Wow, several months ago I restarted our TB club after taking about a five month hiatus to allow the kids time to rest and recuperate, after what I considered "too much baseball, for too long of a time".
Many of these boys had been playing practically non-stop for about 14 months, with some of them playing with us and rec. ball at the same time. They were what I considered "burned out", so we slowed to one, maybe two games on Sunday and then shutdown all together just after Thanksgiving until after the first of the year.
Some continued to play during this time, finding other TB teams and some played other sports for awhile. When we regrouped, I had six of my original eleven return and picked up others through referrals or try-outs (we now roster 12).
Somewhere alone the way my once tough, play hard 11 and 12 year olds turned into a bunch of whiny, sulking 13 years olds. They whine about the weather, they play one game and their arms are sore, they slide into a bag and they skinned their knee, they ground-out on a close play and pull-up with "my heel hurts", blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. . . .
Now don't think I haven't identified where it comes from, I have stands full of parents who before the game feed the kids full of it . . . "are we really going to play, isn't it too hot?", "are those boys on the other team legal, they sure seem too big?", "coach, I know it's the third inning, but can Johnny have this hot dog, I think he looks hungry?", and so on, and so on.
By the time we make it to the championship game (in three tourneys, we have three runner-up trophies); you'd think these kids ran three marathons or something. We make sure they are hydrated properly, give them as much rest as the tournament schedule allows, and rotate them regularly so no one is pitching or catching consecutive games.
All of our pitchers are on a pitch count and not strictly the inning count allowed by the tournament. As it is, some of my pitchers are giving us one inning and complaining of some sort of pain or another. As I have always done, I remove them, not wanting to take a chance that they really have something wrong and exacerbating an unknown injury in a young ball player.
Seems that these kids and the parents forget that the other team we're playing had just as many games as we did and hey, what do you know, they play in the same temperatures that we do.
Looking for some thoughts here . . . what motivating things are you using when faced with this (if you are), do you think I'm too quick on the trigger in pulling my pitchers, or is all of this just the norm for the "new age" 13 year olds (never had this with my older son's teams)?
I'm looking for ANYTHING, I'm baffled, frustrated, and hope there is some help out there . . .
Thanks in advance,
MV9
Many of these boys had been playing practically non-stop for about 14 months, with some of them playing with us and rec. ball at the same time. They were what I considered "burned out", so we slowed to one, maybe two games on Sunday and then shutdown all together just after Thanksgiving until after the first of the year.
Some continued to play during this time, finding other TB teams and some played other sports for awhile. When we regrouped, I had six of my original eleven return and picked up others through referrals or try-outs (we now roster 12).
Somewhere alone the way my once tough, play hard 11 and 12 year olds turned into a bunch of whiny, sulking 13 years olds. They whine about the weather, they play one game and their arms are sore, they slide into a bag and they skinned their knee, they ground-out on a close play and pull-up with "my heel hurts", blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. . . .
Now don't think I haven't identified where it comes from, I have stands full of parents who before the game feed the kids full of it . . . "are we really going to play, isn't it too hot?", "are those boys on the other team legal, they sure seem too big?", "coach, I know it's the third inning, but can Johnny have this hot dog, I think he looks hungry?", and so on, and so on.
By the time we make it to the championship game (in three tourneys, we have three runner-up trophies); you'd think these kids ran three marathons or something. We make sure they are hydrated properly, give them as much rest as the tournament schedule allows, and rotate them regularly so no one is pitching or catching consecutive games.
All of our pitchers are on a pitch count and not strictly the inning count allowed by the tournament. As it is, some of my pitchers are giving us one inning and complaining of some sort of pain or another. As I have always done, I remove them, not wanting to take a chance that they really have something wrong and exacerbating an unknown injury in a young ball player.
Seems that these kids and the parents forget that the other team we're playing had just as many games as we did and hey, what do you know, they play in the same temperatures that we do.
Looking for some thoughts here . . . what motivating things are you using when faced with this (if you are), do you think I'm too quick on the trigger in pulling my pitchers, or is all of this just the norm for the "new age" 13 year olds (never had this with my older son's teams)?
I'm looking for ANYTHING, I'm baffled, frustrated, and hope there is some help out there . . .
Thanks in advance,
MV9
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