- Jun 8, 2016
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What I meant was that behavior at the 14U level isn't a "her problem" it is a "them problem" e.g. her teammates and the coaches allowing it...That’s why I’m asking for help!
What I meant was that behavior at the 14U level isn't a "her problem" it is a "them problem" e.g. her teammates and the coaches allowing it...That’s why I’m asking for help!
If I’m honest- I see the problem more outside softball- but I’m hoping if she can gain the confidence in softball it will trickle into other areas.What I meant was that behavior at the 14U level isn't a "her problem" it is a "them problem" e.g. her teammates and the coaches allowing it...
I gotcha..but 13 still isn't that old. I bet she comes into her own as she gets older.If I’m honest- I see the problem more outside softball- but I’m hoping if she can gain the confidence in softball it will trickle into other areas.
Her pitching coach told me to sign her up for some camps this summer so she has to tell strangers- I’m a pitcher. Hoping she can say it a little louder every time she says it.
A little better/louder/confident every day.
IMHO there should be more quiet people. So many just talk with nothing really to say. The quiet ones who do it right get noticed too. The only problem is if she is so quiet that she won't call the ball or tell where to throw it when appropriate.I’d love to hear how you helped your quieter kids speak up a little more in a team dynamic.
Coaches seem to love the loud outgoing kids. How to I get my happy to practice by herself at home - not in your face - loves the game and improving lots kid - to say coach can I play X? I’m next etc. instead of always letting kids get in front of her and missing out on reps.
She gets to play plenty in games- I’d just love to see her own some space in practice. She misses reps but always wants to practice at home- so we do- but I’d love to see her grow into her role. She’s one of the younger kids- but it’s also just her nature.