| |
10
Tips For Parents
|
This article was originally published
by the Camarillo Pony Baseball Association on their
website. Mark Malloy at malloy@cmp.com has very graciously
agreed to let us re-publish it on our website and
adjust it to reflect our leagues. The Camarillo Pony Baseball Association Home Page is
located at http://www.cpba.org/ . After you
read this article you should visit their site.
|
|
Perhaps you have heard some horror
stories about the overbearing "Little League" parents
and coaches. A good experience for your child begins
us: the parents of each player. It is up to us to make
youth more enjoyable, and a greater learning experience
for the kids. And, after all, no matter how much we
enjoy it too, Pony Baseball is for the kids.
The Board of Directors would
like to share 10 thoughts on how to make this a better
learning experience for you, too. We believe that these
ideas will help to make the next few months more fun
for your children, more enjoyable for you, and a heck
of a lot easier on those people who volunteer their time
and skills.
We hope these ideas can
help!!
|
- Work
with your child.
There really is
little more satisfying than going out at least a
few evenings a week and playing ball with your kids.
This gives quality time, and helps your child improve
his/her skills (and, trust me, the better your child
can play, the more she/he will enjoy the Pony Baseball
experience!). Some day, your child will look back
fondly on the spring evenings spent playing catch
with mom and dad.
- Get
involved with CPBA.
The program is run on a volunteer
basis, and we can use all the help we can get. Anything
you can do to pitch in will make the program run more
smoothly, and will help all the kids, from helping
out at tryouts, to scorekeeping or field preparation,
to umpiring. If your child sees that Pony Baseball
is that important to you, he/she will learn that it
is important to the kids, too. Amongst the board members
are those that have helped out with field prep, scheduling,
scorekeeping, umpiring, equipment and uniform management,
snack bar operations, and fund raising. Everyone can
find a place to help.
If
you love the game of baseball, but can't be available
often enough to coach, Umpiring is a great way
to volunteer. In addition to making baseball
a more satisfying experience for you (Presto,
no more bad calls!), you will be able to teach
your child some of the things that others (umpires!)
look for in a game. And, CPBA provides all of
the training anyone needs. Some people worry
that they are not qualified--I say if you make
a mistake remind them that you didn't get the
job because you are uniquely qualified for it--you
got it because you volunteered. Besides, even
coaches and players make mistakes...the point
is to learn and to have fun, and to teach kids
that you care!!!
Different
coaches have different philosophies. Some believe
in having players play all positions, some want
players to become good at one. Some coaches place
more emphasis on winning (and we can tell you,
from experience, that players and parents tend
to have more fun when they are winning). It is
IMPORTANT to remember that your child's coach is
not being paid, he is working for the love of the
game and the kids. Let him be the coach! Don't
argue and criticize if you think your child is
being treated unfairly (as parents, it is natural
to be very protective, but most coaches aren't
discriminating). If you think there is a problem,
discuss it with the coach AWAY from the ball field;
chances are that you will see his point of view.
The important thing is not to make an issue in
front of the players; along with baseball, they
are learning to work as a team and to respect authority
and experience...work not to ruin this teaching.
- Show
up for the games AND the practices.
In today's busy world it is sometimes hard to juggle
schedules, but this is your child! I cannot begin to
tell stories of kids we've seen who never tried to
excel at baseball, and invariably these kids were dropped
off at practices and picked up afterwards, without
the parent(s) ever watching a single practice. It's
only a couple of times a week, a couple of months out
of the year! The most irritating are the parents who
don't ever watch practice (and, therefore, never understand
the coaches philosophy), but will question (yell!)
at a coaches decision during the game. Most people
wouldn't dare to not show up for work and still tell
the boss what's wrong with the company, but they will
turn around and do just that with their child's' coach.
- Respect
the rules!
This is one of the most
important things the kids should be learning. If
you don't agree with an umpires call, keep it to
yourself. You did not buy a ticket and with it a
right to complain. If there is a team rule that bothers
you, well, it's their team...not yours. If you think
there is a serious problem, take it up with the coach
or a League official on your own time, not your child's'.
Rule of thumb: during practice or games, don't speak
unless spoken to (except, of course, to cheer on
ALL the kids).
- Don't
create pressure.
Just about every father
dreams of his son becoming a major league star, but
they are only children and deserve to enjoy the game
as children. Don't expect more than they can deliver.
Give positive encouragement, and be there when they
need you. Besides, often a child in early years will
lack certain skills, and blossom later on. Don't
fight nature, or the kids.
- Losing
is a normal result of competition - help your
child learn to accept it.
No one likes to lose, but the nature
of a team sport is that one team will always lose.
Teach your child that he/she didn't lose, the team
lost. And they lost to a team that just happened to
play better that day. There is always next time, and
the important thing is to learn from the defeats. One
of life's most interesting truisms is that we learn
more in failure than in success. Its okay to analyze
why your team lost, and how they can do better next
time. It's never okay to place blame!
- Have
Fun!
Pony Baseball should be a positive
experience for everyone: kids, coaches, support staff,
and parents. Winning is nice, but losing is inevitable.
Being a star is fun, but being a bench player is just
as important. As a coach don't get focused on winning
as being the only way to have fun. If you can't enjoy
the game without winning your are missing out on some
of the best things about coaching. One of the most
rewarding experiences possible is to take a player
with little baseball skill, no confidence in himself,
and help him develop over the course of the season
to the point he looks forward to his turns at bat because
he knows he can succeed. That player who came to practice
with his head hanging, now stands tall with pride and
a big smile on his face. Take the opportunity to enjoy
your child's' childhood, and to teach some important
life lessons!!
- Don't
panic if your child is injured.
Although baseball is considered
a 'non-contact' sport, there are occasions when players
collide, or non-contact injuries occur. We are all
concerned about our children's safety, but if your
child suffers an injury, remember: kids are able to
sustain a lot more than adults; and, coaches are probably
familiar with the usual baseball injuries. Let the
coach handle the situation...he doesn't need a panicked
parent to deal with.
- The
program only gets better when people like you
volunteer.
We can't stress this enough: VOLUNTEER...we
need you. One of the biggest irritants we see is those
who will not give their time, but are quick to criticize.
If you can't be part of the solution, don't be part
of the problem. If you think that something needs to
be changed, get involved so that you can change it.
Here's a few examples of how the program has been improved
over the years by people who had an idea of how it
could be better and stepped in and made it happen:
- One person thought it was bad that 11-12 year olds
were playing night games on school nights. He's doing
the schedule now and eliminated those games.
- A few years ago somebody decided that games would
be more fun with fences around the fields. He became
fields director and he arranged to rent the fencing
that made it happen.
- A couple of Mom's wanted healthier options in the
snack bar: they're running it now and we have lot's
more choices for those who don't want to live on just
burgers for three months!
- Speak
up if you think your manager is not being fair.
One of the most frustrating
things for a board member is to have a parent come
up to us after the season and say, "great program,
but my sons manager kept doing something that really
bothered me.". A manager/coach cannot address
problems if they don't know the problems exist. The
board can't resolve problems it never hears about.
Most managers/coaches will welcome your input. If you
don't make progress check with your league commissioner
or any board member.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|