9 Ways to Help Athletes Cope with Anxiety Around Tryouts

TrueSport

August 24, 2023 | 3 minutes, 7 seconds read

As a coach or caregiver, it’s easy to forget the anxiety and nerves that come up for athletes around team tryouts. Or maybe you have an experience of your own that you remember and shudder about decades later! But how do you hold tryouts and make the right selections for your team while still helping athletes navigate those nerves?

Your actions before, during, and after tryouts can make the process less intimidating and more fun—while still ensuring that your team has the right blend of athletes. Here, Amanda Stanec, PhD, kinesiologist and the founder and owner of MOVE + LIVE + LEARN, shares a few tips for how to best help athletes thrive in tryouts this season.

Help Athletes Understand that Some Anxiety Is Actually a Good Thing

Not all anxiety is bad: In fact, some level of anxiety can be positive, and anxiety can be sending us messages that we need to adjust our actions in order to be better prepared. Additionally, common levels of anxiety are a part of life, and sport is a great way for athletes to learn to cope with anxiety so they can apply such skills off the field of play, now and in the future. “It is normal that kids feel a bit anxious before tryouts and that’s because they care,” says Stanec. “If coaches and caregivers talk to their kids about it, then it should be in that context. Say things like, ‘You feel anxious? That’s normal and tells me that you care about the tryout, which is appropriate. But all you can control is your effort and attitude so focus on doing your best and staying determined and positive and you can be proud of yourself.’” And if your athlete isn’t talking about their nerves, don’t bring it up: There is no need to put it in their heads!

Coaches

Be extremely clear about the tryout process.

Often, anxiety that is unhelpful stems from an athlete’s nerves around unknown elements. What exactly will they need to do at tryouts to make the team? The more information you can share with all athletes about the try out the better. This can be done at a pre-tryout meeting or in written form—just make sure it’s accessible to all, not just athletes who have been on the team in the past. “Coaches should also let athletes know to focus only on what they can control: their attitude and effort,” says Stanec. “Encourage athletes to visualize themselves participating in the tryout while giving their best effort and staying positive when they make mistakes. Remind athletes that everyone, even the best athletes in the world, make mistakes in competition and practice and that making mistakes is really one of the only things guaranteed in sport.”

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About TrueSport

TrueSport®, 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.

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Talk to Young Athletes About Abuse, Misconduct

U.S. Center for SafeSport

August 10, 2023 | 1 minute, 20 seconds read

Do you have a younger child just getting started in organized sport? How about a teenager who has moved up to more competitive athletic settings? Either way … that’s great! Youth sport participation can have lifelong positive mental and physical health impacts.

It also means it’s time to start the discussion about what a safe, healthy sport experience should look and feel like to them. Online training offered by the U.S. Center for SafeSport can be an important tool in your family’s toolbelt.

Younger kids often don’t have the language skills necessary to articulate when a potentially unhealthy, inappropriate, or even abusive situation is occurring. “SafeSport for Kids” (for kids ages 5-12) is an entry point for you to have those important conversations.

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About The U.S. Center for SafeSport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for responding to and preventing emotional, physical, and sexual misconduct and abuse in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.  Learn more >

 

SafeSport Training Puts You in Play to Support Athlete Safety

U.S. Center for SafeSport

July 12, 2023 | 1 minute, 28 seconds read

Whether it’s baseball, volleyball, or pickleball that sparks their passion, kids should feel safe and supported in every sport, on every court. And it’s hard to disagree when we see a young athlete’s eyes light up, charged by the satisfaction of a goal reached, a friend made.

Fortunately, it’s easy to take meaningful steps to keep this light from dimming. By learning essential principles and practices for preventing and addressing inappropriate activity that may occur in active settings, you can be an informed ally and champion of athlete well-being in your community.

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is working to deliver more than 5 million trainings by the end of 2023—through over a dozen affordable and accessible courses that empower parents, coaches, athletes, and more to create and reinforce safe sport settings. You or your organization can get SafeSport® Trained today to join a national community aligning against athlete abuse.

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About The U.S. Center for SafeSport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for responding to and preventing emotional, physical, and sexual misconduct and abuse in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.  Learn more >

 

Recap | Automate Your Season Webinar

Running a youth sports season can be stressful. From volunteer management to registration signups to scheduling out your games—you're extremely busy. That's why SportsEngine is excited to share our newest season management tools coming to SportsEngine HQ.

What's new with Season Management?

Watch as our product champions, Jessica Christiansen and Marie Fitzgerald, walkthrough the long-awaited ability to auto-schedule games with the new scheduling assistant tool. In addition, they walk through everything from conflict checking to creating one-off events; our scheduling assistant will streamline the workflow for your team. The motto of the platform is "The more you use it, the easier it is."  With this new workflow, you can communicate with your team faster than ever before.

"We read every piece of feedback from our customers regarding the product. This recent release was a part of that, and for that, we thank you. Our goal is to make things easier for the families and teams we serve," says Christianson. 

Lead a Culture Change in Sport

U.S. Center for SafeSport

December 12, 2022 | 1 minute, 10 seconds read

Keeping Your Programs Abuse-free Should Be Job 1

It’s happening before our eyes. The culture of sport safety is changing for the better. It’s evident in more effective injury treatment and prevention protocols, as evidenced by an increased use of independent, third-party head trauma experts across professional and amateur sport. We have better equipment and safer training methods. And there’s a sharper focus on athlete nutrition, rest, and recovery.

But those efforts ring hollow if we allow a lack of understanding about the signs of abuse and misconduct in sport to persist.

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About The U.S. Center for SafeSport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for responding to and preventing emotional, physical, and sexual misconduct and abuse in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.  Learn more >

 

How To Prevent Bullying, On and Off the Field

The U.S. Center for SafeSport

October 13, 2022 | 2 minutes, 50 seconds read

October is National Bullying Prevention Month. To keep this topic at the forefront for all who can act to reduce bullying's impact, the October installment of the U.S. Center for SafeSport's 'Champion in Every Corner' podcast features ideas and perspectives from ally Judy French. Judy coordinates the National Bullying Prevention Center and conducts workshops on the topic.

Listen to the podcast

 

One important thing that differentiates bullying from other forms of conflict, French says, is that targets of bullying typically have less power than the person or group doing the bullying—making it hard for the target (the person being bullied) to stop it.

It is difficult for a bullying target to stop the behavior independently, so parents and other adults should be aware of bullying vulnerabilities and symptoms.

One of the biggest risk factors for a child becoming a bullying target is social isolation—and some children who are socially isolated, such as those with disabilities, may perceive the attention they get from bullies as good. In other circumstances, some children may be bullying targets even though they may appear to adults as unlikely candidates because they seem to have everything they need socially or emotionally.

Kids may not own up to being bullied because of the shame they may feel, and adults may sometimes be the last to know about it. Bullying often presents as depression: the targeted child may stop wanting to do things they used to enjoy, have a sudden drop in grades, or desire to go to school.

When targeted, kids seek out an adult they trust, don't worry if it's not you—hard as it is for a parent to hear that—but in any case, you should be proactive in talking with your child if you sense indicators of bullying.

"So much of a kid's world can happen outside adult eyes," says Judy French. For this reason, she advises, "We really need to keep lines of communication open with children around us, to get clued in about who could be vulnerable to being targeted."

"A lot of advice the world gives targets is for them to do something—whether it's to ignore it or, as my father used to say, 'Punch him in the nose and he'll never bother you again,'" French says. "And that really doesn't work."

Hear insights from the podcast and listen to additional Champion in Every Corner podcast episodesHERE.

Find more resources on preventing abuse and misconduct in and around sport settings by visiting The U.S. Center for SafeSport Website

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About The U.S. Center for SafeSport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for responding to and preventing emotional, physical, and sexual misconduct and abuse in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.  Learn more >

 

What Sport Administrators Should Know: Policies That Prevent Abuse

U.S. Center for SafeSport

October 13, 2022 | 2 minutes, 53 seconds read

The most important asset sport leaders have with athletes is their trust. You can cultivate and honor that trust by setting and promoting abuse prevention training and behavioral standards for adults in your organization-standards that can help keep young athletes safe. The U.S. Center for SafeSport developed best-practice Minor Athlete Abuse Prevention Policies (MAAPP) that are easy to adopt in any sport setting. MAAPP policies are required throughout the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement, encompassing 11+ million athletes and allies in 50+ sports, and advised for all youth-serving organizations, casual or competitive.

Administrators: Here are some key things to know about what MAAPP policies require-including special responsibilities it may place on you-to support abuse prevention at sport organizations that implement these policies.

1) Complete annual abuse prevention training through the SafeSport® Trained Core and Refresher courses

2) Ensure one-on-one interactions with athletes under 18 are observable and interruptible

3) Let parents/guardians watch their child's individual training sessions and obtain consent forms from them annually

4) Ensure a second adult is always present in the room during massages, rubdowns, and other athletic training modalities-for which the child must be fully or partially clothed, with private body parts covered, and for which parents must annually give written consent

5) Ensure that locker rooms and changing areas are monitored and that semi-private or private changing areas are provided

6) Include another adult or parent/guardian on all electronic communication (text, email, social media) with athletes under 18

7) Have written parent/guardian consent to transport an athlete under 18 alone, or have another adult or at least two minors with you

8) Offer abuse prevention training to parents and athletes under 18, if applicable

9) Ensure that locker rooms and changing areas are monitored and that semi-private or private changing areas are provided

10) Include another adult or parent/guardian on all electronic communication (text, email, social media) with athletes under 18

11) Have written parent/guardian consent to transport an athlete under 18 alone, or have another adult or at least two minors with you

12) Offer abuse prevention training to parents and athletes under 18, if applicable

Visit maapp.uscenterforsafesport.org to learn more about these policies and how they can work for your organization.

How does the MAAPP apply to Transportation and Lodging?

Find out in this episode of the RoadMAAPP-one of six animated videos that break down MAAPP principles in bite-sized ways.

SafeSport | Episode 4: Transportation and Lodging | RoadMAAPP 

Get Trained!

The U.S. Center for SafeSport offers free live virtual MAAPP trainings tailored for administrators, and over a dozen more abuse prevention courses. Contact a training liaison at your organization or visit the Center's SafeSport Courses for All page to learn more.

SafeSport Logo

About The U.S. Center for SafeSport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for responding to and preventing emotional, physical, and sexual misconduct and abuse in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.  Learn more >

 

The Meteoric Rise of Pickleball

JennLShoots via Shutterstock

For the inaugural episode of SportsEngine's new podcast, For the Love of Sport, learn how pickleball has grown to become one of the most popular sports today.

Our hosts, Simon and Marie discuss why they think it’s so popular, and ways athletes can incorporate sports like pickleball, Spikeball and handball into your regular training and we throw out a few other names we might have suggested instead of pickleball.

 

Listen to the first episode

Want to hear more?

Tune in each month for new episodes as the dynamic duo Simon and Marie cover all things youth sports. From funny stories, to how to run your team, there's something for the whole family to enjoy. Subscribe to the full series here

Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher.

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About For the Love of Sport Podcast

For the Love of Sport is the premier podcast covering the world of youth sports. For the Love of Sport dives into the people and processes that make it possible for kids to learn and grow through sports and athletics, and celebrates the admins, coaches, parents, volunteers, leagues, supporters, and youth athletes who put their heart into making it happen each week.
Learn more

Introducing “For the Love of Sport” Podcast

Ever wonder what it takes to run a youth sports organization? Are you curious to learn more about the people and organizations that make youth sports possible? Or maybe your just interested in youth sports in general. Then tune into For the Love of Sport as your hosts, Simon & Marie, take you behind the scenes of youth sports organizations, celebrate the people who make it possible, and share their unique perspectives as coaches, athletes, & club administrators.

Join hosts Simon MacKenzie and Marie Fitzgerald, two Product Marketing Managers at SportsEngine, as they embark on their journey to celebrate youth sports. In each episode, they will bring a guest with a unique story, experience, or lesson to share.

For the Love of Sport | Trailer

Want to hear more?

Tune in each month for new episodes as the dynamic duo Simon and Marie cover all things youth sports. From funny stories, to how to run your team, there's something for the whole family to enjoy. Subscribe to the full series here

Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher.

For the Love of Sport podcast logo

About For the Love of Sport Podcast

For the Love of Sport is the premier podcast covering the world of youth sports. For the Love of Sport dives into the people and processes that make it possible for kids to learn and grow through sports and athletics, and celebrates the admins, coaches, parents, volunteers, leagues, supporters, and youth athletes who put their heart into making it happen each week.
Learn more

Take the Frustration Out of Refunds and Help Mitigate Chargebacks

Dealing with refunds and chargebacks can be frustrating and time consuming. That’s why we want to let you know about Registration Saver (RegSaver).

RegSaver allows your parents, at point of registration, to insure the non-refundable registration fee they pay for their child’s sports camp, tournament, showcase, or season. If a covered peril occurs that causes the participant to miss all or a portion of the event or season, the parent can file a claim to seek reimbursement. The policy covers perils including, but not limited to: illness, injury, death in family, inclement weather, and active military service for parent/guardian.

Coverage becomes effective the day after the policy is purchased and extends to the last day of the event or season. Therefore, it can provide peace of mind to a parent registering months in advance. Should their child become injured after the policy is purchased and prior to the start of the season, they could be eligible for a refund. The policy is extremely affordable, costing just 6% of the registration fee for a camp or tournament and 7% of a season registration.

AIG processes all claims and answers all customer service questions, making the process completely hands-off for you. Policyholders can easily file a claim online and submit any questions through the RegSaver website.

Understandably, most sports organizations have a no-refund policy on sign-up fees. RegSaver offers your parents an alternative and the opportunity to recover their cost. If you have a refund policy in place, RegSaver can replace it.

We know chargebacks have become an issue for many organizations. Unfortunately, parents will sometimes dispute a legitimate signup charge as an attempt to recover their registration fee. RegSaver can provide a layer of protection against the trend. Parents who purchase the policy can have their registration fee refunded should a covered peril occur instead of filing a chargeback.

Also, during the registration process the parent is offered coverage and must select “yes” they would like coverage or “no” they would not. For those that select they did not want coverage to protect against the no-refund policy, their declination of coverage is time stamped in our system, which can be used to assist in a chargeback dispute.

Why RegSaver is a smart idea for your community:

  • It’s affordable—the premium is just 6-7% of the registration fee
  • Helps customers feel more at ease when signing up for an event months in advance
  • Completely “hands off” for you - AIG handles all claims and customer service questions • Policy can be easily and quickly purchased during the checkout process on SportsEngine
  • Addresses the no-refund policy you might have
  • If you have a refund policy in place, this can replace it
  • Can help mitigate credit card chargebacks

If you have any questions, please contact your SportsEngine Account Manager.

We feel RegSaver can save you time and be a major benefit to your families!


About NextWave Insurance Services, LLC

Next Wave Insurance Services, LLC “Next Wave” operates as a Program Administrator, Managing General Underwriting and Wholesale Brokerage firm with offices in San Diego and Rancho Cordova CA. The firm offers independent insurance agents and brokers a broad range of commercial, personal lines, accident & travel related products nationwide. Learn more