I been coaching a Division 7 u12 side. First season.
Does anyone feel that the courses are not relevant to coaching kids that aren't like the ones in the coaching videos?
The disruptive kids. The ones that aren't interested in learning anything beyond booting a ball at a goal. The ones who will only play where they want to play.
I feel more like a youth club worker who only gets relief once the match has started and there's an independent referee in charge. Then you're just praying that the match finishes without any incidents that are going to keep your phone buzzing throughout Sunday and beyond.
Then there's planning training, only to get about 30 productive minutes out of an hour that is nothing but an hour of banging your head against a wall.
And then there's the adults to deal with. Over invested coaches and parents etc etc. Getting people in the same place at the same time. Juggling 5 pitches between 25 teams.
The courses seem to be quality at the time. You go into the season feeling well equipped to make a difference, but in reality the courses only seem to be a realistic reflection of things for a tiny minority of the youth grassroots teams out there.
Yes I realise that I've been unsuccessful and haven't got the right skillset to do it, but it's just a thought about the "ideal world" viewpoint of the courses.