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Understanding Youth

23 January 2010 3 Comments

Sometimes my frustration level reaches such a high I do a poor job of communicating my feelings regarding poor training methods with young athletes.

There is a youth volleyball coach that coaches at a local club. She is currently working with 12- and 13-year-old girls. Her practices are absolutely brutal. An extreme volume of suicide runs, shuffles, holds in a defensive stance and more. Yet, none of that has to do with making the young kids better volleyball players.

At a young age it is all about skill development and motor programming. Volleyball isn’t exactly the like an ultra triathlon. It isn’t like the matches at that level are so physically demanding the kids won’t last. Teach the kids skills so they improve their game.  All this coach is doing is giving a bad name to coaching and setting a lot of young girls up for injury.

Here is another one. I recently had a talk with a father who wants his son to play quarterback at the college level. His son is only 13 years old now. This is great. A goal has been set and they are doing things to improve his athletic ability. Most importantly the young boy plays lots of sports- very smart!

This is what bothers me. A high profiled organization that coaches quarterbacks has a system where they take kids from a young age and coach them over several years. The problem I have is they told this young boy and his father he should be taking supplements such as zinc. Why would you be telling a young athlete to take anything like that when the youngster should only be focusing on a whole foods diet with no junk food? It drives me nuts.

Next, they talk to this young boy about working on his bench and squat plus all the other agility tests so they can track him. I don’t have such a problem with the testing, but what are you really going to find out from a 13-year-old who has not gone through puberty yet. If you start testing him and he goes through puberty and has a loss of body control for several months, then he will become frustrated because he is not gaining. Just let the boy workout correctly and gain control of his body. Stop putting pressure on these kids by saying you want to track them to see improvement at such a young age.

When I do my combine clinics I simply want to expose athletes to things they can work on and how to perform the skills. Period! If they train correctly they will improve. If they don’t train correctly they won’t.

I am so tired of seeing coaches who work with young kids destroy the true essence of youth athletic development. It is no wonder our drop out rates are so high.

3 Comments »

  • Francois said:

    Thanks for writing about this again. I could not agree more. I think the main issue here is coaches who coaches young athletes in the same way they have been coached when they last played. For most of these coaches it would be the coaching they received as adults.
    The message needs to be put out there that young athletes are not little adults. And as such needs be coached in a different way as adults/elite athletes.

    Francois Nel
    South Africa

  • Gina said:

    Bravo Lee! Thank you for putting it out there!

  • Gil said:

    Hi there Lee

    Ditto ditto ditto and to you also Francois

    Couldnt agree more – I coach Softball to this age group – and all I ever do is teach/coach Softball skills – these little bodies (some are bigger than others tho – I have a 12yr old with a 16yr old body!) will gain weight – height – body shape/form etc in their own body life cycle and at what ever pace it naturally takes to get them there

    Leave them alone – just let them create themselves coupled with the skills you are able to give them – in whatever code you coach

    Gil Gurney
    New Zealand

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