games as a result, and in some states in the USA they have declared many of their sports programs are in jeopardy due to lack of officials.

This weekend I will be doing a talk on that very subject for Softball BC, titled “How to attract, retain and increase the number of officials in your organization”

It is based in part on the post I followed up with last year called “Why do Officials Officiate” but for purposes of this post wanted to share why we are losing so many officials year after year.

Top Reasons why officials are quitting are;

  1. It is not safe to fail:

Having talked to many officials and those responsible in various sports organizations, the trends are consistent, as I shared prior Hockey Canada loses 30% of their officials every year, as does every sport that I have talked to as we started to partner with various other sports organizations.

Why?  Because the officials who take a lot of pride in not make mistakes, are quitting because of the abuse that they are taking from adults (parents, coaches or fans) when they do make a mistake OR when they believe they made a mistake.

This is one of the videos I came across that shows very clearly that the umpire made the right call, but received 17 different abusive phrases from parents who were seated in the visitor section (along the 1st base line) who did not have the same perspective as the umpire.

He clearly made the right call as did have the right perspective, but all the parents on the visiting team thought nothing of screaming out their perspective which was wrong.

 

 

  1. Poor Sportsmanship: 

Above are the results for the largest study I have come across where over 17,000 officials replied to a survey from multiple sports done in 2017.  Almost 40% stated it was the parents that were causing the problems, followed by almost 30% of coaches, combining for approx. 70%.

Poor Sportsmanship was also one of the top 3 reasons that were the reasons why 11,000 players quit playing lacrosse in the retention report Alberta Lacrosse shared with me.

No matter what organization that I reach out to potentially partner with across Canada regardless of the hat I am wearing, even though 70% of the issues leading to officials quitting which goes hand in hand with the players is poor sportsmanship, when I ask what they are doing to curve the problem, they say they don’t have budgets for coach or parental education.

 

Translation: They keep doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results (Insanity), posting signs at rinks or fields like the ones above, making it mandatory for parents and coaches to take respect in sport online course for approximately 3 hours but don’t rigidly enforce policies for a zero tolerance for ANY forms of harassment.

 

When asked at what level is sportsmanship the worst, 36% of the officials stated it was the youth competitive level, followed by 21.3% adult recreational level.

These results did not surprise me at all.

Youth Competitive due to high expectations from parents due for a return on investment for the tens of thousands of dollars they invest in their child’s completive youth sports experience to get an NCAA scholarship or play professionally is what is translating to the vocal minority of parents screaming and umpires when they perceive they made a bad call.

Parents – the majority of these officials are just a level above your son or daughter, and many officials start at the age of 12 years old, and within 3 years associations are starting all over again to recruit officials as most have quit.

The second highest level, adult recreational, having played adult rec hockey, as well as slo-pitch for many years, I saw it firsthand how many who were playing adult rec thought they were living the dream playing professionally and took it a wee bit too far and would go at refs or umpires like they lost a Stanley Cup or World Series Game.

Every time I would approach them and say, relax, it’s just a game (yet another PSA campaign by Hockey Canada in 2004 when things really started to ramp up in terms of parental behavior in the stands).

When officials were then asked if Sportsmanship is getting _______, almost 57% said it was getting worse, 27% neither better or worse but thankfully the remainder, close to 16%, stated that sportsmanship was getting better.

This I believe is due to all the organizations and awareness campaigns that have come to fruition in the last decade (including our own) to combat the impact of poor sportsmanship that is impacting the quality of the youth sports experience for kids.

What I was truly surprised with, however, was the fact that some officials responded (11.69%) publicly criticized other officials and when a fan at games, just over 16% confess they heckle their own fraternity.  If truly are going to change the way officials are treated, they must adhere to the very same Respect rule I have for all my teams and NEVER criticize your teammates.

 

  1. Fear for their Safety

I shared this in the prior post that Almost 48% of the male respondents, and 45% of the female respondents shared they feared for their safety because of administrator, coach, player of spectator behavior?

What I did not highlight is just over 11% of male and 20% of female official felt uncomfortable or threatened by members of their very own officiating community.

Really?

What happened to all being it in together as a team?  Again, officials have to respect all others and avoid threats towards others in their community if we are going to reverse their fear for their own safety.

How then do organizations reverse these trends by ensuring that officials have a safe to fail environment, take pride in becoming the best they can be, are not in fear, that sportsmanship includes respecting ALL calls made by officials?

Organizations have to stop putting up signs, sending out public service announcements and as a means “to deal with parents”.  Most people don’t read signs anyway (thanks to my past experience working in the hospitality industry) and the time for PSA’s/Whitepapers is OVER.  It has come time to activate strategies so that sports organizations are accountable for everyone’s safety and creating a quality sporting experience.

In lieu, invest in parent education and teaching their coaches how to engage parents in lieu.

The vast majority of parents are AMAZING people who are doing everything they can to support their kids navigate what has become professional youth sports in lieu of kids playing kids like it was when I grew up.

They also have to recognize that officials are key stakeholders to ensure that today’s youth have a positive sporting experience, without them, kids will merely be having practices.

I worked at BC Place Stadium in security for many years and worked many BC Lions games as well as concerts and if fans became unruly (more often than not due to drinking too much) it was really simple, they were removed from the facility.

If they got into a fist of cuffs with fellow fans, we escorted them to the Police Wagon where they were brought to the station and potentially charged.

If we did so at professional sports events, why then do we not do it at youth sports events?

In lieu of having security surveying the stands, coaches and parents should be doing the same just as they did a generation removed.  If someone was acting up, a coach, parent or board member would approach them and eject them from the facility.

If a parent, coach or fan becomes unruly, too emotional, abusive, they should be removed so they can calm down and not permitted to return no differently when coaches are ejected.  The vocal minority of parents that do so be held accountable to the point where future incidents are treated with longer suspensions and using the same 3 strike rule, if a repeat offender;

Sorry we will miss you.

Meaning, we will not permit you to be a member of our organization.  Just like playing youth sports is a privilege (now more than ever due to pay to play model), so is that of being a member of the organization as parent, official, board member.

As far as I am concerned, no one, whether it be player, coach, official or board member should be in fear or a victim of verbal, worse yet potentially physical abusive threats and we need to bring the game back to the kids.

It’s time to stop doing the same things over and over again and expecting different results (Insanity)

Just like we should see the smiles on players when they are at games, the same should hold true for officials of any sport, they too should have a quality sport experience, otherwise the trends where 30% quit every year will just get worse.

 

Let’s all work together to bring the game back to the kids … where it belongs.

 

Don`t be a kids last coach

David Vs. Goliath – Super Bowl 53

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Athlete, Coach, Organization Executive, Parents

David Vs. Goliath – Superbowl 53

This past weekend I had the privilege for speaking at the 5th annual BC Sport Leadership Conference at one of my former Alma Mater, Douglas College, New West Campus and had the opportunity to interact with many amazing coaches.

Although I would like to say it went off with any glitches, I would be remiss in sharing that we had our challenges getting my laptop to play the video portion of my PowerPoint so borrowed one from the campus and moved my presentation over to a USB.

As I was doing the last keynote of the day, I planned to have all the coaches do the Iceland Viking Clap as an energizer but also ran into challenges with the playback via USB so like I have in many other events adapted by becoming the drummer only to see the borrowed laptop fly off the podium and hit the ground while I walked across the stage saying to myself “Really”?

Fortunately, the laptop was ok and I was able to dive into our core talk, “Don’t be a Kid’s Last Coach” but it was a painful lesson learned to ensure that I remembered the USB drive I saved the presentation on just in case ran into A/V glitches.

But I digress.

To get some downtime, Sunday I planned on watching the NFC and AFC championships with friends and must confess the games did not disappoint.

Both games went into overtime, both games the visiting team won against the top seed, and both games were a classic “David vs. Goliath” game that I had truly hoped would lead to Superbowl 53 is a change of the guard so to speak, where two of the up and coming teams, coaches, and quarterbacks would have an opportunity to play each other (the LA Rams and Kansas City Chiefs) vs. another repeat of what has become the norm for over a decade with the Patriots winning the AFC championship to go their umpteenth Superbowl.

Why was I pulling for the Chiefs and the LA Rams?

I have always been a fan of the Kansas City Chiefs organization, going back to the days when Joe Montana finished off his career as a Chief (as the 49ers moved on with Steve Young and George Siefert vs. Joe Montana and Bill Walsh).

The former owner, Lamar Hunt, is the very reason why the NFL IS the NFL, he was the brainchild of having the former AFC play the NFC (two separate leagues) play for ONE trophy, name the game The Super Bowl, the first couple were won by the team I have been the fan of the longest, the Green Bay Packers, who were lead to their first two Superbowl wins by the late great Vince Lombardi.

The AFC Championship this year was the FIRST EVER that was hosted on home soil where the Chiefs potentially could have been presented the trophy named after their late owner, the Lamar Hunt Trophy but sadly was not the case.

Although Patrick Mahomes made a phenomenal comeback from a 14-0 deficit in the first half (the first time the Chiefs were shut out this season), as has been the case many times in past, Tom Brady lead the Patriots to the game-winning touchdown in OT.

I, like I suspect many people including my son and all of his friends, did not want to see another Superbowl with the Patriots representing the AFC.

Why?

Because they have done so with a wee bit of dishonor, how many of you remember deflategate, where Tom Brady was accused of lying about the fact that he allegedly ordered deflating footballs during the 2015 AFC Championship game. The Patriots disputed the findings but were fined a $1M, lost draft picks, and Tom Brady was suspended for 4 games the following season.

This was 8 years after the first scandal that came to light of wrongdoings by the Patriots, infamous “Spygate”,  where allegations came forth how the Patriots filmed numerous other teams practices, built up a library and so they could plan their strategies vs. opponents including game adjustments. Belichick was fined $500,000, the Patriots $250,000 and they were docked a first round pick.

Sadly, the Patriots organization, Brian Belichick and Tom Brady will have these two scandals cloud what should be remembered as the top dynasty in sports probably ever, Tom Brady becoming the hall of famer after being a late round draft pick, and how Belichick is able to plan strategies against every opponent including this year Kansas City Chiefs leaving Andy Reid as the bridesmaid yet once again.

Then there was the similar David vs. Goliath contest in the NFC championship game played earlier in the day, also going into OT, but this time David (The LA RAMS) were successful in kicking the field goal after an interception to advance to the Superbowl, due largely to the transformation of their young coach Sean McVay, now just 33 years old and was NFL Coach of the year last year for taking the LA Rams back to the playoffs after many years of struggling.

Although I am also a fan of Drew Brees, one of the classiest men to play the game EVER, and for what he accomplished this season, is tainted in part as a result of the allegations their former assistant coach, Greg Williams, provided cash bounties to players over the course of 3 years as of the 2009 Superbowl year for the Saints for “causing intentional injuries” towards opposing players.

Penalties for Bountygate were the most severe in league history, the team was fined $500,000, the GM was suspended 8 games, Linebacker also suspended the entire season and Greg Williams was suspended indefinitely.

Sean Payton, who to this day, denied he knew that his former defensive coordinator was providing cash bounties to players for intentionally injuring opposing players (reminiscent of The Longest Yard where the inmates did so to the guards).

Really?

Similar to Joe Paterno, former longtime head coach of Penn State who did the same and was forced to retire due to allegations of sexual abuse by his former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky?

I’m sorry, but as head coach, you know EVERYTHING that is going on in your team, and using the excuse ignorance is bliss, just does not cut it for me.

Perhaps it was payback in a sense when the refs did not call the DPI (Defensive pass interference) penalty with less than 2 minutes remaining that Sean Payton went at literally every official on the sideline for missing that permitted the Rams to get the tying and winning field goal in OT?

Shortly after the game, Sean Payton shared that league officials fessed up that the refs blew the call that had they called it pass interference and/or head shot, the Saints would have potentially been moving on to the Superbowl in lieu.

In both the Patriots and the Saints scenarios when the scandals came to light, there were supporters for and against and even to this day many blame the NFL and their commission Richard Goddell how they handled it and fans of the Saints I suspect will be loathing for weeks due to the missed call in this NFC Championship game.

Fast forward to the upcoming Superbowl on Feb 3rd, 2019 regardless what side you are on, it truly will be David (LA Rams with young quarterback and head coach) going against Goliath (Patriots with 41 Yr old Tom Brady and Belichick as head coach)

Many of Belichick’s assistant coaches have gone on to become head coaches themselves, one who is on his coaching staff as offensive coordinator, Josh Daniels, was offered, he accepted, then declined the head coaching position of the Miami Dolphins a couple of years back.

Fast forward to this season, their long term defensive coordinator, Matt Patricia, became head coach of the Detroit Lions, his interim replacement that will be calling the defensive plays, Brian Flores, Linebackers coach name is being next Patriots coach to be offered the head coach position of the Miami Dolphins after the season finishes.

Many of Andy Reid’s assistant coaches are also starting to shine in the NFL, Doug Peterson, head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles who won the Superbowl last year, Matt Nagy who lead the Chicago Bears to the Playoffs this year after a long hiatus.

Ironically, Sean McVay, who will be leading the LA Rams against the Patriots, is a protégé of John Gruden (returned a head coach of the Oakland and soon to be become Las Vegas Raiders) as is Sean Payton.

Under Sean McVay, Jarred Goff, 1st overall pick by the Rams 3 years back has flourished, much like Tom Brady, former 6th round of the Patriots, and no matter how you feel about the Patriots (hate them or love them), has evolved to become one of the best quarterbacks EVER to the play the game.

The big question is whether young coach and QB can handle the pressure of the biggest game of the season as the Patriots have shown time and time again they perform when everything is on the line.

EXCEPT one Superbowl in 2008, when I think the biggest celebration ever had at our house for a Superbowl party was when Eli Manning, Tom Coughlin and Lawrence Taylor won against the Patriots to  break their undefeated record which to this day is still held by the 1972 Miami Dolphins, lead by one of the greatest coaches NFL of all time Don Shula.

Sadly, this won’t be the year for Andy Reid to prove all the naysayers wrong from his days coaching in Phillie he could not win THE game (although is protégé Doug Peterson did) and his team being presented the Lamar Hunt trophy on their home turf.  It also will not be a repeat of the Mircacle story last year when Doug lead the Eagles to win the Superbowl with his backup quarterback Nick Foles after taking over for Carson Wentz that suffered another injury in the season.

Although Tom Brady has proved to many that you can still perform at the highest level in your 40’s, the Patriots continue their dominance due to leadership of Bill Belichick with yet another cast of characters year over year (due to trades, retirement, free agency), I know that everyone that will be coming to my house for our annual Superbowl party will be crossing their fingers, putting on rally caps, wearing gold and yellow and Feb. 3rd aspiring for David (Sean McVay, Jared Goff, Aaron Donald, and other Ram’s team mates) to take down Goliath.

GO RAMS GO.

Don`t be a kids last coach

 

 

 

Make it fun.

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Athlete, Coach, Organization Executive, Parents

This Saturday I missed the Seahawks Wildcard Playoff Game vs. Dallas as was the lucky recipient of a couple of tickets to the World Junior Gold Game I wrote about last week.

For many years I used to go on road trips with a number of my former team mates and co-workers to Seattle to watch them play live pre Pete Caroll Era, but as we all got older, married, and parents the weekend road trips weaned to overnight to day of to not at all.

In lieu, have defaulted to watching either at home or Pubs and was disappointed that their season had come to an end due to the fact that Pete has done an amazing job getting Seattle back into the playoffs as they rebuild from former glory days with the Legion of Doom, The Beast (Marshawn Lynch) and evolution of Russell Wilson as rookie to tenured QB.

Pete recently had his contract extended and Russell Wilson shared he was excited because Pete “truly cared about his players”

This continues to be the top characteristic of great coaches whomever I talk to, whether it be grass roots coaches when I survey them or top experts in the field I have had the opportunity to talk to during our online events hosted thru our digital arm “For the Love of The Game

Pete is currently the oldest head coach in the NFL, but probably one of the most joyful on the sidelines and lead Seattle to the Superbowl, winning in 2013, losing in the last play in 2014 (where many questioned THE CALL that lead to the interception at the 2 yard line that would have lead to back to back wins) and has continued as the Seahawks started to see many of those players retire or get traded.

So other than caring about his players, what makes Pete Carrol a GREAT COACH?

I. Going back to his early days as an assistant coach in the NFL, Pete immersed himself in sport psychology and became a huge fan of Dr. Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, a multi-layered approach for human motivation starting with basic human needs evolving achieving one’s true potential (self-actualization) at the top. The pyramid idea has evolved to many other theories like John Wooden’s pyramid of Success, Hockey Canada Skill’s Pyramid and so on where you can not reach the top unless you have strong foundation.  In Maslow’s theory, people were unable to become the best they could be unless their basic and psychological needs were met first.

Maslow introduced the theory in 1943 but was one of many that I also came across in my studies at UBC around the same time that Pete got hooked on.

II. His ongoing research in other areas of Sport Psychology, looking at coaching practices of great coaches including John Wooden, Pete developed his new coaching philosophy which rolled out when became the head coach of USC in 2000

 

The basis for the philosophy is to maximize not only team but individual performances.

In sum, by developing each individual player on your team, collectively as a team you will see the results as a byproduct.

Nothing frustrates me more than when coaches rely on their top players, run short benches (AKA play their favorites) game after game in lieu of focusing on every player and given them all opportunities to contribute to the outcome of games.

Any coach can coach great players and win games.

Great coaches, like Pete Carroll, make all players great and winning becomes a byproduct.

It amazes me in this era with the access we all have to information how many grass roots coaches don’t have coaching philosophies and if they do, they don’t have them in writing.

This is one of the top three things that parents want to know and as one of the other asks I get all the time is Coach How do I Deal with parents … come up with a philosophy and put it in writing and live it like Pete and other great coaches.

  1. Another thing that Pete is infamous for is his belief that coaches should “Make it Fun

 

This is also one of our key takeaways on every presentation we make, kids play sports because they are fun, they quit when they are not. It’s not rocket science.

In my travels and thru our online events I have had an opportunity to interact with top experts in youth sports, coaches, technical directors and every single one of them have shared the importance that we must make youth sports fun again.

Until then, we are going to see more and more kids quit the game they once loved.

As a result of his research on John Wooden who had three rules, Pete came up with 3 of his own;

  1. Always protect the team
  2. No whining, No complaining, No excuses
  3. Be Early

John Wooden’s 3 simple rules

  1. No tardiness (don’t be late)
  2. No profanity
  3. No criticizing your teammates

Ironically my 3 rules are;

  1. If you’re not early you’re late
  2. No swearing
  3. Respect (the game and everyone including yourself)

When I came up with my 3 rules, I had NO Idea they were very similar to John’s, and Pete’s rules are variations of John’s when he did all his research prior to going to USC on what made John such a great coach.

I also would NEVER put myself in the same conversation as John or Pete for everything they have accomplished at the NCAA and Professional levels of sports having been in the grass roots level for decades and now doing what I can to mentor those very same coaches.

  1. Pete also has become a big fan of mindfulness, being in the present vs. focusing on the past or worrying about the future.

Same holds true when you or your team make a big play or interception, recovering a fumble that leads to points for your teams favour.

Coming back to the present, in that moment, not focused on the past or future.

Like Russell Wilson, I was really happy to see that the Seahawks extended his contract for another 3 seasons, I suspect Paul Allen (majority owner who recently passed away) would have been his biggest advocate for it to happen.

Coaches – regardless if you are fan of Pete, John or other great coaches, remember one thing, the greatest coaches of all time cared passionately, they make it fun, they make it safe (to fail and from all forms of harassment) and they teach skills (of the game and life)

Don’t be a Kid’s Last Coach

Ensure that your legacy is a positive one like John’s, Pete’s and all the other great coaches and remember that your purpose is not to make a living, but to make a difference by developing youth into adults.

Let’s all work together to bring the game back to the kids …. where it belongs.