Issues with a high school coach

I see two valid choices and one garbage.

Garbage: let it go and let your son stay on that team.

Valid: Go to the school about it.

Valid: Have your son play a different sport or switch schools.

You don't have to pick every fight, but if you pick it, no how far you are willing to go and what you will do if pushed that far. Then act accordingly.
 
I think the first move is talk to the coach. You can escalate later to other options. I'm assuming you won't just go rant. If you bring up a problem, suggest a way for him to do something besides what he's been doing. Suggest in a nonthreatening manner. That shouldn't be a big deal to the coach if he's interested in being better.

I think most coaches are pretty bad at coaching, and we don't pay them much. I think most try, but most probably coach the way they were coached. In other words, they aren't necessarily good at it just like people at other jobs. He may be wanting to improve. You won't know if you don't talk.

Kids almost never want their parents to take up for them. I think your wife's instincts are pretty good.
 
I hate reading things like this, because we've gone through it twice recently. My son decided not to play baseball his senior year of high school because the coach is arrogant beyond belief, disrespectful, and expects my son to pitch every other day. He decided he'd rather work. Sad that one person in that position can ruin it for so many. My daughter quit cheer after her junior year because the coach kept changing stunt groups days before a competition and my kid got dropped twice. She tried to express why she was upset and concerned and the coach told her to "grow up and think of the team". Well she did and they've gone from winning multiple comps to finishing last in the last two.

I hope it doesn't come to quitting because my kids loved their sports and competed for over a decade before losing their passion because of a bad coach
 
I was a school district employee for 25 years, and was required by law to report any child abuse, by anyone, in the district or the community.

Also, if necessary, most school districts have an anonymous portal for people to report any abuse.
 
Ignore it, nothing you mentioned is a big deal in any way. World is a hard unforgiving place. Its our job as parents to harden our kids so they’re impervious to it when they are no longer under our wing.
 
I will take a shot. I have been an coach of basketball and baseball the past eight years. Previously played at the highschool and collegiate level.

Your first point is valid if true. Making fun of a kid with a disability is out of bounds.

To the other statements. It sounds like a coach trying to motivate kids. Not everyone does that is a positive way. Sometimes that can't be achieved in a touchy Feely way. No disrespect, if your son is starting as a Sophmore, then that gives me pause. You don't mention what level of play 1a, or 6a. Either could have a Sophmore not be able to handle Varsity basketball on an emotional/mental level. Even if the physical skills are there. Younger players tend to run to parents when the mental side of the game gets tough. Usually the kids want their parents to fight their emotional battles for them. That usually ends with the kid quitting.

I am not saying this is a good coach. Over my years of playing and coaching I have watched parents ruin more athletes than coaches. The modern day coddling, egos, prodigy parents, and my kid does no wrong is hard to stomach sometimes.
I would suggest going to all practices. Observe for yourself what goes on. Teach your kids to be resilient. Teach your kids to work hard and take all criticism. It will serve them well when they get into the real world with zero rules!!

Good luck out there!!
 
Sorry meant to reference playing time. Playing time at a Varsity level should be the best match up for a team. That changes throughout a game and season. Promising minutes is no bueno. Minutes are always earned through wirking hard in practice and executing in games. Hustle , mentsl toughness and grit can help too!! That should hsve been covered in a parent meeting.
 
I see two valid choices and one garbage.

Garbage: let it go and let your son stay on that team.

Valid: Go to the school about it.

Valid: Have your son play a different sport or switch schools.

You don't have to pick every fight, but if you pick it, no how far you are willing to go and what you will do if pushed that far. Then act accordingly.
Switching schools is valid?
 
Had a issue with an educator getting physical with my son. Principal swept it under the rug because she said she was already short staffed. We escalate it to the school board and superintendent. The lady was fired and trespassed from the campus as soon as the video was reviewed.

After all of this the school had a personal vendetta against my son and he was written up for anything and everything. We ended up needing to transfer schools.

So I'd guess I'd give some thought to your son's wishes and rather look into volunteering to help keep an eye on things.
In middle school, one day I walked into band class and the instructor's laptop screen was open and in path of the door. I don't know why but as I was walking by, I completely spaced out and appeared to be staring at the laptop screen.

The band teacher walks into class and straight up boots me in the ass. I don't remember it hurting, but it completely shocked me and I started crying.

Class was dead silent and scared for the entire duration of class.
 
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