Ian Goldberg is the Founder and CEO of iSport360, a SportsTech company that is helping 12,000 coaches, parents and kids set goals, share player feedback and track player development….all so our kids can have more success, more confidence and more fun. Try iSport360 for free here.
I have to address the elephant in the room. I'm not a psychologist....just a sports dad and coach for two young daughters. But I think we are lying to ourselves when we tell our kids that we just want them to have fun in youth sports. If we were sincere, would there be such chaos on the sidelines and in the bleachers of youth sports games? Could it be, what we really mean to say is "we want you to have fun but while you're at it, you must learn to master skills, become a leader, achieve your goals and be a winner." Because, sadly, so many of us act as if failure to do these things on the 5th grade travel soccer team means they will fail to do these things in every future endeavor they pursue: high school, college, career, life.
Am I wrong?
A 2014 Research Study* asked kids to rank aspects of youth sports that they consider "fun". And you will not believe what the kids revealed. Winning, playing in tournaments, practicing with specialty trainers and earning medals/trophies (basically 90% of the things we as parents focus on) are among the LEAST FUN parts of their sports experience.....almost as "UNFUN" as getting team pictures taken (#81 on the list). However, the most fun parts of youth sports are playing your best, mastering skills, building relationships with coaches and teammates and being active.
The dilemma is, I have a daughter who LOVES playing sports simply because it's fun and genuinely doesn't care if her team wins. WOW. That is really hard for a parent to digest....and accept. Frankly, I nearly lost my mind, along with every other parent on our team when our girls lost every single game last season. But the truth is: Thanks to soccer, I have a happy, healthy, active daughter who has built a tight bond with her teammates. She has learned how to handle defeat. She's also building strong life skills on and off the field. Perhaps this dilemma is more of a win-win than I thought.
Ian Goldberg is the Founder and CEO of iSport360, a new SportsTech venture helping to improve youth sports for coaches, parents....and of course, our kids.
I totally understand, but isn’t part of the process teaching kids how to win? Or more so putting them in a competitive position to win and have fun at the same time? Isn’t winning also fun. I am not saying that it is the only thing, but there is competition in all aspects of life and part of the training is putting the kids in a fun=winning position to prepare them down the road. Hey, its a doggie dog world out there, and I just hope my kid is wearing milk bone shin guards in this instance!!!!! just putting this out there. This is just an OPINION, and i am not saying it is bible. Just wanted to start a conversation and see what others think.
Thanks for the comments Jaime. For years I always believed agreed that fun=winning and winning=fun. However, the reason I felt compelled to write the post above was because on my team of u11 girls soccer players, losing still equated to fun for the kids (a very foreign concept to parents). Then I found the research above which shows that fun is frequently NOT tied to winning. To me, that was monumental and worth sharing.
Your daughter’s team lost every game last season? Wow! Did you send a strongly worded email to the team manager?