EFTA00360372.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 429.7 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 7 pages
From: Ike Groff
Subject: There's a Reason Why Your Kids Aren't Playing - They're Not Good Enough. From
Boston.com
Date: Thu, 23 Oct 2014 15:28:14 +0000
Inline-Images: image003.png; image002jpg
Good little read thanks J for sending to me.
There's a Reason Why Your Kids Aren't Playing - They're Not
Good Enough
Bill Speros
evrealOBF
Boston.com Correspondent
OCTOBER IS. 2014 12:49 PM
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Obnoxious Boston Fan is long-time sports journalist Bill Speros and offers a fun, unique and biting perspective
on the Red Sox, Celtics, Bruins, Patriots and whatever else people are talking about in the world of sports.
SHARE
COMMENT
EFTA00360372
Description: SLUG: sp/catoctin DATE: August 24, 2006 CREDIT:
Ricky Carioti / TWP. Frederick High School in Freder
The fall sports season is reaching its zenith. Boys and girls at all levels and
grades are running, stretching, planning and preparing for cross-town or cross-
county rivals. Fall, especially in New England, is a wondrous time of year even
if the Red Sox aren't participating. [Here in Florida, it's cause for a street party
whenever the temperature falls below 70 during the day.]
For high school athletes, it means all those sweaty summer practices, workouts
and sports-camps are finally going to pay some dividends.
The heart of any school athletic season brings with it busy schedules, frantic
parents or older siblings driving kids from one field to the next, competition,
camaraderie, joy, and disappointment.
One question every coach from Pop Warner and Youth Volleyball, on up
through the highest levels high school competition in Texas, has heard in their
coaching career is this:
"Why isn't my kid playing?"
EFTA00360373
This topic came up in the wake of a column that ran in the Boston Globe last
week about the lack of play for some in youth sports.
The absurdity of many "win-at-all-cost" coaches in youth sports is neatly
matched by the fanaticism of "play-my-kid-or-else" parents at the high-school
level.
When the games start to count, the main reason why your kid isn't playing is
simple:
"They're just not good enough."
"He/she just isn't fast enough."
"He/she just isn't strong enough."
"He/she just isn't tall enough."
"He/she is too fat/too skinny."
"He/she just didn't try hard enough in practice."
"He/she should not play over Jimmy/Jenny because they're faster, quicker,
stronger, taller, and/or try harder."
Good coaches, however, are not usually that blunt or honest.
We'll focus on football for the rest of this conversation. Although much here
applies to all sports, regardless of the game or gender. Many coaches are
notorious for not telling what you and I would consider the "truth."
The coach of New England's NFL entry has mastered that skill. And high
school coaches who fancy themselves as the "Belichick of the
League" are likely to follow his lead.
Parents get a little nutty at times when it comes to their children and youth/high
school sports. Nearly every parent ever [this one included], at one time or
EFTA00360374
another in the dark recesses of their minds, fancies a scenario where their son
or daughter can master this or that sport well enough to earn a free-ride to
college. When that dream/delusion is squashed after meeting the reality of
genetics, talent, and/or interest, it's hard to reconcile.
For the parents, that is.
The thing is that many kids know what they're good at, and what they're not
good at. When it comes to football, for instance, most of the middle-schoolers
or freshman already know the one or two kids who are good enough to play on
the varsity team. And be the ones likely to catch the eye of a college recruiter.
Their parents do not.
The rest play because they enjoy it, need the discipline, want to belong to a
team, have dreamed of it since they were 5 or 6, are trying to make their
parents happy, need a varsity sport on their college application, or some
combination thereof.
There is another level of high school athlete, the non-elite, that encompasses
about 99 percent of those who play high school and/or youth sports. They're
the ones whose career in organized athletics will end with their final high school
game. Some of these kids are very talented and skilled. They're able to throw
the ball AND catch the ball, much to the delight of Gisele Bundchen. They can
beat anyone in a footrace. They can bench twice their body weight.
Others possess marginal athletic skills, but make up for it practice, by getting
stronger and quicker, and with on-field effort.
And no matter how much little Billy tries, no matter how much little Billy wants
to play, there's no guarantee that he will play. [Unless he's participating in a
league that mandates or guarantees playing time.] Participating in high school
sports, for instance, is no different than any other education experience. You
learn about winning and losing. You learn about bad calls and bad breaks. And
some kids just aren't good enough to play, at least on a routine basis.
EFTA00360375
Far too many children today are living in a world where they never learn "no."
They don't know how to handle disappointment and failure. Nor do they know
how to react and move on when they don't get their own way. Interacting with
actual people, and not just the screens on their iPhones or iPads, is a
challenge, if not an impossibility. I won't call this "abuse," but it's pretty damn
close.
This is a world constructed by "well-meaning" but dangerously naive parents.
The children know no better because this is what they're taught. Real-life
doesn't come with "Participation Awards," "8th-Place Trophies" or laudatory
bumper-stickers telling everyone that you're able to do your job without
screwing up.
Playing a team sport, like football, with the right coaching can help students
learn life's difficult lessons, including Mick Jagger's truism that "you can't
always get what you want."
The joy of winning, the life-time friendships that are crafted among teammates,
the sense of accomplishment and, for some, that varsity letter, makes the effort
worth the risk. Some kids just aren't good enough to play at any competitive
level . This is not a moral judgment. They're too big, too small, too slow, don't
work hard enough off the field, or aren't physically strong enough to be safe
while being on the field against better athletes who won't take it easy on them.
It sucks when your kid isn't playing. Been there, done that. No reasonable
parent wants to see their child hurt. But no one escapes this life unhurt,
emotionally if not physically.
When these kids move on in life, they are going to get rejected when they apply
for college, turned down when they ask out someone for a date, fail to get the
job they want, the shift they want at work, and taste failure and disappointment
on multiple fronts.
EFTA00360376
Legitimate safety concerns aside, coaches should try to get make sure
everyone gets some playing time. But that should never come at expense of
other kids who are more talented, try harder or spend more time practicing.
My son earned a starting spot senior year on his varsity football team. When it
became evident he wasn't going to play much after the first few weeks of the
season, he made the difficult decision to leave the team. He focused full-time
on his studies and conditioning, so he could qualify for a military scholarship.
The sophomore who replaced him is now playing at a Div. I-AA school on
scholarship. This turned out to be a great decision for my son, who is a third-
year US Army ROTC cadet. Win-win.
Their coach wasn't very good, and would be fired before my son graduated.
This taught my son another important life-lesson: All your bosses aren't going
to be great. Sometimes, leadership is going fail and take everyone down with it.
No child should be forced to play sports. And no child should ever go out for
any team thinking they're going to be guaranteed a spot or playing time, no
matter how loudly their parents complain. There is, however, much on the
upside to playing team high school sports that barely gets mentioned
nowadays.
In that sense, sports is a true metaphor for life. No one is guaranteed "playing"
time in life. For the most part, hard work, effort, planning and desire is
rewarded. The benefits can be wonderful. But it's good to prepared when it
doesn't work out that way.
The OBF column is written by award-winning journalist and Bay State native Bill
Speros. Bill has written and reported for ESPN, CBSSports.Com and was a
sports/deputy sports editor at several metro daily newspapers. Reach Bill on
theOBF Facebook page, on Twitter @realOBF or at his
OBF email Address. Thanks always for reading.
EFTA00360377
Ike Groff I®
,Description:
Description:
This e-mail and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed. If you are not the intended recipient,
you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail and any attachment(s) is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in
error please immediately notify the sender at 203-302-7300 or by replying to this e-mail and delete the e-mail and any attachment(s) from your system. Nothing
herein shall be construed as a financial promotion to any person or persons, or a solicitation or recommendation to buy or sell any security or other investment or to
engage in any trading strategy. Information presented is from sources believed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed to be accurate or complete. This information
should not be taken as an offer nor as a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell securities or other financial instruments. Email transmission cannot be guaranteed to be
secure, timely or error free. Tourmaline Partners, MX may review and store both incoming and outgoing messages. Use by other than the intended recipients is
prohibited.
EFTA00360378
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 099d70ec-a3ca-477b-8e14-f4873fcefb48
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00360372.pdf
- Content Hash
- 77fb6426be45a32daeb56339e4239a28
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026