firstflight wrote:So question is should I push the issue? they only have 2 games left .or keep my mouth shut and wait till he hits collage ball so he can do what he wants ..
Rick wrote:firstflight wrote:So question is should I push the issue? they only have 2 games left .or keep my mouth shut and wait till he hits collage ball so he can do what he wants ..
Why would a college coach be any more inclined to let your son play where he wants than where that coach feels he best serves the team? Agree with them or not, coaches are hired to make such decisions.
IndianaMallard64 wrote:As a former starting offensive lineman (graduated last spring) . I Would say 100 percent don't sweat it. College lineman are not 200 pounds. When he gets to college he will be put at D line and from my experience when you are in college you are able to be more open and state your opinions to coaches because they treat you like grown men(disregard what dude said^^^) dont worry about it pops
Bad17 wrote:I coach baseball and nothing I hate more is when a parent comes to me and says my son should play here. My reply to that is ok and that boy moves to the bench or gets cut. I play the boys where they will best serve the team not where they want to play at. If that was the case I would have a whole team of 1st basemen and pitchers. I guess where I'm going with this is stay out of it. Let it ride. You don't have to agree with the coach but it's his decision where he plays at.
bill herian wrote:Might be further ahead having him ask the coach for some reps on defense during practice.
Bad17 wrote:That's what I tell my kids's parents. If they don't like it they can leave. Nothing more annoying than parents complaining about where there kids are playing or not playing.
firstflight wrote:bill herian wrote:Might be further ahead having him ask the coach for some reps on defense during practice.
Yeah he's a dick . He told me to not question his actions . If my kid wanted to keep playing on his team ..
really happened.
sws002 wrote:firstflight wrote:bill herian wrote:Might be further ahead having him ask the coach for some reps on defense during practice.
Yeah he's a dick . He told me to not question his actions . If my kid wanted to keep playing on his team ..
really happened.
You have to remember, he likely gets about 100 calls a week from every jagoff that thinks their son should be starting and this and that. His job is to do the best for the team. I had the exact same situation in college. I played two years of defensive end and was in line to start my junior year, but we were short on the O-line. We had people who could replace me on defense, so I switched to Center, a position I had never played before. I started two years (one at Center, one at Guard), and my playing weight was 260, and I wasn't the smallest one. I should also add that we were damn good too, my alma mater currently holds the longest streak of playoff appearances in NAIA and is sitting #1 in the rankings. It's cliche as fuck, but it's not the size of the dog. Let this one go, even if the coach is a dick, there is nothing you can do that will make it any better.
sws002 wrote:No offense. But in my experience, less than half of high school dads know shit about coaching football.
sws002 wrote:No offense. But in my experience, less than half of high school dads know shit about coaching football.
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