Nick* coached my son's travel soccer team one fall season. The season consisted of eight games, one every Saturday afternoon. The policy of the Massachusetts Youth Soccer Association was for every child to play a minimum of fifty percent of each game.
Seems fair enough, right? Think again. The way it worked on Nick's team was for six of the players (one of them his son) to play between seventy-five and one hundred percent of the game while the remaining twelve boys (including two of my sons) shared the remaining time. Sure, they all played fifty percent of each game, but thirty-five minutes, instead of the upwards of seventy the "favored six" played each week.
The Coach’s Favorite
One of the players seemed to get special consideration. Ricky was a strong, natural athlete: big, fast and tall. Yet, despite the fact that he had never played travel soccer, missed all but two of the team's sixteen weekday practices!! due to other sport team commitments, he never came out of the game! Ever!
The favoritism that Nick showed Ricky wasn't lost on the parents, many of who grumbled on the sidelines about how unfair it was that he was always playing.
Building Resentment
It wasn't lost on the players either. Most players were essentially sharing a position with another boy and by the end of the season, each had played the equivalent of four full games, while the "lucky" six had played almost eight full games. Yet, each family paid the full price for their sons to be on the team.
Since it is generally agreed that the more one plays, the better one tends to get, not only did playing the less developed players less than the more skilled and experienced players make it harder for them to catch up to the other boys, but, worse, it made being on the team less fun and tended to build resentment among the "half nots" towards the full time players which was clearly destructive of team chemistry and cohesion.
Playing, Not Winning, Should Come First
Dr. Milton Fujita, a California-based child-adolescent psychiatrist, has seen plenty of children harmed by participation in sports. "Organizing games for children is fine as long as it's organized so all the kids who want to play actually get to play," he says. When the whole issue of winning becomes primary, then participation suffers. "Winning is kind of inherent. You can't really de-emphasize it. But winning at costs is something that needs to be looked at very seriously," says Fujita.
Why The "Best" Players Don't "Deserve" More Playing Time
Giving the "best" players more playing time than the so-called "weaker" players may help a team win more games, but at what cost? Some boys never missed practice, yet only played the minimum. Others hardly ever, or never, came to practice, yet were "rewarded" for their lack of commitment with extra playing time because the coach wanted to win. A major league superstar earning $10 million a year and leading the league in batting and home runs deserves more playing time than a kid fresh up from the minors with a batting average less than his weight. Saying that a player deserves more playing time because he is leading the Little League™ "Majors" in hitting simply doesn't wash. Every child deserves an equal chance to play and learn new skills.
Coaches: Don't Put All Your Eggs In One Basket
Playing the stronger players more isn't necessarily a surefire recipe for future success either. In Nick's case, it appeared he played Ricky 100% of the time at the expense of the other players in the hopes of developing him into a top-notch player for the town's soccer program. It didn't work out as he planned: The next year Ricky quit soccer to play football!
I have seen the same thing happen in other sports. One spring, a JV lacrosse coach used one player exclusively on the power play all season, presumably to groom him to play for the varsity the next year. He clearly was building the team around this boy's strength. Problem was, the player transferred to a private school the next fall and what could have been a stellar Varsity lacrosse team fell apart. Too bad the coach hadn't given some of the players who were returning a chance to develop more as a powerful and cohesive team they had promised to be before a coach zapped their spirit.
Many high school freshman and junior varsity teams that adopt a win- at-all-costs approach may win more games but end up hurting the varsity in the long run. Those that put player development before winning end up doing what they are supposed to do: develop the largest possible player pool to "feed" the varsity.
How many times have you watched as a starting player suffer an injury during a tournament and is replaced by a player that hasn't had any playing time? Chances are the new player won't perform as well in such a pressure situation than had he had more playing time during the season.
How To Ensure Equal Playing Time: Making A Grid
To ensure equal playing time, your child's coach should:
Prepare a detailed substitution pattern or "grid" before each game.
Trying to keep track of how much each child has played during a game is
next to impossible. It is much easier to do it the night before, when
the coach can set up a balanced lineup with a mix of more and less
experienced players. Writing out the lineup in advance also makes it
easier to move players around so they can play different positions.
Locking players into set positions for every game may increase the
team's (coaches) chances of winning, but as I learned with one of my
own son's in his first season of T-ball [1], it can take the fun out of the game in a hurry!
Tell the players before the game starts when and what positions they are going to play. The coach should make sure that everyone gets to start an equal number of games.
Stick to the game plan, even if the team is losing. The coach should resist the temptation, in the heat of competition, to scrap the substitution grid if her team is losing to keep the "best" players in the game in order to try to win the game. Remember: Most kids play sports to have fun [2], not to win.
Equal Playing Time: A Winning Formula
Deciding on a substitution pattern in advance, and then following it during the game, creates a win-win situation for players, parents and the coach:
Players
(except, perhaps, for the spoiled star who feels it is his or
birthright to play the whole game) because they will have more fun,
won't be resentful or jealous of each other, will play together more as
a team, and be less selfish;
Parents (again,
with the exception of those who feel their son or daughter is so much
more talented that they are entitled to more playing time at the
expense of the weaker players, or those who value winning above all
else) because they will know that their kids are being treated fairly,
so there won't be any need to confront the coach after the game or on
the phone about a lack of playing time for their child; and
The Coach because (a) she can concentrate on watching the game instead of thinking about the next substitution, or worrying whether she has forgotten to give Judy enough playing time; and (b) because the players on the sidelines won't be constantly pestering her; and (c) will not be allowed to show favoritism for their own child.
Tip For Parents
At the pre-season meeting, ask the coach if he or she plans to give players equal playing time and offer to help set up a substitution grid and keep track of the time with a stopwatch. Ask the coach to put the playing schedule in a place where all can view it.
If you notice your child sitting on the sidelines during a game, approach the parent who has been designated as a go-between parents and coach, to relay a question to the coach. Don't automatically assume that the reason your child isn't playing is that the coach is playing favorites. Your child may have told the coach that she is not feeling up to playing in the game but would rather cheer for her teammates, or has forgotten her asthma inhaler, or has an injury.
Tip For Coaches
Don’t assume that your top players are always going to be there. At the sub-varsity level and below, developing all your players insures that someone will be able to step in if a player gets injured, becomes ineligible, switches to another sport, moves away or decides to enroll in a different school.
Tip For Kids
Remind the coach that if all kids got equal playing time, all would have an equal chance to develop new skills and the team would be stronger for it!
Links:
[1] https://momsteam.com/node/743
[2] https://momsteam.com/node/726