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Being a good sports parent 

Let the kids enjoy the game, experts say

F.Birchman / MSNBC.com
Kids and parenting videos
Banned drains covers still used in public pools
July 18: Tireless lobbying gave birth to a new law forcing all public pools to replace flat drain covers. But as NBC’s Lisa Myers reports, months later, these potentially dangerous drains are still being used.

By Jane Weaver
Health editor
msnbc.com
updated 3:50 p.m. ET April 14, 2004

Jane Weaver
Health editor

E-mail
In March a brawl among parents of 9- and 10-year-old hockey players in upstate New York resulted in eight people facing misdemeanor charges and a father suffering a dislocated shoulder after being pushed off the bleachers.

At a Pittsburgh high school basketball game in February, a referee was treated for a concussion after a parent body-slammed him for ordering the man's wife out of the gym for allegedly yelling obscenities.

An over-eager New Jersey father created his own soccer league last fall because his 7-year-old son was too young to play in a competitive league.

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What's wrong with grown-ups these days?

Are some of them just aging failed athletes trying to live vicariously through their athletic children? Anxious moms and dads hoping that their kids can snare college sports scholarships? Or fanatic parents pushing their offspring to become elite athletes with specialized training, summer camps and personal coaches, whether the child wants it or not?

All of the above, say youth sports experts.

Barely out of diapers
Almost 30 million boys and girls under 18 play some kind of organized sport like Little League or soccer, according to the National Council on Youth Sports. For many of them, it's a way to make new friends and play a game they enjoy.

INTERACTIVE
But over the last decade, more otherwise well-meaning parents have been pushing their budding stars to excel at almost any cost.

Children as young as 3 can sign up for swimming and gymnastics programs. Soccer often starts at 4 and baseball at 5. From there it's become increasingly common for parents to rush the kids into highly competitive situations when they're barely out of diapers.

"Youth sports has clearly become more professionalized in recent years," says Gregg Heinzmann, associate director of New Jersey's Rutgers Youth Sports Research Council. "Many more parents want to see their kids achieve some level of success, be it athletic scholarship or in certain cases a pro sports contract."

That hyper-competitive atmosphere can translate into overly involved parents ready to explode at any coach, referee or other parent who interferes with their own children's performances.

"You'll see lawyers and doctors at little girls' or boys' games and some of these people, it's like they've taken a pill that turns them into demons," says Steve Dawson, associate professor of sports sociology at Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio.

Dawson, who is a long-time coach of a high school club soccer team, tells the story of the mother of a 5th grade girls' basketball team who loudly and publicly cheered her daughter for making an opponent cry.

"That's just a minor incident, but it's typical of how carried away some parents get," says Dawson.

'The Tiger Woods syndrome'
Youth sports activist Bob Bigelow calls it "the Tiger Woods syndrome" where parents think they have to push their little kids earlier.

It's parents like that who are ruining youth sports by treating their kids like "miniature adults," says Bigelow, a former first-round NBA draft pick and author of "Just Let The Kids Play."

Dr. Bruce Svare, professor of psychology at the State University of New York at Albany and founder of the National Institute for Sports Reform, says there's a danger to a child's self-esteem when parents send the message to their kids that what they're doing isn't valuable unless they can turn it into something material like a scholarship.

"More parents view their kids as an economic investment that has to be translated into something later on," says Svare.

Dawson agrees. "We've become so competitive, it's out of control."

  FACT FILE
Is your child on steroids?

Anywhere from 3 to 11 percent of high school students, mostly boys, have used steroids, surveys show. Over time, steroids can stunt kids’ growth, shrink testicles and cause heart and liver damage. Parents can be on the look-out for the following symptoms of steroid use:

— Rapid, improbable gains in muscle and weight
— Aggressive behavior known as ‘roid rage’
— Mood swings
— Worsening acne, often on the chest and back
— Breast enlargement in boys
— Facial hair growth in girls
— Deepened voice in girls

If you suspect your child is using steroids, consult your family doctor.

Parents should take note: A 2001 study by the National Alliance for Youth Sports found that 70 percent of American kids who sign up for sports quit by the time they were 13. The reason? They said it wasn't fun anymore.

"It's a downside of 10- to 12-year-olds who sit on benches because adults think it's more important to win," says Bigelow. "Too may parents are buying into it."

"At one level a lot of parents realize it but they're caught on a treadmill," says Svare. "No one's pointing out that it's easier to get an academic scholarship than an athletic one."

To give some perspective, it's widely cited that there is 70 times as much money available for academic scholarships than for athletic ones. Picking up a paycheck in the National Basketball Association is a 1 in 10,000 chance. The odds of winning an Olympic gold medal are 1 in a million.

Then again, few academic scholarship candidates are treated like rock stars in their home towns or are offered million dollar salaries.


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