Imagine spending your entire life dedicating yourself to your craft to the point where you are undoubtedly the greatest in the world to do it.
Coincidentally, that craft is something that people do with the goal of competing to be the best in the world. The odds are so stacked against you -
on top of dealing with abuse from the system that's supposed to be protecting you - and yet you pull it off.
Imagine becoming so good at it that you are literally the only person on the planet that's capable of doing what you do.
You've done what so many dream of doing, but 99.99999% of people will never experience.
Years into your career, you are blazing the trail, pushing your body to limits we've never seen - and continually raising the bar on what the human can do. In case you need visuals to imagine, how about
this video.
Now imagine, after a decade of dominance,
judges start to give you lower scores for no other reason than concerns that other gymnasts will hurt themselves trying to do what you do. Add a pandemic to the mix and some issues a few days leading up to competition with positive tests within the team, and imagine all the things that you're having to process.
And now? All those people that used to talk about pursuing greatness - the greatness you've exuded for 8 straight years, where you've won every competition you've entered - the same ones that complain about everyone-gets-a-trophy, they now turn on you because you make a decision to protect yourself/feel you aren't where you need to be to help your team. They disregard the fact that you've been told that they'll openly punish you for doing things your opponents can't, and they call you a quitter instead of questioning the system that basically said "you're so good that we need to give your opponents an unfair advantage to keep things competitive."
That's what we're witnessing, and as a former competitive athlete/current coach, it sickens me. Where is the objectivity? This is the freaking Olympics. Why is the outrage not at the broken system, but the person which the system broke?
Simone Biles is the bar. Her accolades are undeniable. 4 olympic medals, 19 world championships medals, and
from 2013 to now she hadn't lost a major competition. They've literally named moves after her because she's the only person in the history of her sport who has pulled them off successfully. And people are going to call her soft / a quitter?
Forgive my language: But get the fuck out of here. This isn't a matter of opinion, and if you feel otherwise, you're basing your opinion off skewed resources. Her body of work is as impressive as any athlete that's competed.
Now, let's talk about why her openness about the situation is important to youth sports, because it's very relevant in 2021.
Players and parents are putting themselves into toxic situations because of fear. It's a huge problem we have to address. I have had parents use the term 'hateful' to describe the coaches at their child's program - only to sign them back up the following year. The reason? Fear of the unknown. They get treated like crap, but at least they know the kids and are part of a group. Fear that things could get even worse somewhere else. In some cases for high-level athletes, threats from directors to use their connections to actually hurt the kids' chances at playing at certain schools.
Youth sports is a booming industry financially - and we're killing kids more than ever. And so many of them would benefit from walking away from bad situations, but FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) continually prevails. And certain programs absolutely leverage that FOMO.
Normally in my state, travel ball tryouts occur after high school season. This year? The region took a vote in May to move it up to July - weeks after the last season ends, and before high school season even starts.
I have had a huge amount of parents and players express their displeasure on the change privately. But one parent put it pretty bluntly: "We're slaves, it's pretty sad isn't it?"
That's why Simone's decision matters to me, and it's why it should matter to you. This isn't about quitting. This is about mental health. This is about pushing back against a system that openly promotes injustice towards individuals for its own good. And it's bad to see it at the Olympics, and it's certainly bad to see it in youth sports.
Because goddammit, we're coaching 11-18 year olds. These are kids. This isn't supposed to be about bids or championships. This isn't supposed to be about playing in college (16 out of 17 high school athletes won't), and it's not supposed to be about scholarships (99 out of 100 won't receive them). It's supposed to be about the kids and helping them develop into strong adults, not about how much they can help our program beat other programs.
It's supposed to be about teaching kids how to deal with failure. How to work towards goals, and how to respond when you fall short of some of them. It's supposed to be about building resilience, giving one's best effort, and working well with others.
It should be about coaches helping them through their mistakes, not chewing them out when they do it wrong.
And if we're doing it right, we should be teaching kids about having ownership of their own life. That if they commit to a goal, to go for it with everything -
but also to know when maybe it's time to take a break or change course.
Because on top of all this,
it's supposed to be fun.
Families currently spend thousands of dollars a year, countless hours of travel, only to serve the program that should be serving them. It makes no sense to me. And powers-that-be are only trying to tilt the scales more in their favor - it's why pre-pandemic,
a report projected youth sports to be a 77 billion dollar industry by 2026.
Youth sports sure doesn't seem like it's about the youth nowadays, does it?
We don't call someone a quitter when they leave a toxic job for a new one - quite the opposite. We don't call someone a quitter when they stand up for themselves and pull themselves out of an abusive relationship. And yet, here we are, witnessing a system breaking its greatest athlete, someone who has been a wonderful ambassador to the sport their entire career - and we're taking it out on the athlete instead of questioning that system.
What are we teaching our kids?
I don't know how this plays out. But I have hope. I think Simone will let the games play out, then speak out on exactly what happened. I hope people take those words to heart, and I hope parents and players pay close attention. I hope they consider if the greatest Olympian of all-time can respect herself enough to listen to that inner-voice that says "this situation isn't healthy for me", that maybe they can do the same.
Because no athlete deserves to be abused by the system that's supposed to protect them.
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