What to Say (and Not Say) on the Sideline
I once watched a match where one parent gave a constant stream of instructions from the sideline. Do this. Pass there. Shoot. Unlucky. By the end of the first half my head was spinning — and I wasn't even the one playing.
The Essentials
You're not wrong to want to help. Most parents shout because they care, not because they're doing it wrong. That's the first thing worth knowing.
"Good effort" works. "Pass it!" usually doesn't. Encouragement keeps a child in the game. Instructions pull them out of it.
It's hard to listen to two people at once. A child already processing the coach's voice usually ends up listening to neither.
Cheer effort, not outcome. "Great running" will outlast "great goal," because your child controls one and not the other.
Let the coach coach. One voice giving instructions is plenty. Your child can't serve two touchlines at the same time, and they shouldn't have to choose.
The Deep Dive
It's incredibly hard to sit on your hands when you can see the pass your child can't. The silence feels like doing nothing. But your silence, on a Saturday morning, is actually doing quite a lot.
Children on the pitch are already managing the ball, their teammates, the coach's voice from the other touchline, and the defender closing them down. That's a full mental load before any sideline voice joins in.
When a familiar voice starts calling instructions — pass, shoot, turn, go — a child has to stop, hear it, decode it, and decide whether to obey. It's hard to listen to two people at once; usually, they end up listening to neither.
Encouragement lands differently. A simple "good effort" doesn't ask anything of them — it just tells them you're there. If you do want to be loud, be loud about the effort: "great running" ages better than "great goal," because your child controls one and not the other.
“Your job on a Saturday is not to help your child play — it is to make sure they feel safe enough to try the things that don’t come off”
At nine years old, "bad" football is just football being learned. You're not letting your child down by staying quiet. You're giving them the room to work the game out for themselves — and that's worth more than any shout you could have made.
The Takeaway
Mindset Shift: Your voice from the sideline is either a comfort or a second set of instructions. Only one of them helps.
This Week: At your child's next match, try this. Every time they get the ball and you feel the instinct to shout, pause for one full second and say nothing. Notice how often they glance across anyway — not for instructions, but just to check that you're there.