Winning should not be everything
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Richard Brunette
I just read the “No competition for competitive sports” column by
Lolita Harper in the Monday edition of the Daily Pilot. Having felt
for many years that behavior at youth sports events was out of
control, and as a longtime advocate for teaching positive behavior
and values through youth sports, I have a few comments.
I agree with some points in Harper’s article, but I think she
struck out swinging regarding competition and the primary reasons
some youth sports leagues are attempting to stress fun and
participation over competition, winning and losing.
Thousands of people here in Southern California and across the
nation feel that youth sports programs in general have been doing a
very poor job when it comes to teaching respect and good
sportsmanship, both to the youth in their programs as well as to the
parents and coaches of these youth. Therefore, while many youth
sports programs are attempting to reinforce the positive aspects of
youth sports, they aren’t exactly trying to eliminate competition or
pretend it doesn’t exist.
I agree with Harper when she indicates many lessons learned in
youth sports carry on into other areas of our lives. Gaining
self-confidence and learning the value of teamwork, honesty, ethics
and fair play, respect, hard work, effort and to always do your best,
are but a few of the things we can learn from participating in
sports. These values translate directly into principles we should
value and put into play in our adult lives, too.
But I think, as a society, we’ve lost touch with these values, and
as we’ve strayed further and further onto the win-at-all-cost
athletic fields of America, we’ve lost touch with most of the
positive aspects of sports and athletics. And often, it’s not the
kids, it’s the parents and coaches that need serious attitudinal
adjustments if we’re going to reverse things.
All my life, as an athlete, a coach, and as a 25-year municipal
parks and recreation employee, I’ve seen and heard things screamed at
kids from the sidelines by parents and coaches that have amazed me.
Harper used a negative hypothetical example to prove her point of a
little boy in a noncompetitive-style baseball game dropping a routine
fly ball and suffering no consequences, and therefore learning
nothing, since it’s a warm and fuzzy feel-good league where feelings
shouldn’t be hurt.
Well, I remember as a kid in Little League baseball an umpire
being beaten up after a game he supposedly made a “bad call” in. And
I remember one of my teammates dropping a routine fly ball in a game
and his father screaming in rage that if he does that again, he
better not come home for dinner that night. I think most of us would
prefer our children’s youth sports experiences to be somewhere in the
middle of these extremes.
From the youth arena to the world of professional sports, it is
too often reinforced today that the sole purpose for playing a game
or sport is the end result, that is, to win or lose. The outcome has
become more important than the playing of the game itself. For
example: What’s the first question usually asked a child upon
returning from a sport they’ve just participated in? I’ll bet 10 to
one it’s “Did you win?”
The problems with this attitude are too numerous to mention, and
the negative byproducts of this mentality are evident everywhere in
sports, as well as in our everyday lives.
We’ve got high school and college students being given passing
grades when they shouldn’t have just because they are star athletes.
A pro athlete spits in the face of an umpire and is allowed to
continue to play because he is an all-star. Horrendous or illegal
behavior of athletes is tolerated, or worse, covered up, because they
can be the difference between winning or losing. Cheating is almost
expected, as long as it helps you or the team win.
And its not just in sports where the win-at-all-cost attitude is
affecting us all. In the corporate world, Enron executives cook their
books, or electric companies illegally manipulate power for profit,
and the list goes on and on. Lying, cheating and fraud are so
commonplace, it’s almost acceptable and seems necessary; if you want
to “win,” that is.
As adults, maybe we need to better define what “winning” means.
As a nation, we literally work ourselves to death. Fifty, 60-,
70-hour work-weeks are necessary in order to “be the best.” Stress,
hypertension and cardiovascular disease are killing us. But we have
to “be the best and win,” right? Win at all cost. Win if it means you
have to cheat. Win if it means you have to hurt the kid on the other
team. Win, win, win! It’s all that matters.
Clearly, our priorities, both in the sporting and the real world,
are askew and need fixing.
Lessons learned in youth carry on into adulthood. So what are we
teaching our youth? In sports and the real world, the phrase “it’s
not whether you win or lose, it’s how you play the game” has been
replaced by “who cares how you play the game, you better win, or it’s
not worth playing.” Winning has become so important that we’ve lost
sight of everything else.
Simply listen to the adults at any youth sports event on any
playground across America. I’m surprised the kids can play at all
over the din created by the parents and coaches screaming at them
from the sidelines. When I attend these events, I constantly have to
stifle the urge to ask parents and coaches to stop yelling and just
let the kids play. This win-lose mentality completely fails to take
into account what should be the primary purposes for playing any game
or sport -- the sheer fun, joy and healthy benefits of participation.
The focus of youth sports, particularly for young children, should be
on having fun while learning the basic skills and rules of the game
in an environment of healthy competition.
Once again, I agree with Harper. It’s not the competition aspect
that is bad; quite the contrary. Competition can be healthy and is a
part of every game or sport we play. Competition is an important part
of life and helps us to improve and be better at whatever it is we’re
doing.
But many children are often taught the exaggerated importance of
competition, which is to “be the best” and to “win at all cost.”
Being the best and winning becomes more important than doing your
best, having fun and playing fair.
The pressure brought on by the win/lose mentality puts a lot of
stress on youth and can create intense performance anxiety. Frequent
studies and journal articles identify three of the top 10 reasons
children quit sports is because “it wasn’t fun,” “there was too much
pressure (worry)” and there was an “over-emphasis on winning.” Simply
put, children are often so scared they won’t do well that they have
no fun while actually playing and ultimately they quit the sport. How
can we teach them the important life-lessons they need to learn
through sports if they quit playing the game ?
How would I address this issue? Well, it’s such a societal
problem, so deeply rooted in the American psyche, that it’ll be hard
to change, and no single approach will reverse things entirely. After
all, Americans love to win and have little tolerance for losers.
But my answer is that it is very important that all youth sports
programs try to educate parents and coaches, as well as the children
in their programs, on the type of behavior that is acceptable at
youth sporting events, and we need to re-emphasize what is really
important about the lessons we learn from participating in youth
sports. We learn the values and principals that we should hold dear
as adults. This should be a priority for all youth sports programs
and leagues, just like learning the rules and fundamentals of a sport
are. Remember, like bad sportsmanship and poor values, good
sportsmanship and good values don’t just happen, they are taught.
So whether you are a parent, coach, or simply come into contact
with youth sports participants after a game, ask the kids if they had
fun, not who won or lost. Ask them if they had fun and what they
learned. After all, winning isn’t everything, and it is important how
you play the game, not whether you win or lose.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Richard Brunette is a Costa Mesa resident.
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