Coaching Minor Sports: If They Come Back, You Got It Right

25 lessons on helping children build confidence, belonging, and a love for the game

GIVING BACK – Coaching Minor Sports

Coaching minor sports is not about winning games.

It’s about building confidence, creating a sense of belonging, and giving kids a reason to come back.

I always measured my success by how many of the players signed up again the following year.

If they came back, we got it right.

Many of my posts focus on building organizational culture and developing people. This one is one of the ways to build community by volunteering to coach children and youth in minor sports.

These are a few tips and lessons that people shared with me, and I believe made a significant difference in helping me coach and helping the players learn the game, have fun, and learn about teamwork.

Connection Comes First

  1. When coaching or talking to small children, kneel down and speak to them, making eye contact. I believe everyone responds better when you are at their level.

Set the Tone Early

  1. As the coach, always be the first person to a game or practice. You set the tone, you set the stage, and very often, players and parents would start to come early too. Sometimes, the quietest and hardest-working players would be there the earliest, and I would use that time to talk, connect, and provide “tools” they could use immediately to improve.   
  2. Practices are often more important than the games. As a coach, tailor your drills to develop the overall skills of your players, but work on the things that they are not good at. Try to develop your strongest players and your weakest players equally.

Make It Fun, Make It Fair

  1. Everyone gets the same amount of playing time. I coached house league players, and my passion was to teach them how to play individually and as a team, but always to make sure they had fun. I always measured my success by how many of the players signed up again the following year.
  2. Teams sit together.  For games like soccer, have the players who are not playing sit together, teach them they are a team, and encourage them to encourage their teammates. Teamwork and fair play are more than just slogans; they are the basis of everything we did throughout the season.

Teach the Game and the Person

  1. Only part of a coach’s job is to teach them how to play the game; the coach also builds and develops the fundamentals of personal skills, and also how to be part of a team.
  2. Teach positional play, teamwork, and develop skills. Successful players, people, teams, and organizations all play smart and learn small “edges” to succeed. For example, in a practice situation, place two pylons in the corners of the net. Not only do the players trying to score have to beat the goalie, but they also have to hit a pylon to make it count. Teaching players early to keep their head up and aim where the goalie is not sounds simple but watch how many older kids and adults will shoot the puck or the ball right at the goalie.
  3. Do the same drills you ask your players to do and do it with them.  It’s fun, sets a good example, and its important.

Winning, Losing, and Sportsmanship

  1. Teaching the players how to lose well is equally important. I never worried about the score during the game; my focus was on making sure that each player and the team played the game and each shift to the best of their abilities. This approach did not change whether we were ahead or behind. We won as a team and we lost as a team.
  2. Respect the officials. Usually, we had young officials for our games; it is important to encourage them and to realize that they are just kids too. Too many parents and some coaches lose sight of that.

Consistency and Responsibility

  1. My teams always took the ice or the field together. The goalie leads the way. At the end of the game, we shook hands together with the other team, goalie first, coach(s) last.
  2. Bad shifts will happen, mistakes are going to be made, and it’s all part of coaching.

What It All Comes Down To

At the end of the day, that’s what it comes down to.

The players know if you care. The parents know if you care. And it shows in how the team plays, how they treat each other, and whether they come back the next season.

Coaching is not just about teaching a game. It’s about creating an environment where children feel supported, included, and confident enough to keep going.

If they come back, we got it right.

Paul

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *