Yep, it's very common in little league where dad's often coach their kids. Some are great. They volunteer their time and put up with a lot of crappy parents. My son learned from a very good coach, who still did favor his kid, but overall wasn't too bad. My son's little league all-star travel team / travel team had 3 coaches. The HC's kid played 1B, the one assistant coach's kid played SS, the other assistant had twins, they played 2B & 3B. My son was the fastest kid so he played CF.My son’s little league coach was that guy. Everyone joked behind his back that he thinks he’s going to be on the Yankees. But the kid was terrible and he refused to accept any coaching. I offered to teach him to hit and his Dad wouldn’t let me. He was convinced that he was the best coach in the league. My kid worked for everything he got. Fast forward to high school, and Linc is batting cleanup and Jack quit the team because he had no position and sat on the bench.
Exactly my sediment.Exactly.
It’s the Lavar Ball effect.
Exactly.I think he’s drafted before our next pick. This is the point in the draft you start taking chances on guys.
At 10 I played with the coach's son in little league t-ball. His dad was brutal to him, made him cry on the field for making a mistake. I also played with the head coach's son in HS football. He wasn't favored or coddled at all, started next to me on the O-line and he did fine. His dad was stern to him at times but no more or less than the rest of us. Last time I saw him was in 1996 he was working as a city bus driver. Got on the bus in Kahala and he goes "Hey Mike." I sat up front and I talked with him until my stop. So they weren't all spoiled in my day... I think something changed years after that like...hmmm.... maybe the $$$$$$.Sanders is the kid who played little league baseball who was coached by his dad. He played short stop & pitched. His dad coached him at every age. Even started a travel team when he got older and he kissed his ass all along the way and treated him like he was a star. Then when it was time to play HS baseball, the HS coach played the other kids who didn't act like they were the greatest thing since sliced bread, while the Sanders kid rarely played.
Daddy then bitched and moaned at every game as he couldn't believe his kid wasn't playing. He was stunned at the situation his son was in. How can he not be the teams star player? Eventually the kid quit.
I have seen this up close with a couple of kids when my son played HS baseball. Dad treated their kid like he was so much better than everyone else at every level, without realizing there were much better kids who kept working and improving while playing on the same teams his kid was playing on.
I blame the dad...he created the situation.
I agree with this. If we can prove he can play with a we not me attitude, he is worth a lot more then whomever we take next. QB's that can play get large hauls in trades. This will not prevent us from taking a QB next year, he just replaces a replaceable Bennett and could net us some valuable draft picks in the future.I’d be happy to spend a 6th round pick on him. After all, if he proves a problem you cut him; if you draft a better QB next year, you talk him up then trade him; if he gets his head down and shines you eventually play him.
For all the negativity, he was the reason for Colorado’s amazing rise. He put that team on his back and had success behind a terrible O-line. He would respect Stafford, Jimmy G and McVay or bust out of he league without ever getting a shot because if he didn’t who else would trust him
Damn I’m starting to like the idea![]()
I also read somewhere, that Sanders changed their college celebration song to his rap “song”All I needed to see and hear was one appearance as a guest with a couple of ESPN talking heads.
His manner and arrogance is punchable.
if I had a time machine, stopping Hitler would be #1 on my list. #2 would be preventing the Lakers from drafting Lavar Ball.Exactly.
It’s the Lavar Ball effect.