The twenty minutes after a game are some of the most important in youth sports, and most of us get them wrong with the best intentions. We break down the at-bat, ask what happened, point out what we saw from the stands. Without meaning to, we become one more source of pressure on a kid who is already hard enough on themselves.
This is the playbook I give parents who want to raise a confident, resilient competitor without becoming the second coach. Your kid's potential is already there. Your job is to clear the things that get in its way, not add to them.
Seven short chapters, each with a clear idea, a real example, and one thing you can try this week. No lectures, no guilt. You can read it in one sitting and put it to work at the next game.
Built for baseball parents at any level. It helps you lead with the relationship and let the coach coach.
What is inside:
Seven chapters, each with a clear idea, a real example, and one move to try this week
What to say, and what to skip, on the ride home
The questions that build confidence instead of pressure
How to be the steady one in the stands when your kid is watching
A one-page cheat sheet to keep in the car
The twenty minutes after a game are some of the most important in youth sports, and most of us get them wrong with the best intentions. We break down the at-bat, ask what happened, point out what we saw from the stands. Without meaning to, we become one more source of pressure on a kid who is already hard enough on themselves.
This is the playbook I give parents who want to raise a confident, resilient competitor without becoming the second coach. Your kid's potential is already there. Your job is to clear the things that get in its way, not add to them.
Seven short chapters, each with a clear idea, a real example, and one thing you can try this week. No lectures, no guilt. You can read it in one sitting and put it to work at the next game.
Built for baseball parents at any level. It helps you lead with the relationship and let the coach coach.
What is inside:
Seven chapters, each with a clear idea, a real example, and one move to try this week
What to say, and what to skip, on the ride home
The questions that build confidence instead of pressure
How to be the steady one in the stands when your kid is watching
A one-page cheat sheet to keep in the car