you can be okay when your kid doesn't get to play when they should. I'm not a spiteful, overly competitive parent, but when I see my kid, who has always played key positions as a starter, suddenly standing on the sidelines so that the newly paid coaches can play the kids that have $$, have older brothers that make them think the younger brother could be a clone of said older brother or the kid is a teacher/coaches kid, it kind of makes you go hmmmm.....after you get over the initial anger of the politics of middle school football. This was my reality check that it's alive and well, so I'm left with find humoring in it after nothing left else to do.
A. While other parents are complaining about their kids who have never been injured at younger competitions, getting hurt now, I can revel in the fact that if my child isn't playing he can't end up like his teammates either.
B. He will have a body that still functions in high school, while some kids will have broken down parts from multiple injuries at younger ages.
C. Less grass stains to get out.
D. His weaker ankles can rest (kind of a cheat since it's another injury related reason, but oh well.
E. When they get their butts handed to them like they did today I can honestly say my kid had not part of it. There may not be an i in team, but if you have the same favorites in the game day after day, there's never going to be a u in it either.
So, here's to more losses until hopefully they learn to play to the kids' potentials instead of politics in a public school. These coaches have a lot to learn abut communication. Those poor boys were running in and out because they had no idea where they were supposed to be or go because they get mixed signals from the coaches.