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Raising Happy and Successful Adults thru Sports

Raising Happy and Successful Adults thru Sports
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Michelle Rheaume

Life Lessons from The Sandlot

November 23, 2016 by Michelle Rheaume Leave a Comment

Life Lessons from The Sandlot

“You’re killing me, Smalls”, is one of the most repeated quotes in our house from the great movie The Sandlot. If you haven’t seen this movie yet, its a ‘must see’ for anyone interested in youth sports. The movie documents many life lessons that are getting lost in youth sports today.

For those who are not familiar with the reference, Smalls is a pre-teen boy who recently moves into a neighborhood in southern California. He is an only child that was never taught how to play baseball and a new step-father that loves baseball but hasn’t had the time to teach him. Nevertheless, he is invited play sandlot baseball with the other boys because they need one more.

The quote is rememberable because it highlights the frustration we all experience when playing with someone who doesn’t know the rules or expectations. In the movie, Smalls doesn’t have the experience or social context, much less ability, the other boys seem to know intuitively.

Love of the game

life sessons from the sandlot
A real sand lot for life lessons.

I love this movie for many reasons, but the one that stands out the most is they play for the love of the game.  The kids come together everyday in the summer and just played the game.  They didn’t keep track of the score or who had the most hits.  They played for fun and to get better at the game. The boys unanimously agreed on who was the greatest player of all time, Babe Ruth. They all played their hearts out trying to be just like the “Great Bambino”, although acutely aware of their individual limitations. Kids need spend a lot more time just getting out there and playing for fun. Don’t worry about the score or who hit the farthest ball.  Just go out there with a bunch of friends and play the game.

Connections

In the movie there was little they did besides baseball. Although, occasionally they went to the pool for a swim. And we all know how that ended! I love that my kids can pick up a ball and bat and just go out there and play.  It might not be with the neighbors, or at our local field but they find a way and get to play the game.

One of my favorite summertime memories is during an organized baseball game for my son. All the siblings of various ages and genders, get together and play their own game on the playground next to the baseball field.  If there isn’t a field available they find a way to improvise the game. They gathered at the playscape with a tennis ball, a few mitts and a bat. They agreed to use the slide as first, swing as second and if it goes over the monkey bars its a home run! This is creativity shows their love for the game. They want to play anywhere and anytime.

However, now that I’m older I realize the real value is the social connections the kids build. They are building memories that will aspire to recreate in everything they do the rest of their life.

Life Lessons

This interaction teaches them:

  • how to communicate with peers;
  • compromise to solve problems;
  • keep focused on a common goal, and;
  • support and encourage teammates.

All because even kids know, you can’t win alone. Therefore, becomes a naturally supportive and collaborative environment. Moreover, they are learning and practicing these skills just because they were encouraged and allowed to ‘just play’. The irony is the families were together at the same park because of an organized baseball game.

I think most of us would watch the kids playing on the side game with a warm smile. The pure joy, passion and laughter of an impromptu game is easy to enjoy. Everyone enjoys watching people, at any age, have fun because the fun it is contagious.

Although, “You’r killing me Smalls”, suggests frustration with a ‘newbie’. The movie uses the line as a relatable trigger point to highlight a decision made by the hero, Benny. He happens to be the best baseball player in the neighborhood. His response, as a leader, it to teach the less skilled.

Yet, many of the same people will turn 180 degrees toward the organized game. It seems perspectives change when they see full equipment, uniforms, coaches, umpires and chalked lines. All of a sudden, the stakes are higher, the anxiety is greater and we forget it is just a game. Moreover, the lessons inferred by kids in this environment seem to be focused only on performance and results. Support and collaboration seem to be lost as the competition matures. However, any adult that has been part of a high performing organization understands that support and collaboration on any team are key drivers of success.

Be the Change

Play My Kid was created to shift the focus of youth coaches to ensure sports are fun, creative, supportive and collaborative. Parents really just want to see their kids play with others. The most successful, respected and admired people in our world, regardless of ability, are engaged, friendly, happy, kind and helpful. Clearly, it is very difficult to practice those skills while sitting on the sidelines.

Filed Under: Blog

Who’s Sitting the Bench today?

September 11, 2016 by Michelle Rheaume 1 Comment

Objective evaluation of performance

How do you make your line up? Most coaches anticipate who can contribute to the team based on their talent. Then they eliminate the one kid who couldn’t hit the ball today at practice. Then you think about the player who kept talking and wasn’t paying attention during the 30 minutes of infield drills, and tell yourself, “She is obviously sitting on the bench, she didn’t work as hard as the others.” Is this really how coaches should decide who “earns” more playing time than the others? Reputation and anecdotal behavior? I don’t think it should be this way in youth sports at all. It’s extremely selfish and shortsighted.

Let me be clear, I was guilty of this on a regular basis early in my coaching career. It’s very difficult for coaches who want to be competitive all the time to keep things in perspective. Are you coaching for wins or looking to make these kids better athletes?

Parent goals

My softball coaching career started, right out of high school. I told myself I wasn’t going to be “that coach”. Yet, I fell into a rut the first season and put the same kids at the same positions, and kept the same order in the lineup. Of course that meant the same couple of girls had to be the substitutes. As I neared the end of the season, I realized I had fallen into this pattern. The pattern I told myself I wasn’t going to repeat. I had turned into “one of those coaches”.

Immediately, I decided to switch it up the last few games, and boy did I hear about it. Most of it was just from a few dads, they were upset that their daughter didn’t play the whole game. “How could you take her out? She’s your best hitter.”

I simply agreed,  “Yes, your daughter has had a great season, and  a lot of playing time. Now it’s time for another girl to get her chance”.

I wanted to yell, and argue with him. Where would that have gotten us? It would have embarrassed him, his daughter, me and the entire program. I needed him to see what I saw. There were other players on the team who could contribute, and I needed to give them a chance.

That was practically 20 years ago and it taught me a lot, not about the game, but how to deal with parents. (And that you can’t please them all, or can you?)

Bigger goals

How you decide to make your line up is the managers choice. There are a lot of things to consider, you want the athletes to perform well and be successful. You want these kids to go out with their heads held high and confident that they can make the play, hit the ball or pitch an inning. We stress so much about winning the game, is it the result that’s the most important? Does that really measure how good we are as a team? If the same kids sit the bench, and don’t get to play more than one or two innings then what are we teaching them? Why aren’t they getting a chance to play like the others? Isn’t it still just a game?

Coaches have to remember that this is a learning experience. If we want them to succeed, we have to give them opportunities to learn. If the same player strikes out at every at bat they could get discouraged. While it might happen, it means coaches need to work a little harder on those skills at practice.

Mistakes can be a good thing sometimes, as long as we can learn from them!

We have to get out of the mind set that errors force coaches to take them out of the game. Instead of doing that, let’s keep them in and encourage them to try again. Mistakes can be a good thing sometimes, as long as we can learn from them!

Good Teammates

Sitting the bench should be something that every teammate has a chance to do. It shouldn’t be looked at like its a punishment, it’s part of being on a team with multiple players. Everyone has a turn to play and a turn to sit.

So how and when do you explain that to the parents? If you start off the season with a team meeting this is a great place to start, informing the parents of your playing time rules. How you will handle playing time and your beliefs.  Being upfront with your parents will start the season off on the right foot, keeping your word and following through the whole season will end on a high note! Sometimes you really have to think as you are making up the line up, are you coaching to win? Or are you coaching to produce better athletes?

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Filed Under: Blog

3 Signs of a Winning Coach

August 21, 2016 by Michelle Rheaume Leave a Comment

How do you decide if your child had a good season? Is it the number of wins? How many losses? Or do you keep track of how many times your child plays and compare it to another child and their play time?  There are three things I look for and determine whether or not I feel like my child had a great season.

IMPROVEMENT

1. Did they become a better player? This is one of my favorite things to see happen over the course of six to twelve weeks(depending on the sport). Watching my child improve as an individual is key to a successful  season. To see them successfully make a play, field the ball, make a bounce pass, hit the ball, make a basket, strike out swinging, go for the layup, cheer on the teammate that just struck out or give a high five to a friend that just made a free throw. These are all things I look for that will improve my child’s sports career. Seeing them improve as an individual and as a teammate are proving to me that they had a successful season.  Sometimes it’s more than wins and losses. I want my child to grow as an athlete, which can be anything like trying to make a basket or throwing a no hitter. Having a successful season to me is watching them improve throughout the season, there will be ups and downs, and learning to deal with those emotions and coming out on a positive note is key.

FUN

2. Did you have fun? This is huge in my opinion. Not just having fun chatting with your friends, telling the latest knock-knock jokes on the bench kind of fun, all that and more. Meeting new kids and coaches, connecting with them on and off the field. Getting to know their teammates and coaches, and being able to communicate with them. This is one of my favorite things to witness, new friendships forming. The kids might not realize it yet, but this is one of the best part of being on a team. These individuals
are going to work together as a team, have good moments and bad. Question is did you come out of this experience as a better player? Or maybe more importantly a better person.

RESPECT

3. Is your Coach someone you can look up to? This can be tricky to answer on so many levels. I am not an expert, I can only speak from my experience and what my kids have experienced. This is a truly coming from the heart, I want my child to look to their coach as someone they have respect for and enjoy playing for. This has such an impact on them as to wether or not they will have a successful season.(And reality is it will stick with them for many years to come!) I’ve seen some incredible adults out on the court or field coaching, and I could not be happier that my child gets to have that experience. I’ve also seen it go the other way, disappointed that this is who my child is learning from and seeing it turn into a negative experience. I’m not looking for the perfect coach because we are all human. I don’t expect perfection from anyone. I just want them to love what they are doing, if the coach is having fun and can teach the kids to be a better player than that’s a win in my book any day. After all, sometimes its not about wether you win or lose, its how you play the game. Learning how to play the game and how to be a good teammate can mean you had a successful season, sometimes its just hard to see that.

Filed Under: Blog

Watching the Olympics, family bonding moment.

August 15, 2016 by Michelle Rheaume Leave a Comment

The Olympics have finally started, all the hype and talk about it is here and so far they are beyond my expectations.

Usually at this point in the summer I am yelling at my kids to turn off the television, but not for these two weeks. This is the one time during the year that I will allow the TV to be on all day long.

In fact, I’ll be the one turning it on, and searching the guides for any sport and any competitor. This is the one time every four years we get to watch and learn about all the different sports we never get to see. img_1095

I am amazed by all people from all over the world who will come together to compete. These athletes have been training for years, or their whole lives. They put everything else in their life aside and train for the olympics once every four years.

I am in awe of these athletes. I have so much respect for them and their families, I cheer for all of them. I get tears in my eyes when someone falls, or gets hurt. I get tears when they stand on that podium and their national anthem is playing. My kids look at me like I’m nuts, “Mom, are you crying?”

I explain to them that I am so proud of these athletes, for everything they stand for. Just knowing how much work they put into it and how far they have come. All the blood, sweat and tears they have put into their sport. All the dinners they missed with their families, or school events or a birthday parties. Many had to move out of state to train with the best coaches or facilities, separated from their family.

All their hard work and dedication comes down to these two weeks. Everything they have worked so hard for will be put to the test, right here, right now. In another country in front of millions of people to see… no pressure!

These athletes are all winners in my book, they are the best in the world. I love that my kids love to watch them as much as I do. I love that we can all sit around the TV in our family room with our eyes glued to a tennis match, or rowing, or the four hour bike race that is down to the last 2 kilometers. Four hours on a bike racing? That would only happen during the Olympics! The most we ride is thirty minutes, and we usually break halfway through for a slush!

My kids love watching and learning about all these different sports. There really is more to life than baseball, softball, basketball or volleyball. (I can’t believe I will admit that.)

The realization there are so many more options in the world of sports is humbling as an athlete, a coach and parent. It makes me realize that diversity in sports is human, universal and global.

Filed Under: Blog

Win or lose, take them out for ice cream.

July 31, 2016 by Michelle Rheaume 2 Comments

After a big game it’s not unusual for the coach to say, “Let’s go celebrate and get ice cream!” But have you ever celebrated after a big loss?  After the game where you felt like it was a scene from the bad news bears? One error led to another,which led to another and it felt like eternity to get that third out? That game where just a few kids hit the ball and the rest struck out. This is when you need to step back and find the positives in that game. Look at the athletes and see how they handled the loss, are they discouraged because they had a bad game? Or can they say that they tried their best, and there’s always next time. TakeThem4IceCream

This is a huge challenge for coaches. Trying to focus on the positive instead of the negative. Reminding the kids that if they gave it their all, and didn’t give up, then it was a well played game.

Too many kids get discouraged after making an error which, without the right support, leads to more errors. This is when I really need to encourage them, remind them that they can do it. “Shake it off, good try, get ready for the next play.” There will always be another play. There will always be another chance to hit. Their career isn’t ending after the game, that’s part of the joy, their sport career is just beginning. They already know there was a mistake, they need to know mistakes are part of the process.

We can all picture the scene, a child strikes out and it can be so disappointing, head hung low, kicking the dirt back to the dugout. You can see it coming, they want to throw their bat and helmet, so frustrated with the strikeout they feel the need to express their anger. This is where I step in try to put all that negativity away, remind them that they gave it a great effort. This time it didn’t work out, but they tried and gave it their all. And guess what, you will get another try at hitting the ball!  There will always be another chance at fielding that ground ball or catching that pop up. Sometimes the challenge is making them believe in themselves. Only then, can they truly turn failure into growth.

They need to be reminded, “this is a learning experience, if you make a mistake then what did you learn from it?” This is where we grow both as coaches and players. Winning is fun, I mean, who doesn’t want to win the game? But there is a lot to learn from losing a game, this is when coaches and players can (and should) grow. These are the time we realize what we need to work on as a team or individual player. It’s when we lose we strive to be a better player and work harder to get that win.

Winning is great and gives you a great reason to celebrate, however losing the game isn’t a reason to be sad. I will often tell my players, and I’m sure we’ve heard the cliche before, “it really doesn’t matter if we win or lose, it’s how we play the game”. Did we give it our all? Did we try and encourage our teammates?  If the answer is yes then it’s a win my book, if each player can honestly say they gave it their all and tried their hardest then that’s all that matters.

The pain of a loss should fuel coaches and players during practices. Games are important as a relative test, but there are very few individual games that will have a real and lasting impact on your life, win or lose. You will get another chance, there will be another game…win or lose though, you should always take them out for ice cream!

Filed Under: Blog

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