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Parental Support
The Key to
Peak Performance
The role that parents play in the life of a
soccer player has a tremendous impact on their experience. With
this in mind, we have taken some time to write down some helpful
reminders for all of us as we approach the upcoming season. If you
should have any questions about these thoughts, please feel free
to discuss it with us, the coaches.
1. Let the coaches
coach: Leave the coaching to the coaches. This includes
motivating, psyching your child for practice, after game
critiquing, setting goals, requiring additional training, etc.
You have entrusted the care of your player to these coaches
and they need to be free to do their job. If a player has too
many coaches, it is confusing for her and her performance
usually declines.
2. Support the
program: Get involved. Volunteer. Help out with
fundraisers, car-pool; anything to support the program.
3. Be you child's
best fan: Support your child unconditionally. Do not
withdraw love when your child performs poorly. Your child
should never have to perform to win your love.
4. Support and
root for all players on the team: Foster teamwork. Your
child's teammates are
not the enemy. When they are playing better than your
child, your child now has a wonderful opportunity to
learn
5. Do not bribe or
offer incentives: Your job is not
to motivate. Leave this to the coaching staff. Bribes will
distract your child from properly concentrating in practice
and game situations.
6. Encourage your
child to talk with the coaches: If your child is having
difficulties in practice or games, or can't make a practice,
etc., encourage her
to speak directly to the coaches. This "responsibility
taking" is a big part of becoming a big-time player. By
handling the off-field tasks, your child is claiming ownership
of all aspects of the game - preparation for as well as
playing the game.
7. Understand and
display appropriate game behavior: Remember, your child's
self esteem and game performance is at stake. Be supportive,
cheer, be appropriate. To perform to the best of her
abilities, a player needs to focus on the parts of the game
that they can control (her fitness, positioning, decision
making, skill, aggressiveness, what the game is presenting
her). If she starts focusing on what she can not control (the
condition of the field, the referee, the weather, the
opponent, even the outcome of the game at times), she will not
play up to her ability. If she hears a lot of people telling
her what to do, or yelling at the referee, it diverts her
attention away from the task at hand.
8. Monitor your
child's stress level at home: Keep an eye on the player to
make sure that she is handling stress effectively from the
various activities in her life.
9. Monitor eating
and sleeping habits: Be sure your child is eating the
proper foods and getting adequate rest.
10. Help your child
keep her priorities straight: Help your child maintain a
focus on schoolwork, relationships and the other things in
life beside soccer. Also, if your child has made a commitment
to soccer, help her fulfill her obligation to the team.
11. Reality test:
If your child has come off the field when her team has lost,
but she has played her best, help her to see this as a
"win". Remind her that she is to focus on
"process" and not "results". Her fun and
satisfaction should be derived from "striving to
win". Conversely, she should be as satisfied from success
that occurs despite inadequate preparation and performance.
12. Keep soccer in
its proper perspective: Soccer should not be larger than
life for you. If your child's performance produces strong
emotions in you, suppress them. Remember your relationship
will continue with your children long
after her competitive soccer days are over. Keep your
goals and needs separate from your child's experience.
13. Have fun:
That is what we will be trying to do! We will try to challenge
your child to reach past her "comfort
level" and improve herself as a player, and thus, a
person. We will attempt to do this in environments that are
fun, yet challenging. We look forward to this process. We hope
you do to!
Oakland Catholic Soccer
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