Of our three kids my youngest son is the athlete. He has been playing soccer for six years now and is playing at the competitive Travel Team level. I coached him for four years, during the non-competitive intramural seasons. At the end of each season the coaches were suppose to give each player a ranking (1-5) based on not only skills, but coachability, do the parents bring the kid to practices and games, etc. At the start of the following season we would have a draft to try and keep the teams as balanced as possible. I heard grumblings from other coaches that certain coaches were purposefully rating their best players low so that they would be easier to pick up in the draft. There were about 80 kids in this age group, and usually less than 10 were ranked 5, but less than 20 ranked as 4s, the majority of the kids were ranked as 3s. Over the four years I got suspicious of what was going on, and held on to my draft sheet to see how kids were ranked. It was always obvious who the most skilled players were, and coaches knew them. So, as a coach you had no choice but to rank them as 5s. It was the others that should have been 4s that I found coaches putting down as 2s. Over the last two years that I coached there emerged to two teams that were dominating the rest of the teams, and it was those coaches that were working the draft system. This was for kids playing soccer starting at age 6 up to age 9.
Ive also had to deal with over the top parents even at the 4 year old level. I just dont get it. I had a parent talking to the other parents behind my back complaining I wasnt teaching the kids anything. These were 4 and 5 year olds. The fundamentals for 4 and 5 year olds is to learn proper dribbling and kicking. I told my parents that these kids need to learn how to dribble and keep their heads up so that they can see where they are going. Sure enough, during one game a player from the other team had the ball and dribbled full steam into the goal post. Luckily it was only a small bump on his head, but I turned to my parents and said this is why we work on our dribbling skills so much.
Ive also had to deal with over the top parents even at the 4 year old level. I just dont get it. I had a parent talking to the other parents behind my back complaining I wasnt teaching the kids anything. These were 4 and 5 year olds. The fundamentals for 4 and 5 year olds is to learn proper dribbling and kicking. I told my parents that these kids need to learn how to dribble and keep their heads up so that they can see where they are going. Sure enough, during one game a player from the other team had the ball and dribbled full steam into the goal post. Luckily it was only a small bump on his head, but I turned to my parents and said this is why we work on our dribbling skills so much.