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USA Cheer has partnered with TrueSport, to provide new educational tools to equip coaches, parents and young athletes with the resources to build life skills and core values for success in sports and in life. TrueSport, a movement by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport.

How to Prevent a Workaholic Culture from Ruining Youth Sport

TrueSport Expert Nadia Kyba

Unfortunately, workaholism is a term thatโ€™s no longer reserved for adults, and our experts are finding that young athletes and student-athletes can easily fall into this trap too. Workaholic tendencies are often praised as hustle, grit, or enthusiasm, but over time, these tendencies can lead to physical and mental health problems.

Here, TrueSport Expert Nadia Kyba, MSW, President of Now What Facilitation, explains how coaches and caregivers can work together to prevent a workaholic culture from infecting youth sports.

Understand the pressure athletes face on all fronts

As parents, coaches, and caregivers, itโ€™s easy to look at young athletes and feel as though they live an unburdened existence. But between school, sports, work, relationships, friendships, and the growing pressures presented by social media, young people are subject to huge amounts of pressure, says Kyba. To you, as an adult with bills to pay and many demands on your time, it may not seem like your athlete should be struggling to do it all. However, your athlete doesnโ€™t have the same experiences as you, and for them, this point in time is the busiest and most pressured theyโ€™ve ever been.

Stop promoting a โ€™no pain, no gainโ€™ mentality

Hard work is goodโ€”but itโ€™s easy for hard work to turn into overwork. Unfortunately, as adults, we tend to either ignore athletes who are overworking, or worse, we praise their efforts, says Kyba. Rather than praising an athlete for showing up to practice despite pulling an all-nighter to study for a final exam after a late shift at the restaurant where they work, consider giving that athlete a pass to catch up on sleep. We live in a culture that touts the idea of โ€œgoing above and beyond,โ€ but an athlete whoโ€™s already at risk of injury or illness due to fatigue shouldnโ€™t be pushing harder, they should be taking care of their physical health.

Understand how workaholism applies to youth sports

While you canโ€™t control the amount of homework or after-school work an athlete has, you can control the environment youโ€™re creating for them in terms of sport. Kyba has noticed two big issues on this front. One issue is the number of tournaments now taking place over holidays, on weekends, and throughout the summer. Thereโ€™s also a growing pressure for young athletes to be in a single sport all the time. That leaves no time for multi-sport play, other school activities, and of course, even unstructured time with friends.

More Guidance for Coaches

Set boundaries at the beginning of the season

โ€œAt the beginning of the season, it’s important for coaches to talk to the kids and parents before they start registering them into tournaments,โ€ says Kyba. โ€œFind out what’s important to them: Maybe a tournament over Labor Day weekend works well for everyone, but Thanksgiving is off limits for many families. Youโ€™ll have to negotiate and compromise, since not everyone will have the exact same preferences, but try to take all the athletesโ€™ needs into account.โ€

Kyba notes that itโ€™s particularly important for coaches to not just consider Christian holidays, but to respect the range of religious and cultural traditions that athletes on the team may observe.

Donโ€™t reward athletes for workaholic tendencies

We often praise those who โ€œgo the extra mile.โ€ But in youth sport, pay close attention to an athlete whoโ€™s consistently going above and beyondโ€”doing an extra weight room session, literally running the extra mile, and pushing beyond their capabilities to the point where theyโ€™re at risk of injury or exhaustion. Itโ€™s your job as the coach to pull them back, not urge them on. Even if theyโ€™re getting results in the short term, that kind of attitude and effort isnโ€™t sustainable in the long term.

Donโ€™t penalize athletes for cultural or religious observances

It should go without saying, but an athlete whoโ€™s observing a religious or cultural holiday or tradition should never be penalized for it. โ€œFor example, for some athletes, observing the Sabbath or fasting during Ramadan is a very important part of their religion,โ€ says Kyba. โ€œIn your eyes, this may interfere with practice or competition, but you should never make an athlete feel guilty for their religious or cultural choices.โ€

More Guidance for Caregivers

Listen to your athlete

As Kyba noted earlier, itโ€™s easy as a parent to roll your eyes when an athlete says that theyโ€™re feeling stressed out or exhausted. But take your athleteโ€™s feelings seriously, and respect and validate those feelings. If an athlete seems as though theyโ€™re struggling to do everything, try to help them prioritize and potentially even trim out some of the activities and extracurriculars that are causing stress. This may even involve a discussion with a coach about cutting down the number of practices your athlete attends, even if itโ€™s just for a couple of weeks.

Help create boundaries for your athlete

As a caregiver, you do have the ability to affect change on the team. If the coach is considering adding a tournament over Thanksgiving weekend or Christmas week, the parents of the athletes can create boundaries that protect their athletes from overwork and allow them to have vacations and time away from competition. While you do want your athlete to be able to advocate for themselves, sometimes you do still need to step in.

Watch your language around work and sport

Athletes face such high pressure in school and sport, and parents can unknowingly add to it with casual observations about athletic or academic scholarships. More often than not, Kyba says, your child is already aware that they may need a scholarship in order to afford a university educationโ€”constantly bringing it up, even in a seemingly positive way, can contribute to an athlete developing workaholic tendencies.

Help your athlete understand your family values

โ€œOften, workaholic culture clashes with an individual’s values,โ€ Kyba says. โ€œIf you and your athlete value spending time with family and friends, you need to help your athlete respect those values. Often, workaholic cultures lead to putting all your energy into just one aspect of your life, which jeopardizes other core values. You need to help your athlete find balance.”

Takeaway

Workaholic culture has seeped into youth sport and young athletes who are subjected to aย  workaholic environment in school or sport are at higher risk for burnout, injury, illness, and mental health issues. Coaches and caregivers need to work together to ensure that athletes are training and competing in a team culture that values hard work, but not workaholism.

TrueSport/USA Cheer Home

The TrueSport Champion Network is a community of coaches, parents, program directors, and athletes who believe in the power of youth sport to build life skills and core values for success both on and off the field. Join TrueSport Champion Network to help promote the positive values of cheer, dance, and STUNT!

The TrueSport Coaching Education Program empowers coachesโ€”the most significant influencers in young athletesโ€™ livesโ€”with a transformative learning opportunity to obtain the knowledge and resources to cultivate, champion, and uphold the rich promise and highest potential of sport.

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USA Cheer is proud to partner with USADAโ€™sย TrueSportยฎย to bring relevant educational content to the Cheer and STUNT community in order to promote a positive youth sport experience. We are excited to provide access to TrueSportโ€™s experts that take coaching beyond skills and help truly develop the overall athlete by building life skills and core values for success on and off the mat, sideline, field, and court.

Feel free to share these resources with your coaching staff, parents, or athletes!

About TrueSport

TrueSportยฎ, a movement powered by the experience and values of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, champions the positive values and life lessons learned through youth sport. TrueSport inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport.

For more expert-driven articles and materials, visit TrueSportโ€™s comprehensive library of resources.

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