Manawatu Standard

Initiative­s planned for youth sport ‘gobbledigo­ok’

- Hamish Bidwell of RNZ

Astand? No, these alleged youth sport initiative­s are little more than a stunt.

Sport New Zealand and the fine folk from Hockey NZ, NZ Cricket, Netball NZ, NZ Rugby and NZ Football aren’t going to do a thing about age-group sport. Not in the small town where I live, nor in the bigger centres where there’s money being made via academies and where rugby and rugby league agents routinely sign up kids as young as 11 and 12.

No national body is going to have any impact upon behaviour or culture at our local rugby club. They can’t dictate whether children enjoy playing or not.

We’re lucky to field full teams most weeks. Coaches aren’t picked on merit or suitabilit­y; they’re merely ill-equipped parents who’ve been begged into lending a hand.

There’s little or no training gear and teams have gone through their 2019 seasons without winning a single game.

And yet we’re told that these six organisati­ons have committed to: Ensuring all young people who play our sports receive a quality experience, irrespecti­ve of the level at which they compete.

And that they will ‘‘ensure that skill developmen­t opportunit­ies are offered to more young people’’.

Go on then, I dare you. Deliver that here in this wee town. Deliver it anywhere, to be honest.

Rugby’s a working class game where I live. Most dads are tradies and call a spade a spade. Some are quiet during games, while others will pipe up if their child gets the ball.

Good on Sport NZ and company, but a commitment to ‘‘leading attitudina­l and behavioura­l change among the sport leaders, coaches, administra­tors and caregivers involved in youth sport’’ is just wellintent­ioned gobbledigo­ok.

It means nothing and has no chance of resonating with the audience I’m part of.

Can you imagine the money that’s been spent on this already? The lunches and the meetings? The public relations firms and spin doctors who’ve made a quick buck? All the promotiona­l material that’s being prepared for parents who’ll never read or receive it?

And how many would understand this stuff anyway?

I’m an engaged, literate parent with a

child who’s played four sports competitiv­ely and plays a fifth for fun. I’ve not received one word of promotiona­l material about positive parenting, workloads, injury prevention and the like from any of those codes. And nor do I want it.

Youth sport is not without its issues but no-one believes Sport NZ and its fellow signatorie­s are going to do anything about them.

They’re not going to fix up first XV rugby. There’s too much money in it.

By the time some kids are at intermedia­te school a pathway towards profession­al sport has been put in place. Too many people financiall­y depend on that for anything to change.

And then there’s these academies that prey on the vanity of parents. That tell them their child is special and that with the right coaching – at this modest price per term – could become a Lionel Messi or Roger Federer.

Unless Sport NZ, and these wellmeanin­g codes, are going to make up the financial shortfall, coaches aren’t going to abandon their private and group sessions. They’re not going to realise they’re making a dishonest living and start coaching kids for free.

Why should they, anyway? If people are dopey or egotistica­l enough to plough money into their children’s pastimes, then who is Sport NZ to stop them?

The genie is too far out of the bottle. You can’t appeal to people’s better judgment or nature anymore. Too many people have lost the plot about kids’ sport and too many people are now making a living from it.

You can’t ask a parent to mind their language or keep their comments positive on the sideline. You can’t even tell them to be quiet.

At best you’ll start some kind of row, make a fool of yourself and upset the children. At worst, you’ll get your lights punched out.

Unfortunat­ely no amount of advertisin­g, no pamphlets, no coloured bibs for sideline behaviour monitors are going to change that.

We’ve lost all perspectiv­e across the board and sport’s no exception and this idea that change is coming or that organisati­ons have taken a stand is laughable.

As good as it might seem on a Powerpoint presentati­on, it won’t pass muster in real life.

Those that need help tend to be blind to their faults, while the rest of us just shrug our shoulders and carry on as normal.

‘‘Too many people have lost the plot about kids’ sport and too many people are now making a living from it.’’

 ??  ?? Youth sport in New Zealand is set for a dramatic shakeup, with six sports organisati­ons taking a stand.
Youth sport in New Zealand is set for a dramatic shakeup, with six sports organisati­ons taking a stand.

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