He Is Just a Little Boy
He stands at the plate
with his heart pounding fast.
The bases are loaded,
the die has been cast.
Mom and Dad cannot help
him,
he stands all alone.
A hit at this moment,
would send the team home.
The ball meets the
plate,
he swings and he misses.
There's a groan from the crowd,
with some boos and some hisses.
A thoughtless voice
cries,
"Strike out the bum."
Tears fill his eyes,
the game's no longer fun.
So open your heart and
give him a break,
For it's moments like this,
a man you can make.
Please keep this in
mind,
when you hear someone forget,
He is just a little boy....and not a man yet.
By Chaplain Bob Fox
Watching
your son or daughter play baseball will often stir up powerful
emotions. It's been said that winning builds character, while
losing reveals it (this goes for the fan as well as the athlete).
Competitive fires can quickly melt an otherwise cool, calm, and
collective attitude. At the heart of a good baseball
experience is how well we balance our desire to win with the need to
develop healthy young people. This balance will affect your
every action, your relationship with your player, the volunteer
umpires, and the overall atmosphere at our ballfields. Please help
to make this baseball season a positive one for your player, his/her
team, the children on the other teams, and our community.
For more please see
the
Positive Coaching
web site.
Play
baseball 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 activity allows quality
time together and helps your child improve his/her baseball
skills. Some day, your child will look back with fondness on
the summer evenings spent playing catch with mom and dad.
PCA
(Positive Coaching Alliance)
has established that
Positive Coaches are "Double-Goal" Coaches (they 1-strive to win AND
2-teach life lessons). So there are two groups focused on the
responsibilities of the first goal: coaches and athletes.
As a parent, you have a much more important responsibility. Your job
revolves around around the second goal (making sure your child draws
from the sports experience the lessons that will help him or her to
become a successful, contributing adult). And while this is not easy
given the seductive nature of the first goal, it can make all the
difference in your child's life.
A win-at-all-cost parent might look on his child striking out with
the bases loaded to end the game as a tragedy. But as a Second-Goal
Parent, you see the silver lining. This is an opportunity to
encourage your child to develop resilience! Failure on the athletic
field becomes a teachable moment for life lessons, if you play your
crucial role, the role of the Second-Goal Parent.
Guidelines
for Honoring the Game
The key to preventing adult misbehavior in youth
sports is a youth sports culture in which all
involved "Honor the Game." Honoring the Game
gets to the ROOTS of the matter and involves
respect for the Rules, Opponents, Officials,
Teammates and one's Self. You don't bend the
rules to win. You understand that a worthy
opponent is a gift that forces you to play to
your highest potential. You show respect for
officials even when you disagree. You refuse to
do anything that embarrasses your team. You live
up to your own standards even if others don't.
Here are ways that parents can create a
positive youth sports culture so that children
will have fun and learn positive character
traits to last a lifetime.
Before the Game:
- Make a commitment to
Honor the Game in action and language no
matter what others may do.
- Tell your child before
each game that you are proud of him or her
regardless of how well he or she plays.
During the Game:
- Fill your children's
"Emotional Tank" through praise and positive
recognition so they can play their very
best.
- Don't give
instructions to your child during the game.
Let the coach correct player mistakes.
- Cheer good plays by
both teams (this is advanced behavior!)
- Mention good calls by
the official to other parents.
- If an official makes a
"bad" call against your team? Honor the
Game—BE SILENT!
- If another parent on
your team yells at an official? Gently
remind him or her to Honor the Game.
- Don't do anything in
the heat of the moment that you will regret
after the game. Ask yourself, "Will this
embarrass my child or the team?"
- Remember to have fun!
Enjoy the game.
After the Game:
- Thank the officials
for doing a difficult job for little or no
pay.
- Thank the coaches for
their commitment and effort.
- Don't give advice.
Instead ask your child what he or she
thought about the game and then LISTEN.
Listening fills Emotional Tanks.
- Tell your child again
that you are proud of him or her, whether
the team won or lost.
Baseball
is a great game. It's a lot of fun to play, and it's also a way that
we learn important lessons that can help us later in life. I know
that I learned a lot from playing competitive sports when I was your
age. I want to tell you about a goal I have for the team and
for each of you individually this season. It's called "Act like a
winner to be a winner."
There are two kinds of winners. What is one kind of winner? What
does "winner" mean to you? (Answer likely to be something like "The
one who has the most points at the end of the game.") One kind of
winner is the team that has the most points at the end of the game.
And we want to be that kind of winner. We want to work as hard as we
can to win as many games as we can.
There is another kind of winner though that is just as important.
That is a winner in life. We want to learn from this season how to
be a winner in everything we do, not just baseball.
To be a winner we need to start acting like a winner. And a winner
is someone who is working for mastery of whatever activity he or she
is doing. So in baseball we want to work toward mastery to be the
best baseball player and team we can be. And we want to learn how to
achieve mastery at anything we want to be good at.
To help understand the way that we achieve mastery, we use the
example of a tree that we call the Tree of Mastery. If you climb the
Tree of Mastery you will be successful. We say that the Tree of
Mastery is an ELM tree because there are three things you
need to do to climb the Tree of Mastery:
E is for Effort. We want to give our best effort every time
we come out on the field. I am more concerned that we try our
hardest than I am if we win. We could win against a weak team
without giving it our best effort, and that doesn't really mean
anything.
On the other hand we could play a team that was stronger than we are
and try our very hardest and lose. I would be proud of us in that
case because we were acting like a winner by trying our hardest even
though the other team ended up winning the game. So the first part
of the ELM tree is E for Effort.
L is for Learning. We want to continue learning and improving
every week in practice and every time we play a game. If we continue
to learn, we will get better, and that is more important than
whether or not we are better than some other team.
We could be better than another team without learning and improving
if that team is a weak team. And we could be weaker than another
team but be learning a lot and getting better all the time. It's
more important to me that we learn and improve than it is to beat a
team that isn't very good. And it's more important that we learn and
improve even if we lose to a team that is stronger than we are. So
the second part of the ELM tree is L for Learning.
M is for Mistakes. Most people think it's bad to make a
mistake. But mistakes are part of the learning process. You can't
learn something as complicated as baseball if you are afraid to make
a mistake. And people that are afraid to make a mistake often don't
even try very hard.
I want you to know that it is okay to make a mistake on this team.
We want to learn from our mistakes and not let them discourage us or
keep us from working hard. So, is it okay to make a mistake on this
team? Yes, it is. And the third part of the ELM tree is M for it's
okay to make a Mistake.
Acting like a winner involves three things. It means:
-
Giving your best effort every time,
-
Continuing to learn and improve, and
-
Not
letting mistakes (or fear of making a mistake) stop you.
If you
do these three things, you are acting like a winner, and you will be
a winner in life as well as baseball. Now let's go have a great
practice. Give it your best effort, learn as much as you can, and
don't worry about making a mistake.
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