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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Center Youth Baseball Around the Kids!, June 10, 2001
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 110,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Let'em Play (Hardcover)
Unfortunately, the people who need the message in this book are probably not going to be looking for such a book. That's a pity.

As sports psychologist Dr. Jack Llewellyn points out, 75 percent of all youth baseball players drop out by age 13. That's before they even begin to have the development necessary to begin to develop key skills for the game. The main reason for this is that parents forced the children to play, and the children had a bad experience.

Dr. Llewellyn also takes dead aim at the adults who abuse youth baseball by misbehaving themselves and imposing adult objectives onto the kids.

The book is organized around three perspectives: What parents, coaches and athletes need to know. Each section talks about goals, best practices, and provides an extensive set of questions and answers.

The book's credibility is bolstered by 12 interviews with top baseball players, coaches, and an orthopedic surgeon (don't start throwing curves until 14 or older). Many are from the Atlanta Braves and New York Yankee organizations, so everyone will recognize these men as winners. Their experiences and advice match Dr. Llewellyn's proposals.

Although the book has many long lists of do's and don't's, these basically boil down to being sure the players have fun, the experience builds parent-child relationships, and that the game experiences help establish important psychological development for life (such as dealing with setbacks).

For parents, the advice begins with picking the right program and coach for your child. For coaches, it begins with the concept of making youth baseball a beneficial experience for all of the kids. For athletes, the book begins with the idea of playing baseball because you like it. The advice to each group reflects what is said to the others. As a result, a parent who is a team coach could read this book with her or his child and have a family discussion about what should be done. That is not suggested directly, but it would be helpful.

I had no disagreements with the book based on my 18 years of coaching youth sports. In my experience, it is good to change the emphasis suggested here a little. Start by asking each player what she or he wants to get out of the season. Then set up a specific program to help that player in that way. And check regularly with the player to see how it's going. If you do that, lots of what are on these long lists will take care of themselves.

The book could have been strengthened by providing more guidance for how to handle problems with parents and coaches. Working with the kids is the easy part, by comparison.

After you have read and enjoyed this book, I suggest that you think about how school should be conducted. I suspect that school is now as off-the-mark as youth baseball has become. The things that administrators and teachers focus on so much are certainly not things that have added much value to my life. How about yours? How can we help our children to get the right kind of education and experience with learning?

Be sure you have the right goals . . . and then go ahead!

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5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for every baseball PARENT AND PLAYER, June 14, 2009
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This review is from: Let'em Play (Hardcover)
This book should be required for every baseball parent and all baseball players; it would be great for all baseball coaches to read this wonderful piece of insight in the thoughts and minds of young (players) people. I will never forget my 12-year old son coming home from baseball practice with several small rocks in his mouth, his face red, body wet from sweat and very thirsty. "Mom, I'm okay. Coach Billy will not give us water. He said to put small rocks in (our) mouth to keep us from getting thirsty. I'm gonna practice not drinking water for another hour and then I'll have some (water)." All this because my son's team had lost three games straight! My word, the stressful practice described to me by my little boy and the idiot he had for a coach. Nevertheless, my son loved and respected his baseball coach. My son would try to run through a wall if needed for his beloved Coach Billy! I realize this happened many years ago and my wonderful son is now a successful baseball coach and a scout, and he has seen and told me the number of coaches, "Little League" and "travel ball" coaches who are just as ignorant as my son's Coach Billy. However, my son will not let me speak ill of Coach Billy...no, my son still holds Coach Billy in the highest regard. "A wonderful man who kept my love of baseball burning bright..."
If coaches only knew. If only all coaches would read this book.
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Let'em Play
Let'em Play by Dr. Jack H. Llewellyn Ph.D. (Hardcover - September 18, 2001)
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