Sunday, September 17, 2000
Put me in, Coach!

By JUSTIN KOLLMEYER
Religion Columnist


Dear Coach of young people at ANY level:
"Put me in, Coach, I'm ready to play today." John Fogerty and all young people everywhere.

The bench. The WHOLE game.

What you do, Coach, when you don't even let a player on your team play at all during a game is a BIG deal. You don't just "not play him," you discount him, you dismiss him, you demean him, you shame him.

When you leave a girl, who has practiced and given her maximum effort, on the bench for an entire game, your actions separate her out from the team, labeling her as unworthy, useless, a liability, and an outcast to the rest of the team. She is NOT these things, of course! But you might as well have gone over to her and pinned these words to her jersey and made her wear it the whole game.

Too harsh and too deep an analysis? No, it's not. Think about it. Your players are people. They are people who think and feel and are being molded into the young adults they are becoming. And, as members of your team, they are entrusted to your care. But when you leave them outside the field of play, you're not caring for them or about them!

I believe the stakes in youth sports are much higher than what they might seem. Whether you realize it or not, you are in a crucial situation with the awesome responsibility of helping mold the lives of the young people entrusted to your care.

Your main job is about much more than "w"s and "l"s. Again, you are in the crucial situation as coach with the awesome responsibility of helping mold the lives of the young people entrusted to your care.

A coach who cares about his players as people, and cares about developing young people, can find all kinds of ways to use his whole team – so that it is a TEAM. After all, the coach just might need the WHOLE team at a critical time in a game or a season.

What if this were you, Coach? Is this how you would want to be treated? Of course not. Is this how you would want the coach to treat your daughter or your son? Of course not. Ask any of the kids if it would be OK with them if you did that to them.
The good news is that our young people are remarkably strong people. Stronger, I dare say, than you or I. They roll with the punches and bounce back with extreme character and perseverance.

The question for you to answer for yourself is simply this: How important was the game and the score? Were the games more important than treating all your team with dignity and respect and honor?

I promise you, if you treat all your team with dignity, respect, and honor, they'll win more games for you! (How do you think Lou Holtz got South Carolina to beat Georgia just last weekend? He convinced them that they were WORTHY enough to WIN!)

And more importantly, if you treat all your team with dignity, respect, and honor, they will remember you all their lives and be better people for it. This world will be a better place because of you! But if you treat your players as only pawns of your power and discount them when they don't fit into your plans, they'll forget you in an instant and possibly be adversely affected by the negative influence you had on them at this stage of their lives. Think how tragic that would be!

As you go through your coaching career, one particular scripture that might help you to accomplish a long and successful career might be this one:
"For what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world, but loses his own soul?"

I think you lost your soul for just awhile the last time you let a player suit up and just sit the whole game. But I bet it won't happen as easily again or without you thinking very hard about the consequences. It's never too late to change and make amends for past mistakes. The players make some mistakes on the field. You make some on the sidelines as well. The game goes on. You can shake it off because you know there's something more important at stake – a much bigger picture.

Thank you for considering this. We honor you, Coach, and thank you for dedicating your life to developing young people into great adults.

Good luck the rest of the season and in all the seasons to come.

Just one more thing, "Put me in, Coach, I'm ready to play today!"

(The Rev. Justin Kollmeyer is senior pastor of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Fayetteville.)


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