Wednesday, February 22, 2012 Login Register  Search

"No lines, No laps, No Lectures" - Karl Dewazien

 Parenting Athletes

Minimize

 

 
 
Parenting Athletes for Lifelong Success
The 8 Winning Practices for Parenting Athletes
Pam Richmond Champagne, MCC, from The Sports Parenting Coach
 
“As a parent you have the most powerful and long-lasting influence on your child. As you
understand and apply the following eight concepts, you support your child’s sports and lifelong
success. They are called “winning practices” for a reason. Athletes must first understand a key concept or technique. Then they must implement it and continue to practice it until the skill becomes second nature. So it is with these eight winning practices for parenting your athlete.
 
Winning Practice 1: Support your athlete emotionally.
Emotional support is the bedrock for developing a child’s self-acceptance and self-assurance –
critical traits for long-term sports and life success. Children are naturally sensitive to the emotions
and feelings of their parents (and coaches). They are adept at “reading” emotional undertones,
not to mention more obvious body language. Make sure your child never feels they must earn
your approval or love on the athletic field.
 
Parents who lose control or push hard create too much pressure. This contributes to unhappiness
and poorer performance. Michele Uhlfelder, one of the best female lacrosse players in the world
and currently coach at Stanford, says having a pushy parent stacks the cards against an athlete.
 
Coaches don’t want to have to deal with difficult situations so a talented young athlete can get
turned away for this reason alone. Pressure exists naturally in competition. While it’s fair to expect your child athlete to put out their best effort, it’s your job to relax the pressure.
 
Winning Practice 2: Allow your athlete to guide the sports experience.
It’s a great idea to expose your athlete to champions in their sport and point out what’s possible.
Children rely on parents and coaches to expand their vision. However, a child knows when a
parent takes over their goals and claims the victories and losses as their own. If you care more
than your athlete does, helpful encouragement will turn into detrimental pushing in a heartbeat.
Let your child lead the way by their words and their actions. This will reveal their commitment.
Have you asked your child what her sports goals are? Invest your time and energy equal to, but
no greater than, the interest and effort that your child demonstrates.
 
Keep in mind this comment in “U.S. News & World Report” (6/7/04): “Fewer than 5 percent of
children can be called elite athletes.” Of course, even less go on to play at collegiate or
professional levels.
 
Winning Practice 3: Champion your athlete.
Knowing how to champion your athlete will do more to ignite and sustain your child’s enthusiasm
and persistence, especially through the tough periods, than anything else. It’s a natural human
tendency to focus on and express what’s wrong rather than what’s right. We do it to ourselves
when we self-criticize, or when we zero in on everything we didn’t get done rather than what we
accomplished.
 
Championing skills go beyond mere compliments and typical praise. You can champion actions,
progress, dreams, traits, commitments, gifts, and qualities. To champion most powerfully, speak
to a deeper level. Become more aware of and acknowledge the qualities and character traits that
your child demonstrates.
 
These qualities might include persistence and determination, focus, resilience, team spirit, or
honesty, to name just a few. Whether or not your youngster wins a particular competitive event,
nurturing these kinds of qualities in your child will make a lifelong difference.
 
Winning Practice 4: Respect your child’s individuality.
It never works to compare your child with another. Each child has unique strengths, limitations,
temperament, and natural abilities. For example, the ideal temperament for ice skating would be
different than for football or soccer. Also, some kids are more naturally competitive than others.
Children mature physically and emotionally at different times so expectations need to be adjusted
accordingly. Some coaches say parents are often surprised that kids who mature early physically
do not always outshine the late bloomers, who had to work harder at their sport.
 
Winning Practice 5: Teach and model the bigger picture continually.
Participation in sports is potentially an amazing vehicle for growing character, honing key life
skills, and teaching important life lessons. But it’s only a potentiality, not a certainty. Sports can
also pervert character and impair long-term well being and lifelong success.
 
What do you want your athlete to learn through participating their sport? What core qualities and
sense of ethics do you want her to develop? Being crystal clear about all of this and weaving
these topics into conversations with your child – as well as demonstrating them yourself – will
provide a strong foundation for your child’s future.
 
Many athletes over-train and cause themselves extremes of fatigue, strain, and pain. We hear of
athletes, often teenagers, on steroids or struggling with eating disorders. In the bigger picture,
over the span of a precious lifetime, what will it cost these athletes?
 
As adults we hopefully have a broader life perspective, a wiser patience. You can help your child
athlete understand that in sports, as in life, any particular loss, or victory for that matter, is small
and relatively insignificant. Even seemingly devastating slumps can be put into a healthy
perspective.
 
Winning Practice 6: Focus on mastery and enjoyment rather than winning.
Whether its sports or a business situation, it is best to focus 100 percent where you have the full
control. Winning the game or tournament can be an inspirational end goal, but it is not the ideal
focus! There are many elements not under an athlete’s control.
 
An athlete needs to focus on what he has control over -- his development process, skill mastery,
and attitude. In doing this, tension decreases and the increased relaxation and enjoyment will
boost performance.
 
Notice what thoughts are upper most in your mind. As a parent you can model focusing on
mastery and enjoyment. Simply help your child stay focused on the process rather than the
outcome. Be interested in what’s she’s learning about herself and what skills she’s developing.
Find out what he enjoys about his sport.
This is a key concept for coaches, as well as parents, to understand and implement.
 
Winning Practice 7: Honor your family unit.
Sports might involve a sizeable chunk of your family’s time, especially if you have more than one
child participating or you are involved in multiple sports. No doubt it’s a challenge, yet find a way
to commit to some family time that focuses on other interests. Let your child and yourself have
regular unstructured, unscheduled time.
 
The mother of world champion tennis pros Venus and Serena Williams says they never talk
tennis away from practice and matches. Could this be at least a part of the secret to their amazing success?
 
It’s easy to spread your child and yourself too thin by signing up for lots of extracurricular
activities. There’s no set rule here except to know your child’s natural energy level, capacity, and
level of desire. Be on the alert for any signs of burnout, fatigue, or stress. At the early signs, have
a talk and make a change.
 
Winning Practice 8: Build supportive relationships with your sports family (coaches, refs, administrators, other parents, and child’s sport mates).
 
You’re all in this together, bonded by common goals. Mutual respect and support pays big
dividends. With this in mind it’s possible to communicate concerns to coaches and other sports
officials in a respectful, thoughtful manner.
 
Some ways to be a positive influence include letting the coach do the coaching and addressing
any concerns with administrators, coaches, or others privately. You can model upbeat behaviors
such as cheering for the good efforts of all team members and refraining from spreading
negativity. Instead, go directly to the source of any problem or upset and seek to resolve it in a
respectful manner.
 
If another parent is talking or acting negatively, don’t feed it any energy – starve it. Steer the

conversation in another direction, or simply move away. Keep your conversation with your child continually focused on the positive. The more harmonious the relationships in your extended sports family are, the more “happy success” is made possible.