Youth sports not about cutting out the competition
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Richard Brunette
Regarding Steve Smith’s “Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose”
article in Saturday’s Daily Pilot, in which he relates his youth
baseball coaching experiences and refers to Lolita Harper’s last
“Thinking Allowed” article from May 21, and her comment that
“ ... competitive sports are good for children,” I absolutely
agree with Smith and Harper’s belief that competition in youth sports
is good for children.
You get no argument from me. But Harper and Smith and many parents
of youth sports participants still seem to be missing the main point
of why many youth sports organizations are attempting to de-emphasize
winning, losing and competition.
Smith and many others seem to be locked into the belief that youth
sports organizations are trying to eliminate competition altogether.
No one is trying to eliminate competition. In sports, as in life,
that is impossible. It’s not that competition is bad. Competition can
be healthy and is a part of every game or sport we play. Competition
is a very important part of life, and helps us to improve and be
better at whatever it is we’re doing. But many children are often
taught the exaggerated importance of competition, which is to “be the
best” and to “win at all cost.” Being the best and winning becomes
more important than doing your best, playing fair and having fun. The
focus of youth sports, particularly for children, should be on having
fun while learning the basic skills and rules of the game amid an
environment of healthy competition.
In his articles on youth sports, including this one, Smith also
often states that youth sports programs are handing out awards to too
many kids because they are afraid of hurting someone’s feelings,
inferring that this somehow dilutes the meaning of the awards, making
them no good to anyone.
I fail to make the connection Smith and many others do that this
practice somehow makes these awards any less meaningful. Giving
participation awards is simply a way of acknowledging a good job for
trying, for coming out to play, and that everyone’s input on a team
is meaningful, important and necessary. It also reinforces, in a
small way, that there is no “I” in team.
Too often we recognize only the talented, the most skilled
players, the ones everyone wants on their teams solely because of
their athletic prowess. And we end up with athletes who are spoiled
rotten, thinking they can get away with anything, and that they
deserve everything.
We often forget to reinforce to the average and below-average
athletes that playing and participation, that their attempts and
efforts, do account for something. It is in the trying, in the
effort, and not the winning, that some of life’s most meaningful
lessons are learned.
I’ll take the kid with the heart, the drive and the will to
succeed over the most talented kid every time. Often, it is that kid
who will amount to something, both on the field of athletic
competition as well as in life. This is the reason all the kids are
being congratulated for playing, not because organizations don’t want
to “hurt someone’s feelings.”
Now, for something I absolutely disagree with and cannot believe
Smith truly meant in his article.
In one of his final paragraphs, Smith made the statement, “trying
to make everything ‘fair’ is no good either.”
Shame on you. Are you trying to say that cheating should be
taught or allowed? That fair play and honesty shouldn’t be a major
component of youth sports? That trying to make things fair isn’t
exactly one of the major values that youth sports programs should be
attempting to do and to instill in our children?
I don’t think you were trying to say that. I think many parents
and supporters of youth sports sometimes cannot see the forest for
the trees in their approach to youth sports. Their “competitive
spirit” (some would say “overly-competitive spirit”) blinds them to
the reasons behind why some things are done the way they are done.
Yes, life isn’t fair, and kids will learn this fact all too
quickly. But wouldn’t it be great if life was fair? Wouldn’t it be
amazing if as kids learned that life isn’t fair they also learned
that it is always the right thing to do to try to make things as fair
and honest as possible whenever they had the power to do so,
regardless of the outcome? That yes, maybe playing fair might make
them lose the game, but that by not being fair, or by cheating or by
taking advantage of someone unfairly by not following the rules or
the spirit of honest competition, that winning in the short term
equates to losing in the long run?
I believe, as I’m sure you do, that kids learn invaluable lessons
through participation in youth sports that can translate into their
adult lives. Yes, sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, but isn’t
one of the most valuable lessons kids should be learning in youth
sports a sense of fair play? Maybe the world would have a few less
Enron scandals, Wall Street insider trading convictions, or illegal
corporate manipulations to increase company profits if the folks
responsible for these transgressions were taught the rules of fair
play in childhood, and had incorporated them into their adult lives
and business practices.
Call me naive, call me stupid and say that the world will never
work this way, but I’d like to think that whenever we have the power
to try to make the world a fairer place, that we will choose to do
so, and that maybe, just maybe, this will have an effect on the
children who we have an opportunity to influence and affect through
youth sports.
* RICHARD BRUNETTE is a Costa Mesa resident.
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