john utah wrote:
Flagpole wrote:Those saying it is ok are coaches who want it to be ok. It isn't. Baseball and basketball coaches don't go out there and take batting practice or play in a scrimmage. Coaches who think it is ok to run with their teams aren't likely to feel things sliding in a bad direction. It's all a bad direction. Coaches coach. Athletes train. Any coach who thinks they are coaching while running with the team has some serious micromanaging issues (at best) and, if not that, some maturity issues.
If there are issues with some runners not running the route or some shenanigans going on, then either hop on a bike or make them run within eyesight for a while until they get that they can't do what they've been doing. Running with them is wrong though. Not a good way to spark interest from others who have yet to join the team. "Guess what, Coach Wilson runs with us! Isn't that great!" -- Umm...no.
Wrong. You think tennis coaches aren't out on the court with their players with racquets in hand? What about coaches throwing batting practice in baseball? Hello? Your blanket statements are flawed.
If an xc team is doing a basic 5-10 mile trail run then there is absolutely zero reason why a coach can't run the same run. I'm not saying the coach has to be right next to the guys running in the exact same pack (if he could even keep up), but the idea that he's "coaching" by standing at the trailhead waiting for everyone to come back is absurd. Not sure how anyone could see it any other way. I do some weekend runs with the XC team as a parent and the coaches are always out on the trails. One coach is usually just doing his thing, getting his run in. The other is usually running alongside the kids and trying to push the kids that are half a$$ing it or encouraging/pacing others that are struggling. If you think it's preferable for the coach to remain at the trailhead you know nothing about the sport.
That said, there are obviously many instances where the coach should not be running, such as intervals on the track.
Hitting balls to a tennis player who doesn't have a partner and throwing batting practice isn't training with the team -- those things are necessary. It is not necessary (and wrong) to run with the team.
I know a ton about the sport and human nature. A coach running beside a kid while he's running a long run is a fun killer and motivation killer. Kids have watches, and it doesn't take too long to know how to pace yourself (hit paces given to you by your coach). No one likes a micromanager, and for good reason...keeps them from growing as people (as athletes in this case).
Just because there are coaches that apparently run with the kids on your kid's team doesn't make it right, because it isn't. A good program doesn't have kids in it that are struggling...expectations are set at the beginning of the summer, and either the kids run all summer or they don't. Then, when fall arrives, those kids that didn't run need to start off running slower and shorter than those who did. Good coaches are upfront about that fact back in May...that you will either not be able to keep up with the normal workouts or you will get injured, and you sure in h*ll won't be as fast as you could have been.