Winning Hoops Blog



  1. Bill Salyers is a member of the Winning Hoops Editorial Advisory Board and is a current coach at Bishop Leibold School (Ohio). Salyers has authored the best-selling Winning Hoops book Basketball Basics: Building Blocks For Coaching Youth Basketball.

    Dealing With Problem Parents

    April 13, 2009 by Bill Salyers

    Last week, I discussed dealing with problem players. Today, the focus turns to problem parents, which we all deal with at one time or another.

    Many coaches have many ideas on handling the problem parent. I am proactive with parents about issues and consequences. Also, communication with everyone involved is the best policy so that potential issues never materialize.
     
    For example, if you are going to play the top six players the entire game, then the rest of the team needs to know how you are going to approach playing time. If you are a coach that adjusts playing time based on attendance, then that needs to be communicated. You have to be fair and consistent. Simply put yourself in your players’ parents’ shoes. What would they want to know? What is important for them? Don’t assume anything. Above all, be fair. Coach Morgan Wooten of famed DeMatha high school suggests that the less rules the better so you don’t get trapped.
     
    Second, the communication is typically filtered through the player and lost in translation. Years ago, it was a bit more difficult to get information directly to the parents. I would send important information to the parent and then ask them to call upon reading to make sure that they not only received it, but there were no issues. Now, I use email frequently. Players are caught up in social activities and other school activities in addition to athletics. In our environment, we have cheerleaders and other teams using our facility. It is noisy and can be distracting. Information that you tell the players may or may not make it home for a variety of reasons. Don’t take chances.

    Also, I have two rules that are explained to the parents at the mandatory parents meeting before the first practice. Any time there is a parent/coach discussion about the team, the player must be present. This reduces the “I forgot that coach told me if I would do X, then Y would happen” issues.  Also, always restrict the topic to the player, not other players. For instance, what can Megan do to earn more playing time is a valid discussion topic. Why Kelli is playing more than Kate is not.
     
    It is important for the parents to know what is expected of them. I hand out a “Parents Golden Rules” sheet at the parents meeting. They are required to sign it and return the sheet. It outlines the kind of conduct and participation that is expected. The leverage that the you have is playing time. For instance, you have to bench a player if a parent is out of control in the stands. I benched a player nine seasons ago when his father received a technical that affected a game. I still here about the incident occasionally!

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  2. Dealing With The Problem Player

    April 6, 2009 by Bill Salyers

    In my 16 seasons, I definitely have changed the way that I handle problem players.

    The first couple of seasons of my career, I invoked the discipline of stopping practice and running line drills. This approach seemed to provide a solution to some situations. However, the problem is that it stops practice and gives attention to the problem player. (more…)

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  3. The Team is YOU!

    March 25, 2009 by Bill Salyers

    There are many offenses, defenses and inbounds plays that you may choose to run. The players will come from all sorts of homes, backgrounds and experiences. When you are pulling a team together in a short amount of time, the key thing to remember is that, even with all of these variances, the team is you! Over the past 16 years, one thing that I have learned is that as the coach goes, so goes the team. Think about these examples.

    I once watched a game where it was close at halftime. The home team came out in a full-court press and really rattled the visitors. The home team took the lead and control of the game. The more the visitors made mistakes, the more the visiting coach screamed. Finally, during a timeout, the coach actually broke his clipboard. He slammed the clipboard into the floor, breaking off a corner. The irony was, at each proceeding timeout, that particular coach was preaching poise and confidence. The players became more worried about the coach and less about what they should be doing. The lesson: If you want the players to play with poise, coach with poise. Lead by example. (more…)

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