Youth Sports - by Mike Boyle
 I have a favorite quote that is particularly applicable when it comes to training kids.
“prepare the child for the path, not the path for the child”
The reality is that you will not 
always be there to pave the way for your child, fix things, argue with 
coaches etc. etc. Kids will grow into adults and experience grumpy 
co-workers and mean bosses. Constantly insulating kids from difficult 
situations and consistently cleaning up the mess they create defeats the
 purpose of sport.
Sport is about learning to succeed 
and to fail, not just to succeed. Sports should primarily provide life 
lessons. If the life lesson learned from sport is that Mom and Dad can 
and will fix everything, later life will be difficult. If the lesson is 
that school is something you have to do but sports are what is really 
important than, be prepared for some really big problems down the road.
Youth sports has become all about 
success and scholarships instead of about learning and sportsmanship. I 
have some bad news for all the parents out there. Your child more than 
likely won’t get a scholarship. If he or she does get a scholarship, 
they probably won’t make the pros. I’m not trying to rain on anyone’s 
parade, I’m just a realist.
I have more bad news. Those parents 
who consistently prepare the path for the child by confronting teachers 
and coaches, changing teams, changing leagues and changing schools are 
making life-long losers out of their children.
Remember the purpose of sport is to 
teach kids about success and about failure. The failure lessons may in 
fact be more important than the successes. Everyone wants their child to
 succeed, it’s universal, it’s part of being a parent. However, it is 
when we attempt to alter the normal path that we screw things up. 
Protecting your child from difficult situations only delays lessons that
 are very necessary. Failures experienced at twenty one are far more 
painful than those experienced at ten or twelve. You don’t do your child
 a service by protecting them, you do them a disservice.
Remember you are a parent. You are 
not a friend, a manager, or an agent. Your job is to help create a 
competent, capable adult, not a dysfunctional child.
My mother had a wonderful saying on 
our wall when I was a child. It said “Children learn What they Live”. 
The same one hangs in my kitchen now. If you consistently prepare the 
path for the child you postpone the inevitable. The key is value 
education. Teach your children what is really important. Teach hard 
work, commitment, loyalty and dedication.
The next time you make a decision 
involving your child’s sport or sports, ask yourself “Am I preparing the
 child for the path or the path for the child”. This simple step will 
guide your decision making every time.