Youth Sports: The Fast Lane To Retirement | Steve Locker | TEDxColumbus

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TEDx Talks

TEDx Talks

Күн бұрын

In today's youth sports culture, parents seem to be in a race to competition. Steve Locker helps reassure parents that a patient approach to sports can work by examining the stages of child development and how they relate to athletic development. Steve uses his nineteen years of collegiate coaching experience, twelve years of child development experience, and his work with more than 15,000 children to understand the process on all levels.
Steve Locker is the founder of Locker Soccer Academy (2004) and Second Nature Sports (2013). He has 16 years of collegiate head coaching experience, including 7 years at Harvard University. He has spent the past eleven years working intensely with young children, and has personally worked with over 15,000 children in that time. Steve played collegiate soccer for Penn State and internationally for Hannover 96 in Germany. Steve holds the distinction of being the first American to earn a professional coaching diploma from Germany. His recent book, “Playing For The Long Run” compliments his efforts in fulfilling his passion to educate parents & parent-coaches in youth sports.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Пікірлер: 9
@mattsanford6491
@mattsanford6491 2 жыл бұрын
The best part about beer leagues is there’s: - no coaches - no parents - no practice Show up 5 minutes before start, play, have beer, go home. Nobody quits beer leagues until they’re injured. Youth leagues should give up developing pros and focus on developing future beer leaguers. Since they account for 90-95% of the kids who won’t otherwise play past high school.
@Michael-cb5nm
@Michael-cb5nm 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting that Belgium does 2 v 2 until age 6 or 7, then 3 v 3, then 5 v 5 for the U10s, then 8 v 8 up to U13, with 11 v 11 only being introduced at 14 years old at the earliest, and even then on a smaller field. And this little nation went from number 50 in the world twenty years ago to number 1 in 2019. Seems that starting small works…
@raghavnarasimhan4703
@raghavnarasimhan4703 7 жыл бұрын
Coach Steve Locker, Tremendous talk and tremendous message! Thank you and hope it reaches parents far and wide.
@johnnyschtingray2083
@johnnyschtingray2083 3 жыл бұрын
Very Well Done Steve! Nice to see a Roxborough kid do good.
@Rozenxz
@Rozenxz 2 жыл бұрын
This one is good 👍
@robcolvin8574
@robcolvin8574 Ай бұрын
I just don’t believe a group of kids stayed together for 3 years of losing and they and their parents were ok. Kids want to win! As a coach I want to develop but kids want to win! They can become demoralized and just as likely to quit if they don’t find success. There has to be a healthy balance of development and winning for kids to stay passionate and motivated.
@winstonjen5360
@winstonjen5360 3 жыл бұрын
Oh my goodness! Our ten-year-old son has brain damage! How on Earth did that happen? Well, you forced him to practice football since he was eight years old. He's lucky to be alive. Oh my goodness! Our son barely graduated from high school! How on Earth did that happen? Well, you forced him to practice sport for 20 hours every weekend so he didn't have time to study or sleep. What did you think would happen?
@junechoi7595
@junechoi7595 2 жыл бұрын
How dare you point out their faults!!!
Gym belt !! 😂😂  @kauermtt
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