How much is too much?
Posted: Tue Nov 05, 2013 12:46 pm
Interesting read:
http://www.startribune.com/sports/230597801.html
http://www.startribune.com/sports/230597801.html
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Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?SCBlueLiner wrote:I'm a die hard hockey guy and even I think those parents are little much. If the end goal is for this kid to be the best hockey player she can be, which I would assume it is, then my advice would be to pump the brakes a bit and pull back on her training. She'll be better off in the long run with less hockey specific training and more athlete training. Sign her up for soccer or lacrosse or softball to complement her hockey training. Give the kid a change of seasons and scenery.
One thing I've learned is that if you take away something a kid really wants they get hungrier and want it more. If you spoon feed her all the hockey she wants she'll come to expect it and get complacent. Make her hungry for it by withholding it from her a little bit.
I don't doubt the parent's dedication to their daughter, and it isn't all hockey as they are also making time for her to be in Girl Scouts. I just think they are going about this the wrong way to get the results they desire. You've got to have balance, no matter what it is in life, you have to have balance.
I had this thought ... but at this age don't most kids want to please? Do the kids know any better? If that is all they know, that's all they know.puckbreath wrote:Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?SCBlueLiner wrote:I'm a die hard hockey guy and even I think those parents are little much. If the end goal is for this kid to be the best hockey player she can be, which I would assume it is, then my advice would be to pump the brakes a bit and pull back on her training. She'll be better off in the long run with less hockey specific training and more athlete training. Sign her up for soccer or lacrosse or softball to complement her hockey training. Give the kid a change of seasons and scenery.
One thing I've learned is that if you take away something a kid really wants they get hungrier and want it more. If you spoon feed her all the hockey she wants she'll come to expect it and get complacent. Make her hungry for it by withholding it from her a little bit.
I don't doubt the parent's dedication to their daughter, and it isn't all hockey as they are also making time for her to be in Girl Scouts. I just think they are going about this the wrong way to get the results they desire. You've got to have balance, no matter what it is in life, you have to have balance.
You'd be surprised, what they think, and what they know, if only asked.DrGaf wrote:I had this thought ... but at this age don't most kids want to please? Do the kids know any better? If that is all they know, that's all they know.puckbreath wrote:Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?SCBlueLiner wrote:I'm a die hard hockey guy and even I think those parents are little much. If the end goal is for this kid to be the best hockey player she can be, which I would assume it is, then my advice would be to pump the brakes a bit and pull back on her training. She'll be better off in the long run with less hockey specific training and more athlete training. Sign her up for soccer or lacrosse or softball to complement her hockey training. Give the kid a change of seasons and scenery.
One thing I've learned is that if you take away something a kid really wants they get hungrier and want it more. If you spoon feed her all the hockey she wants she'll come to expect it and get complacent. Make her hungry for it by withholding it from her a little bit.
I don't doubt the parent's dedication to their daughter, and it isn't all hockey as they are also making time for her to be in Girl Scouts. I just think they are going about this the wrong way to get the results they desire. You've got to have balance, no matter what it is in life, you have to have balance.
Sticky wicket if you ask me.
The problem with that question is, the parents that are crazed always claim "that's what they want to do, I'm not pushing them."Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?
That's fine, ask them what they want, but a parent also needs to set limits. My kid would want to eat candy for every meal. Should I let him? It's what he wants. Or are you saying the kid doesn't want to play hockey, it's the parents? I'm working form the perspective the kid wants it, it's just the parents are feeding her too much of it.puckbreath wrote:Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?SCBlueLiner wrote:I'm a die hard hockey guy and even I think those parents are little much. If the end goal is for this kid to be the best hockey player she can be, which I would assume it is, then my advice would be to pump the brakes a bit and pull back on her training. She'll be better off in the long run with less hockey specific training and more athlete training. Sign her up for soccer or lacrosse or softball to complement her hockey training. Give the kid a change of seasons and scenery.
One thing I've learned is that if you take away something a kid really wants they get hungrier and want it more. If you spoon feed her all the hockey she wants she'll come to expect it and get complacent. Make her hungry for it by withholding it from her a little bit.
I don't doubt the parent's dedication to their daughter, and it isn't all hockey as they are also making time for her to be in Girl Scouts. I just think they are going about this the wrong way to get the results they desire. You've got to have balance, no matter what it is in life, you have to have balance.
JSR, we are on the exact same page and I think saying the exact same things in different ways.JSR wrote:Here is the way I see it. I actually have no doubt this kid loves hockey, or any kid that resembles this story. I also actually have no doubt that if asked even properly the kid may even say they want to do more. Here is where a parent needs to bring balance though, see the problem is if you ask a 7 year old they will tell you they love ice cream sundaes, and if you ask them they will tell you they would love to have ice cream sundaes for every meal, and maybe have a side of soda and doritos with it for every meal. A 7 year old might also want to play video games 24/7 in between those ice cream sundaes and they will tell you they love it, and it's all they want to do, and they may say they never get tired of it.... BUT as a good parent do you let them eat ice cream sundaes for every meal and play video games 24/7.... No, because you know that even too much of a good thing is still too much, so you need to provide balance for them, even athletically, at a young age, even if they don't want to play soccer you should make them try it for one season, then try football, and baseball etc.... all the while still letting them play winter hockey and SOME off season hockey. Then as they become older and enter different development stages you can increase the amount of hockey based on their passion and dedication to the game.... I've seen hundreds of athletes go through the process and I have literally never seen a really well rounded athlete fall very far behind his year round one sport crazy friends, and in fact I see the well rounded athletes usually surpass them when they reach high school age and start specializing a little later because they have a bigger set of tools to pull from, from playing all those different sports etc...... JMHO based on what I've seen over the years as a coach, parent and player.
1. I didn't say any of the things you state in your reply's first paragraph.SCBlueLiner wrote:That's fine, ask them what they want, but a parent also needs to set limits. My kid would want to eat candy for every meal. Should I let him? It's what he wants. Or are you saying the kid doesn't want to play hockey, it's the parents? I'm working form the perspective the kid wants it, it's just the parents are feeding her too much of it.puckbreath wrote:Or here's a novel idea; why not ask the kid what *they* want to do, sports, non-sports, and everything in between ?SCBlueLiner wrote:I'm a die hard hockey guy and even I think those parents are little much. If the end goal is for this kid to be the best hockey player she can be, which I would assume it is, then my advice would be to pump the brakes a bit and pull back on her training. She'll be better off in the long run with less hockey specific training and more athlete training. Sign her up for soccer or lacrosse or softball to complement her hockey training. Give the kid a change of seasons and scenery.
One thing I've learned is that if you take away something a kid really wants they get hungrier and want it more. If you spoon feed her all the hockey she wants she'll come to expect it and get complacent. Make her hungry for it by withholding it from her a little bit.
I don't doubt the parent's dedication to their daughter, and it isn't all hockey as they are also making time for her to be in Girl Scouts. I just think they are going about this the wrong way to get the results they desire. You've got to have balance, no matter what it is in life, you have to have balance.
My post was two fold.
First, from a strictly hockey development perspective, if the goal of the player and parents is to be the best hockey player possible than I think they are doing the wrong things to achieve that goal. Overtraining can lead to injuries. There's the fatigue factor. A well-rounded, straight up stud athlete is going to be a better hockey player than a hockey drone. Etc, etc. I've seen kids play harder the last game of the season than mid-season because they knew it was the end. That's it, no more games. It's the carrot on the stick theory. Keep the carrot dangling in front of the athlete, don't give it to them until they are too full to eat.
Second, I think having balance in life is a good thing. The kid is 7. Heck, it's a grind for college athletes to dedicate almost every day to their sport. Imagine being 7 and doing it.
Sara's coach said "She is real comfortable, (skating both) backwards and forward." I think that is the same report Gretzky received as a 7 year old from his coach so yeah, she is pretty good.O-townClown wrote:Is she any good?
Boomerang, I love that first part and will borrow it. Good stuff.boomerang wrote:I think there are two ways to play hockey beyond high school--natural talent or be crazy enough to put in enough work to get there.
My brother played baseball with a kid that everyone was SURE was going to be a major leaguer some day. Puberty hit, and he ended up being average and is now a county attorney. No college ball, even. I grew up playing with the neighborhood boys, and there was one kid that was pretty good, but didn't seem like anything special, and he ended up playing a number of years for the Twins.