Dr. Dean Hinitz has been a sports psychologist for 30 years, is a former collegiate gymnast, has worked with Team USA and is the parent of two athletes himself. Hinitz said itโs not a matter of whether or not kids should receive participation trophies for being involved in youth sports, but instead itโs about determining what age is appropriate to celebrate participation and determining what other elements are important in sports.
According to Hinitz, around age 5 is a suitable time to give children participation trophies.
โKids delight in their very first trophy, but after that we start developing criteria for improvement, for excellent play, for place finishes so [kids] can start making distinctions,โ said Hinitz.
He agrees that winning and losing is a component of sports that children need to understand eventually, but Hinitz said that a childโs youth sports experience should not begin with that mentality. You want to acknowledge your child and let them know theyโve been seen, and they tried their very best in the game, and at that early age itโs okay to reinforce that behavior, win or lose, with a reward, according to Hinitz.
As children move up the developmental ladder throughout elementary school, Hinitz said that participation trophies lose their meaning.
โTrophies and rewards mean something as long as they mean something, and thanking anyone for showing up means a ton when youโre 5,โ said Hinitz. โIt doesnโt mean a lot when youโre 15. It doesnโt even mean a ton when youโre 10. Kids are smart enough to start recognizing that thereโs, sort of, individual performance outcomes.โ
However, itโs not all about the outcome of a childโs performance, either. According to Hinitz, coaches have to learn to reward the process elements of sports, like the focus of making a great swing, or the effort it takes to sprint to first base, as opposed to the mathematical results of athletic involvement, like how many points were scored.
He said heโll ask youth basketball players if they can make a great free throw shot every time, and their response is โno,โ but heโll then explain to young players, โYes, you can make a great free throw shot every time, you just canโt make all of your shots,โ reinforcing that elements like focus, attention, effort, commitment and rigor should be recognized in our sports culture just as much as scoring points.
Winning attitude
Hinitz said another problem within our society is if you try something and make a fool of yourself, the effort it took to try in the first place is overshadowed by the negative outcome.
โWhen someone misses a field goal, we all make fun of them as opposed to celebrating the courage to put their cleat in the grass and take a swing at a ball with their leg,โ said Hinitz. โWhatโs been lost is when a little girl falls off the balance beam, we all say, โOh she messed up her routine,โ as opposed to all great respects to those who get on a balance beam.โ
According to Hinitz, outstanding coaches reward true mental toughness, which is the willingness to be vulnerable, exposed and to try. Excellent coaches donโt shame their athletes for missing, they celebrate their athletes for wholehearted effort, or when theyโre 5, for simply showing up and giving the sport a try.
โWe think mental toughness is falling down and getting up again, and thatโs an element of it, but the highest level of mental toughness is saying, without any defenses, without any protection at all, โIโm swinging from my heels, Iโm leaping across the floor, Iโm serving with all of my heart,โโ said Hinitz.
He said that thereโs also underlying messages everywhere in our culture that effort, difficulty and trying are all bad. He said that almost every product around us from garage doors to remotes is designed to teach us that effort is bad and should be avoided at all costs.
โWhere most people are striving to avoid [effort], great coaches say this is good,โ said Hinitz. โItโs good to move. Itโs good to be tired at the end of the day, to feel something that normal people donโt feel, which is physically exhausted. Itโs a hard thing to teach, but itโs an amazing thing to teach.โ
Another element of excellent coaching is creating a true love of the game. Hinitz has also coached a fair amount of youth sports, and, when he asks younger kids what they love about it, they talk about how fun the movements are in their sport and what it feels like to fly, jump and twist. When he asks college-age athletes what they love about their sport, heโll get responses about a gymnast scoring a 9.5 or a baseball player going three for four at the plateโthese responses are no longer about the sport, theyโre about mathematics.
Hinitz has discovered that if an athleteโs love of movement and passion for their sport prevails, even in a high pressure situation, theyโll perform better focusing on, say, the sensation of how good a back flip feels rather than honing in on a potential score.
โThereโs a little kid in all of usโin most of us, and I hope it doesnโt get extinguishedโthat loves to run, jump, flip, catch, fall and get up again, and once we start keeping score, the joy in basic movement can be lost,โ said Hinitz.
