Guest christglorified Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Just volunteered to coach little league football! Its my first time...any advice?
tvc184 Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Get an assistant coach(es) that have done it before.
warfan Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Have rules and stick to them. And yes, an experienced assistant coach.
jmspears3 Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Do not put up with any crap from parents ;D Let them know up front that you are the coach and you will play the kids where you see fit.Besides you are volunteering your time not the parents.
Guest christglorified Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Ages are 4th and 5th grade
piratefan Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Don't let the parents coach your team..I guarantee you will have one or two problem parents! Be fair with the kids,but firm and consistent..And treat all of them the same no matter if he is the star or the bench warmer.
Xlion Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 When you get your coaches make sure they are on the same page as you are, also always end on a positive...... 8) GOOD Luck
AggiesAreWe Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Like the song says, " teach your children well". Lead by example, not by mouth. And above all, make this experience for them fun.
td Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Meet with the parents before you ever meet with the kids. Tell them who you are and a little about yourself. Tell them what they can expect from you and what you expect from them. Not all kids can throw, or block but the can all hustle and pay attention. I also tell them if they have a problem with anything that I'm doing to talk to me after practice or after the game away from the kids and talk to me like an adult. I tell them if they don't embarrass me I promise not to embarrass them and then neither of us will embarass their child. This little speech has worked very well for me. I've never had a parent get out of line..........yet!Good luck and be patient.
warfan Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Meet with the parents before you ever meet with the kids. Tell them who you are and a little about yourself. Tell them what they can expect from you and what you expect from them. Not all kids can throw, or block but the can all hustle and pay attention. I also tell them if they have a problem with anything that I'm doing to talk to me after practice or after the game away from the kids and talk to me like an adult. I tell them if they don't embarrass me I promise not to embarrass them and then neither of us will embarass their child. This little speech has worked very well for me. I've never had a parent get out of line..........yet!Good luck and be patient.Great Advice. I would always have this meeting, put the rules and expectations on paper and pass them out. The biggest headache are parents, if the team consist of new players you need to get a grip on the parents quick. If most of the players have played before they should know what to expect. This does put you the "new" guy in the limelight, that's where experienced assistants will help. Thanks for volunteering and wanting to do a good job, we need more like you in all the sports.
GoDogs27 Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Two words... Quarterback Bootleg........... works on youngsters everytime
td Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Have you seen the wrong ball play on youtube? ;D
teeboan Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 teach proper techinques and fundamentals, I see so many kids that don't know how to tackle it's scary.. and a spinal injury waiting to happen
Ty Cobb Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Remember that you are coaching young kids. Put a time limit on the practices.
Bucster Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 teach proper techinques and fundamentals, I see so many kids that don't know how to tackle it's scary.. and a spinal injury waiting to happenDing! Ding! Ding! ........ we finally have a winner!Teach them kids some basic fundamentals and make football fun for 'em and you'll make their future Jr. & Hs. coaches very happy.Another thing I'll add, remember you aint Tom Landry and you aint coaching the Dallas Cowboys. IMO the worst thing a little league coach can do is to allow winning & losing to get personal. At this age it's about teaching the boys how to play football and not winning or losing.
BMTSoulja1 Posted August 24, 2007 Report Posted August 24, 2007 Take the little rascals and jack them up every chance you get. Give them an earfull on great plays. Cut them no slack. Boot camp, baby! Naw, I'm just playing. ;D ;D ;D ;D
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