You can go to any playground, any gym and see it: the shoes, the tattoos, the hair, even the moves. Kids trying to look like, act like, play like the professional athletes they see on television and idolize.
The names are familiar. “Tracy McGrady”, “Mia Hamm”, “Michael Vick,” say kids listing their idols. But what’s wrong with kids wanting to be just like the best players in the world?
“There’s nothing wrong with trying to win. There’s nothing wrong with being competitive, but when it slops over into a win-at-all-costs mentality where anything goes as long as you’re on top, then you get anti-social behaviors,” says Jim Thompson, Founder of the Positive Coaching Alliance.
Those behaviors can take many forms, like cheating, fighting, taunting or showing off.
18 year-old Darrell Sims, Jr. sees these behaviors on the basketball courts he plays on. “People you play against – when they score on you, they do all their little [taunts] to try to be like people on tv,” he says.
But on television, there are no consequences. Kids don’t see the fines or suspensions – just the highlights.
“Of course kids are going to emulate that unless somebody intervenes,” says Thompson.
Coaches can intervene by focusing on two goals. “The first goal is winning – they are trying to win, to be competitive. But the second goal is to use sports to teach life lessons. And when those two goals conflict, you always go with the second goal – that life lessons goal,” says Thompson.
Parents can help by teaching kids to honor the game – to respect other players, officials, and themselves.
Thompson encourages parents and coaches to challenge kids to set high standards of conduct for themselves. “So the other team taunts. Do you taunt back? Or do you live up to your own standards? That’s what honoring the game is all about,” says Thompson.
As for the pros who show-off and taunt?
18 year-old Inquoris Johnson holds them to the same standards he has for himself. “If Michael Vick did that, I wouldn’t do it. I’d let him go. He wouldn’t even be my idol no more, you know. I want to look up to somebody that’s got good sportsmanship,” he says. |