My daughter had two great privileges growing up: she attended a pair of first - rate private schools; and
she played youth sports for many years at a competitive level.
«When
I played youth sports it was repetition and repetition,» he says.
«
I played youth sports in Henderson from 5 years old to high school, where my dad was able to coach me for several seasons,» DiNicola says.
«
I played youth sports without any fear of criticism other than the coach maybe telling you something but you didn't fear that because when I went home it was dinner and on to my brother's activity or whatever,» Mattingly said.
Injuries may be part of the game when you are
playing youth sports, but that does not mean that you have to accept them as an inevitability for your child.
As soon as children start to
play youth sports, they begin to learn the basics of sportsmanship for kids.
Don't assume that because your child
plays youth sports, he's meeting that minimum.
It's not enough to just say these things are benefits of
playing youth sports.
Really, I think if you look at the bottom line, what are
we playing youth sports for?
If your kid
plays youth sports, eventually you're both going to be faced with disappointment.
Not exact matches
Other investments have included
Sports Illustrated Play, a venture devoted to youth sports, and the acquisition of inVNT, which manages live events for comp
Sports Illustrated
Play, a venture devoted to
youth sports, and the acquisition of inVNT, which manages live events for comp
sports, and the acquisition of inVNT, which manages live events for companies.
Helping the world
play smarter and live more, SportsEngine, Inc., an NBC
Sports Group company, is the leading provider of Sport Life Management web software and mobile applications for youth, amateur, and professional s
Sports Group company, is the leading provider of Sport Life Management web software and mobile applications for
youth, amateur, and professional
sportssports.
Youth sports primarily exist as a vehicle for our children to
play.
Orr's aching knees, unfortunately, limit the times when he can
play like the
youth who revolutionized the
sport in the late 1960s.
In today's ultra-competitive,
youth sport landscape, I.D. camps have become a big piece of the puzzle for those who seek to
play at the collegiate level.
Pass to
Play: Annual
Sports Physical Event for
Youth Athletes.
Now more and more
youth sports teams are
playing on Sunday, when the fields are easier to get and parents are available to drive.
As we sign our kids up for
youth sports each year, as do another 42 million American parents, I suggest that we keep this thing in perspective; trying to understand why it is that our child wants to
play and why is that we, the parents, want them to
play.
Pass to
Play: Fourth Annual
Sports Physical Event for
Youth Athletes Are you ready for the season?
While the mission of Sac LAX is to develop players, supportive teammates and honorable opponents, Sac LAX's other purpose is simple; provide an opportunity for kids to
play and enjoy the game of lacrosse, to empower
youth and give them a
sport in which to express themselves, have fun, make friends and stay healthy.
@shard, I think Thatcher
played her part in producing an unproductive environment for
youth sport and activities.
The real problem is much more fundamental: all too often
youth sports today is not about kids
playing sports, it is about how adults are manipulating the system to serve their own interests: the game within the game.
Years before
sport concussions took over as the predominant
youth sports safety issue of the 21st centry, we were highlighting the critical and unique role that ATs
play in recognizing, evaluating and managing concussions.
How you manage both the ups and the inevitable downs will
play a large role in whether your child has a successful
youth sports experience.
Last Friday, I participated in a roundtable discussion in Washington, D.C. conducted by the Aspen Institute's
Sports & Society program called «
Playing Safety: The Future of
Youth Football?»
Director of Smart Teams
Play Safe, Publisher of MomsTEAM.com, and author of Home Team Advantage: The Critical Role of Mothers in
Youth Sports (HarperCollins), and Brooke is also a founding member of the UN International Safeguards of Children in
Sports global coalition.
If your child
plays a contact or collision
sport, whether at the
youth, middle school or high school level, odds are that at some point in their athletic career they will suffer a concussion.
If your child
plays a contact or collision
sport, whether at the
youth, middle school or high school level, chances are they will suffer a concussion at some point in their athletic career.
The summit brought together over fifty of the nation's largest
youth - serving and
youth -
sports organizations, as well as child development,
youth sports and prevention experts, to discuss strategies for protecting children from sexual abuse while
playing sports.
Because studies show that one - off concussion education isn't enough to change concussion symptom reporting behavior, Step Three in the SmartTeams
Play SafeTM #TeamUp4 ConcussionSafetyTM game plan calls for coaches, athletes, athletic trainers, team doctors (and, at the
youth and high school level, parents) to attend a mandatoryconcussion safety meeting before every
sports season to learn in detail about the importance of immediate concussion symptom reporting, not just in minimizing the risks concussions pose to an athlete's short - and long - term health, but in increasing the chances for individual and team success.
The well - publicized lawsuits by former players against the N.F.L., the suicide of Junior Seau, a «Chicken Little - sky is falling» mentality by some prominent concussion experts and former athletes, some of whom suggest that the
sport is simply too dangerous to be
played at all at the
youth level, and continuing research on the short - and long - term effects of concussion on cognitive function and brain health, have created a pretty toxic environment for the
sport.
«I am excited about the opportunity the Smart Teams
Play Safe summit and the SmartTEAM program have given me to work with some of the nation's leading
youth sports safety experts in developing and testing a set of best practices.
Director of Smart Teams
Play Safe, Publisher of MomsTEAM.com, and author of Home Team Advantage: The Critical Role of Mothers in
Youth Sports (HarperCollins), Brooke is also a founding member of the UN International Safeguards of Children in
Sports global coalition.
Not surprisingly, the media feeding frenzy has resulted, anecdotal evidence suggests, in a sharp drop in
youth football registrations for this fall's season, with parents fearful that
playing football will almost inevitably expose their kid to an unreasonable risk of injury (which, of course, is patently untrue; more than 7 million kids in the U.S. currently
play football, very few of whom, statistically speaking and despite a few well - publicized cases - are likely to end up committing suicide because of the hits they sustained
playing the
sport, and millions upon countless millions who have
played football over the past century without apparent ill effect).
If you are involved in a private
youth sports program which
plays on publicly - owned fields, diamonds, rinks, or courts, or are in local government, you have probably been hearing a lot lately about what is being dubbed the «power of the permit»: the authority municipalities and towns around the country are using to condition use of their athletic facilities by private programs on compliance with state concussion safety laws from which they would otherwise be exempt, or, in an increasing number of instances, to fill gaps in their state's law.
When I presented the next year in Atlantic City to recreational department directors gathered for the annual meeting of the New Jersey Parks and Recreation Directors» Association, I spoke to the critical role they could
play in improving
sports safety by proactively exercising the power of the permit to require
youth sport coaches to receive more training in first aid, CPR, and the signs and symptoms of a concussion.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 25-43-103 requires each public and private middle and high school to require each coach of a
youth athletic activity that involves interscholastic
play to complete an annual concussion recognition education course.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 18 -2-25a (2013) requires the governing authority of each public and nonpublic elementary school, middle school, junior high school and high school, working through guidance approved by the department of health and communicated through the department of education, to do the following: (A) Adopt guidelines and other pertinent information and forms as approved by the department of health to inform and educate coaches, school administrators,
youth athletes and their parents or guardians of the nature, risk and symptoms of concussion and head injury, including continuing to
play after concussion or head injury; (B) Require annual completion by all coaches, whether the coach is employed or a volunteer, and by school athletic directors of a concussion recognition and head injury safety education course program approved by the department.
Concussion or
Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 20 -2-324.1 (2013) requires each local board of education, administration of a nonpublic school and governing body of a charter school to adopt and implement a concussion management and return to
play policy that includes the following components: 1) an information sheet to all
youth athletes» parents or legal guardians informing them of the nature and risk of concussion and head injury, 2) requirement for removal from
play and examination by a health care provider for those exhibiting symptoms of a concussion during a game, competition, tryout or practice and 3) for those
youth that have sustained a concussion (as determined by a health care provider), the coach or other designated personnel shall not permit the
youth athlete to return to
play until they receive clearance from a health care provider for a full or graduated return to
play.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: SB189 (2011) requires the governing authority of each public and nonpublic school to provide information to all coaches, officials, volunteers,
youth athletes and their parents / guardians about the nature and risk of concussion and head injury, including continuing to
play after a concussion or head injury.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: HB108 (2011) requires the governing body of each
sport or recreational organization to develop guidelines and other pertinent information and forms to inform and educate
youth athletes and their parents of the nature and risk of concussion and brain injury, including continuing to
play after a suspected concussion or brain injury.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: RCW 28A.600 (2009) requires each school district's board of directors to work with the Washington interscholastic activities association to develop guidelines to inform and and educate coaches,
youth athletes, and their parents and / or guardians of the nature and risk of concussion and head injury including continuing to
play after concussion or head injury.
Concussion and
Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 167.765 requires the department of health and senior services to work with various organizations (outlined in the statute) to promulgate rules which develop guidelines, pertinent information, and forms to educate coaches,
youth athletes, and their parents and guardians of the nature and risk of concussion and brain injury including continuing to
play after concussion or brain injury.
Simply put, as I have been saying for years, we need to put the word «
youth,» «games,» and «
play» back in
youth sports.
Brooke de Lench is Founding Executive Director of MomsTEAM Institute, Inc., Director of Smart Teams
Play Safe, Publisher of MomsTEAM.com, author of Home Team Advantage: The Critical Role of Mothers in
Youth Sports (HarperCollins), and Producer / Director / Creator of the PBS documentary, «The Smartest Team: Making High School Football Safer.»
Yet they may pale in comparison to a match - up which
plays out daily on the fields, pitches, courts and gyms of
youth sports: the rivalry between separated or divorced
sports parents.
while far from conclusive, has raised alarm bells among some in the
youth sports community and prompted at least one leading concussion expert, Dr. Robert Cantu, MomsTeam's concussion expert emeritus, to recently recommend that kids not
play such
sports until middle or high school, at least under current rules.
It's also seems to be
playing out in my domain of
youth sports.
Push for the formation of a Parent Advisory Group (PAC) consisting of parents with children currently
playing in the program to provide the Board of Directors with feedback (both negative and positive) from other parents; the input helps to insure that its decisions are reflective of, and responsive to, a broad cross-section of the
youth sports community.
As The Korey Stringer Institute and University of Connecticut's Doug Casa argued during his presentation at MomsTEAM Institute of
Youth Sports Safety's Smart Teams Play Safe summit last year, youth sports safety policies should be developed and implemented by sports medicine professio
Youth Sports Safety's Smart Teams Play Safe summit last year, youth sports safety policies should be developed and implemented by sports medicine professi
Sports Safety's Smart Teams
Play Safe summit last year,
youth sports safety policies should be developed and implemented by sports medicine professio
youth sports safety policies should be developed and implemented by sports medicine professi
sports safety policies should be developed and implemented by
sports medicine professi
sports medicine professionals.