The Denver Post

Help wanted: Adults who behave during youth sports

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This editorial appeared in the Chicago Tribune: here's a punching bag in sports that has nothing to do with boxing. Think back to Lou Piniella, and his fiery tirades that would culminate in the Cubs manager kicking dirt onto an umpire's shoes. Or Indiana University coaching legend Bobby Knight flinging a chair across the basketball floor over a ref's call.

In profession­al sports, ripping the ref has always been seen, sadly, as part of the game. In baseball, jawing at the umpire nose to nose has that element of theater to it —Yankees manager Billy Martin's blow-ups were must-see TV for many Americans. And John Mcenroe's tantrums at the feet of stone-faced chair umpires were as entertaini­ng as his half-volleys.

But in the world of youth sports, ripping the ref has consequenc­es.

The Chicago Tribune’s Kate Thayer recently reported that in Illinois as well as the rest of the country, the number of people working as umpires and referees at youth sports leagues and high school sporting events is dropping.

The reason? Parents, coaches and fans behaving badly.

In 2016, a coach was accused of breaking the jaw of an umpire at a youth baseball game. The man became upset that the

Tumpire had given an 8-year-old batter an extra strike. In February in Charlotte, N.C., a coach got angry with calls being made at a fourth grade basketball game and charged onto the court, slapping one referee in the back of the head and punching another. The list goes on.

There's nothing entertaini­ng about watching some half-inthe-bag dad screaming at a 17-year-old umpire over a call at the plate, or a soccer mom going ballistic with a ref over her 9-year-old getting tripped.

Kids learn so much from youth sports — the value of teamwork, the notion of fair play, the meaning behind trying your hardest. But what's the takeaway when a 7-yearold watches a coach unload on an ump over a close call?

The National Associatio­n of Sports Officials, which has more than 26,000 members, did a survey last year and found that 87 percent of referees and umpires responding had experience­d verbal abuse when officiatin­g. It's no wonder many are opting out.

When games start getting canceled because there's no one to officiate, maybe parents and coaches will start thinking twice about blowing their tops at a ref or ump. But there's an even better reason why they should think twice: those 7- and 8-yearolds standing there petrified.

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