I recently read The Matheny Manifesto, which is the somewhat controversial letter St. Louis Cardinals’ Manager Mike Matheny wrote to little league parents when he was asked to coach little league baseball. Mike has some very strong stances on the role of a sports parent, some of which were not received well. Honestly, I probably wouldn’t have made Mike’s cut for sports parents.
You may have heard sports parents say, “we are a baseball family,” or “a soccer family,” or like me, “a basketball family.” Bledsoe boys and basketball go hand in hand, starting with my grandfather in the 1920s. We all get our wives, daughters, and entire family loving the game of basketball. Similar to that I’d also say we are a sports parent/youth coach family. My dad coached me, I coach my kids (going on 9 years), my brother coached his son and he also coaches for a living. When our love of sports, family, and kids come together it compels us to coach.
I have a “little” experience in the sports parenting and youth coaching world. So, when I read a few clips of The Matheny Manifesto I was challenged. Although I respect Mike’s experience and knowledge as a former Major League Baseball player, and now a Major League Baseball coach, I thought he was off base. Here is the part I was stuck on:
“I believe that the biggest role of the parent is to be a silent source of encouragement…if you ask most boys what they would want their parents to do during the game; they would say “NOTHING”…You as parents need to be the silent”
So, as a parent I am to sit on my hands, keep my mouth closed, then after the game say “good game Johnny” with a handshake, followed by “what do you want for dinner?” I can understand not coaching from the stands, not saying negative things to the kids, and not complaining to umpires or coaches. But not saying anything? He has to be kidding me!
Fortunately, I took the time and read the entire manifesto. What I found was priceless! When I read the clips above with the full context it made more sense. And through the letter I learned more about Mike and the basis for the way he does things. Now, I am a big fan of this manifesto, and believe every single sports parent and youth coach in every sport should read this. Not only should they read it, but keep it on hand and reread frequently. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qObGlmvPfuY He makes some strong statements, but his overarching goal and driver of the way he does things is the following notion:
“The youth sports experience is ALL about the kids.” [Tweet this]
I don’t think there is a sports parent that would disagree with that statement. Although, I’m still not in 100% agreement with the silent treatment, as I believe positive encouragement and cheering from the parent should be allowed and encouraged. Plus, I honestly don’t think I could keep quiet. I won’t coach, degrade my kid or others, or argue with officials from the side. But I am a parent and a fan. For those reasons, I think Mike would “cut” me 🙂
As I’ve said this is something every sports parent and youth coach should read. If they did, many of the issues we deal with in youth sports may be resolved. Below are some of my thoughts on specific points Mike addresses in the manifesto.
I’m not sure where you stand on the points made above or in The Matheny Manifesto. Hopefully, we all can agree that youth sports is ALL about the kids. When that happens youth sports can be the fun, enjoyable, and life building experience it is intended to be. Win, lose, or draw there is nothing like it. Question: Have you read The Matheny Manifesto? What are your thoughts?
If you want to find the perfect coach so you are able to focus on being the best parent you can be, check out CoachUp!
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