TLDR: Here's my playing/coaching background, I've admittedly been brash with a lot of my conversations over the last 5 years. I spent the last couple years a lot less combative - but also more quiet in general. Moving forward, I hope to find a balance of being more vocal again while focusing more on collaborating with like-minded individuals vs. going head-to-head with people who see things differently. I also shared data that I feel is important for all youth sports participants (coaches/directors/players/parents) to know as they move forward, and hopefully it explains a little more of why I'm wired the way I am (and for those that have been at odds with me over the last few years, perhaps this could be the beginning of mending bridges).
I'm usually not one for resolutions. But this has been on my mind for quite some time now, and I think I'm ready for a change of pace.
I'm not your typical volleyball player/coach. I'd like to provide a little context to those who only know me from a distance. While I never 'made it' to the professional level, I've accumulated quite a range of experiences over my 15 years as a coach/administrator.
*I've coached NJCAA, NCAA Division III, and NCAA Division I. For two years, I actually coached women's Division III in the fall and participated in my men's season in the spring.
*I've worked in college admissions.
*I've worked for a club full-time, including serving as college liaison where I spoke to literally hundreds of families from various backgrounds.
*I've coached kids that had already won legitimate national championships (Open level), as well as kids who played in dress shoes because it's the only pair they've had.
I've seen the highest highs, and the lowest lows. As a player, it wasn't much different. I went into high school 5'5, 95 pounds, and lugging around size 12 feet.
*Given the fact that most the time I was just trying not to fall, I wasn't the most graceful athlete.
*I was bullied a large portion of my high school career.
*I had coaches who focused on the biggest/fastest/strongest and gave minimal focus to the 'other kids'.
Luckily I grew into my feet, had some coaches who helped me see what I could be vs. what I wasn't, and had a pretty good career for the next 12 years.
Overall, tough patches aside, I am incredibly blessed for the opportunities I've had and the experiences the sport has provided me. It's why I've dedicated my life to using the sport to give back to the next generation of players.
My message has always been set out to be a positive one: Youth sports should be fun for kids. It should be something they have control over. Youth sports should leave their participants better than they found them.
Overall, I'd like to think I'm a pretty positive person. Unfortunately, there are some elephants in the room that aren't easily discussed in certain circles: The study that shows
more kids are quitting youth sports by age 13 than ever before.
More kids are getting injured than ever before. For the first time in 30 years,
high school sports participation actually decreased in the 2018-19 season.
If you don't believe me, read those articles I linked. I'm not trying to be the 'bad guy', or a Debbie Downer. But I care about these kids, and I think at some point, if we're involved with youth sports programming, we cannot be naive to that data. We cannot
look at the numbers from a business perspective solely and say just because they go up, we've got a 'good' product.
What we have is 'experts' in our sport selling X/Y/Z to parents/players that trust them to lead them the right direction. Sometimes, that direction doesn't paint the whole picture.
"If I want to play in college, I was told I need to play for X organizations."
Those organizations will show you all the kids that win tournaments and commit to college - they won't tell you about all the kids that left after one year, did not make it to college, or that the majority of their teams won't win tournaments.
"If I want to play in college, I need to do Y combine."
Those combines will boast about the college coaches in attendance and previous attendees that have found schools through them - they won't tell you that if you aren't playing at a certain level, no combine/showcase will get you into one of those schools.
"If I want to play in college, I need to play my sport year-round."
The organizations will show all the examples of kids that played year-round that
did
make it to college - they won't talk about how the athlete was 6'0 as a 14 year old, or the work ethic that athlete had to earn the opportunity to play in college. Organizations can
absolutely help athletes take their game to the next level, but sometimes I think we undersell how much of an athlete's success falls on their genetic build/own commitment to excellence.
I don't blame the organizations that have been marketing successfully with the above lines. I also don't blame parents and players for buying into them if they don't know any better.
But at some point, change has to be made before this bubble bursts - and it will.
Reading the previous lines, I realize that sounds negative:
But at some point, if the data itself is trending in the wrong direction, there's nothing we can do to improve it without acknowledging it. From my time speaking with some of the titans in our industry, the biggest obstacle we're facing is
from a business perspective, youth sports has never been better - and from a culture point of view it's never been more damaging (and expensive).All I want to do is create a healthier and more balanced environment for the kids.
For the last 5 years, I admittedly butted heads. I invested time into conversations with people who weren't looking to change their perspective. In some cases, people I considered good friends cut ties, and even went as far as to spread falsehoods about me in order to 'protect their brand'.
Being open and honest, I feel a big reason I've been a lot more quiet over the last few years was because I was tired of 'fighting'. I'm heavily outnumbered in a pretty cut-throat region, and I needed a bit of a sabbatical.
But our new facility is open. Our new model is sustainable AND healthy for athletes. Month-to-month scheduling, athletes pick their own practice schedule, and every athlete gets the same coaches/system/opportunity for development. Whether they're new to sand or college-bound, everyone gets the same attention to detail, and we care about them regardless of what their own personal commitment to the sport may be.
I want to share it with others that may want the same thing we do for our kids.
I need to push through the worrying/stressing about how some people will respond, and start finding the people that want to collaborate. It's going to take a LOT of people to clean up our current youth sports culture.
So if you're like-minded and would like to work together, please reach out. I've talked to so many people that off-the-record feel the same way I do, but are afraid of breaking from the norm/'keeping up with the Joneses'.
It's time for us to be the Joneses.
Whether it's working together or simply keeping up with what we're doing at Progression, I hope you'll join me along the way.
Here's to an awesome 2020.