There’s always one. The kid who is clearly several levels below everyone else. Maybe it’s yours.
When you’re sitting in the bleachers watching your kid make mistakes over and over while other kids execute, something breaks inside. You feel their embarrassment. You think about how hard this must be. You want to save them from it.
So you have a choice. You can pretend your kid is fine and encourage them to keep trying. Or you can be honest.
Most parents pretend. They say “everyone starts somewhere.” They say “they’ll improve.” They say “it’s not about winning.” All true, but evasive. What they’re not saying is: “Your kid is struggling and it’s going to be hard to stay with this group.”
Here’s what I’d do instead. Have a real conversation with your kid when you’re not in crisis.
“I’ve been watching you play. You’re working hard. I also notice you’re finding it tough compared to some of the other kids. Is this fun for you? Or does it feel like school where you’re not getting it?”
Listen. Don’t interrupt. Don’t defend. Don’t minimize.
Then be honest about the options:
Stay and fight through it. This team, this season, knowing it’s going to be hard. Some kids do this. They improve slowly. They stick. It teaches them something real about resilience.
Find a different team. A team where the skill level matches theirs. Where they can compete, not just participate. Easier road, but different lessons.
Take a break. Not forever. But maybe this year isn’t the year. They can come back different.
What you don’t do: pretend everything is fine while your kid is visibly struggling. That teaches them that you can’t be honest about hard things, that their reality doesn’t matter if it makes you sad.
Honesty is harder. But it’s what your kid needs.
If they stay, help them improve specifically. Not “try harder.” But “your footwork is behind. Let’s work on it.” If they switch teams, help them find the right fit. If they take a break, let them come back different.
The worst thing you can do is let them stay miserable on a team where they don’t belong because you can’t face the conversation.