Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Is there room for fighting in girls soccer?

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #61
    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
    Agree that it starts at home. There’s a girl on our hs team that is committed to a D1 school that plays dirty, yells f bombs and starts to get into fights (that have been stopped long before they get this bad). Our hs refs hardly call anything so she only gets a few yellows and got one red for fighting. Her mom complained that the high school coach wasn’t happy about the yellows and the red because “her club coach is fine with all that!”. In this case, the hs coach doesn’t have a chance because the parents and the club coach condone it.
    Not buying it. What D1 program?

    Comment


      #62
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      that's the point- environment is not the only factor
      the kids you reference came from decent (whats good families actually mean)- good schools
      which assumes good teachers

      these kids know right from wrong- they choose to go the way they go
      If the school isn't enforcing their rules they won't change; even worse if the parents think their kids walk on water. There's plenty of bad parents in good districts. Our school - also a very good one - is a joke with enforcement. Kids get away with a ton and the school acts like nothing ever happened (even though everyone knows). That encourages more bad behavior because there are no consequences.

      Comment


        #63
        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
        Not buying it. What D1 program?
        Not the poster but do you really think they're going to ID a kid on this cesspool? Small state, people know people

        Comment


          #64
          Absolutely there’s room for fighting

          Comment


            #65
            Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
            Not buying it. What D1 program?
            Truth. Not saying but in a different state so the D1 team coach (conservative coach and team) has no idea. The fouling, attitude and language got way worse after she committed. I think she thought she’d breeze through all the other hs players but the reality was far from it...so took it out on the other players and even f-bombed a ref. Her stats ended up like 5th on the team with all non committed players doing better above her. Just agreeing that that kind of play and bad behavior starts at home. HS coach shouldn’t be blamed in this case and didn’t support it. Refs not really to blame either - although maybe if the refs gave reds instead of yellows when reds were clearly warranted then maybe it would’ve calmed her down a bit more.

            Comment


              #66
              Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
              Truth. Not saying but in a different state so the D1 team coach (conservative coach and team) has no idea. The fouling, attitude and language got way worse after she committed. I think she thought she’d breeze through all the other hs players but the reality was far from it...so took it out on the other players and even f-bombed a ref. Her stats ended up like 5th on the team with all non committed players doing better above her. Just agreeing that that kind of play and bad behavior starts at home. HS coach shouldn’t be blamed in this case and didn’t support it. Refs not really to blame either - although maybe if the refs gave reds instead of yellows when reds were clearly warranted then maybe it would’ve calmed her down a bit more.
              Video finally out

              https://nypost.com/2019/12/27/massiv...o-close-early/

              Comment

              Previously entered content was automatically saved. Restore or Discard.
              Auto-Saved
              x
              Insert: Thumbnail Small Medium Large Fullsize Remove  
              x
              Working...
              X