When Youth Soccer Loses The Plot

By: chris | March 31st, 2009

Scituate youth soccer does not deserve Michael Kinahan.

The parents of girls U-7 squad Team 7, aka Green Death, received an email from new coach Michael K recently and some were seriously taken aback. It was refreshingly bold, unapologetically abrasive, and mildly bizarre. So much so, in fact, that it was clearly done in a spirit of humor. Except some parents, and the Scituate soccer powers, didn’t get it – lending more evidence to the theory that one needn’t be bright to reproduce – and Michael was removed from his coaching duties as a result for the greatest youth soccer email ever written.

The email in its entirety – and it’s worth it:


Congratulations on being selected for Team 7 (forest green shirts) of the Scituate Soccer Club! My name is Michael and I have been fortunate enough to be selected to coach what I know will be a wonderful group of young ladies. Chris Mac will also be coaching and I expect the ever popular Terry to return to the sidelines. Our first game will be Saturday April 4 at 10:00AM. There will be a half hour of skills followed by a 1 hour game, so total time will be 1.5 hours. All games will be played on the fields in the front of the High School. Each player will be required to wear shin guards and cleats are recommended but not required. A ball will be provided to each player at the first meeting, and each player should bring the ball to games and practices. There is no set practice time allotted for the U8 teams, but I will convene with the coaches to determine the best time and place. If there are cancellations due to rain, all notices will be posted via the Scituate Soccer Club website, no calls will be made (though I will try to send an email). Attached is the Schedule and Code of Conduct. After listening to the head of the referees drone on for about 30 minutes on the dangers of jewelry (time which I will never get back), no player will be allowed to play with pierced ears, hairclips, etc. We used to tape the earings, but that practice is no longer acceptable. Please let me know if your child has any health issues that I need to be aware of. My home phone is 781 XXX XXXX, my cell number is 781 XXX XXXX, and I check my email frequently. According to my wife, my emails get too wordy, so for those of you read too slowly, are easily offended, or are too busy, you can stop here. For the others……

OK, here’s the real deal: Team 7 will be called Green Death. We will only acknowledge “Team 7” for scheduling and disciplinary purposes. Green Death has had a long and colorful history, and I fully expect every player and parent to be on board with the team. This is not a team, but a family (some say cult), that you belong to forever. We play fair at all times, but we play tough and physical soccer. We have some returning players who know the deal; for the others, I only expect 110% at every game and practice. We do not cater to superstars, but prefer the gritty determination of journeymen who bring their lunch pail to work every week, chase every ball and dig in corners like a Michael Vick pit bull. Unless there is an issue concerning the health of my players or inside info on the opposition, you probably don’t need to talk to me. Coach MacDonald has been designated “good guy” this year.

Some say soccer at this age is about fun and I completely agree. However, I believe winning is fun and losing is for losers. Ergo, we will strive for the “W” in each game. While we may not win every game (excuse me, I just got a little nauseated) I expect us to fight for every loose ball and play every shift as if it were the finals of the World Cup. While I spent a good Saturday morning listening to the legal liability BS, which included a 30 minute dissertation on how we need to baby the kids and especially the refs, I was disgusted. The kids will run, they will fall, get bumps, bruises and even bleed a little. Big deal, it’s good for them (but I do hope the other team is the one bleeding). If the refs can’t handle a little criticism, then they should turn in their whistle. The sooner they figure out how to make a decision and live with the consequences the better. My heckling of the refs is actually helping them develop as people. The political correctness police are not welcome on my sidelines. America’s youth is becoming fat, lazy and non-competitive because competition is viewed as “bad”. I argue that competition is good and is important to the evolution of our species and our survival in what has become an increasingly competitive global economy and dangerous world. Second place trophies are nothing to be proud of as they serve only as a reminder that you missed your goal; their only useful purpose is as an inspiration to do that next set of reps. Do you go to a job interview and not care about winning? Don’t animals eat what they kill (and yes, someone actually kills the meat we eat too – it isn’t grown in plastic wrap)? And speaking of meat, I expect that the ladies be put on a diet of fish, undercooked red meat and lots of veggies. No junk food. Protein shakes are encouraged, and while blood doping and HGH use is frowned upon, there is no testing policy. And at the risk of stating the obvious, blue slushies are for winners.

These are my views and not necessarily the views of the league (but they should be). I recognize that my school of thought may be an ideological shift from conventional norms. But it is imperative that we all fight the good fight, get involved now and resist the urge to become sweat-xedo-wearing yuppies who sit on the sidelines in their LL Bean chairs sipping mocha-latte-half-caf-chinos while discussing reality TV and home decorating with other feeble-minded folks. I want to hear cheering, I want to hear encouragement, I want to get the team pumped up at each and every game and know they are playing for something.

Lastly, we are all cognizant of the soft bigotry that expects women and especially little girls, to be dainty and submissive; I wholeheartedly reject such drivel. My overarching goal is develop ladies who are confident and fearless, who will stand up for their beliefs and challenge the status quo. Girls who will kick ass and take names on the field, off the field and throughout their lives. I want these girls to be winners in the game of life. Who’s with me?

Go Green Death!

Of course he’s not entirely innocent…


Park said a 12-year-old referee refused to return this year because of the way Kinahan treated her last year.

“That did lend some truth to what he said in the e-mail,” said Park.

Still, lose a 12 year old referee or the greatest youth soccer emailer in history? No contest.

[Spotted on Deadspin]



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Comments  

  • ricci |  March 31st, 2009 at 8:36 pm

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    good god what a genius.

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  • Laurie |  March 31st, 2009 at 9:21 pm

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    holy shit. U-7?!?!?!

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  • LorenzoRosanero |  March 31st, 2009 at 10:06 pm

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    Seriously, that was possibly the greatest letter of intent ever written. Declaration of Independence? Step aside! haha

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  • Capunk |  April 1st, 2009 at 1:01 am

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    Ironic that he lost to ‘political correctness’ when he mentioned he doesn’t care for political correctness. I see not much wrong in the e-mail either. A bit harsh, but the intent is good.

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  • martin |  April 1st, 2009 at 1:13 am

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    Capunk – what about “while blood doping and HGH use is frowned upon, there is no testing policy?”

    I love people that try and introduce comedy into everyday life. Unfortunately most people don’t get it.

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  • Jose |  April 1st, 2009 at 2:52 am

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    To be perfectly honest, even though I find this absolutely hilarious, I can see why parents would rather not subject their U-7 daughters to someone that showed that kind of… intent.

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  • Shazback |  April 1st, 2009 at 4:27 am

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    This man seems to have some serious issues. Yes, determination and desire to win are important… But when you’re a coach of U-7s (heck, up to U-13s or U-15s!) the main objective you should have in to actually -improve- the playing level your players have. Making them run after each loose ball will most likely be negative (there’s a reason why the passing game superseded the dribbling game in the 1880s, and why school playground football is just a rabble of kids running after the ball), and berating someone for not winning/making mistakes when they have not been given the proper training to win/do it correctly is ridiculous. As for heckling the refs, I think this coach should be banned by the league from match-day presence in the stadium. We’re not talking about people on equal standing making informed choices (a fully trained referee vs. a manager/coach), but a person who is most likely in the first few steps of a relatively long process towards becoming a referee against a grown man who has been working in the field for a certain number of years. I hope at the very least that one of the referees will learn very precisely Law 12 (Fouls and Misconduct) and dismiss the manager after 2-3 offences.

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  • ejb |  April 1st, 2009 at 5:16 am

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    ^^^^ someone doesnt get it

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  • fcfury |  April 1st, 2009 at 6:32 am

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    Yea, it may be funny if taken out of context, or if there was no truth to his ranting, but clearly his behavior indicates it actually wasn’t supposed to be a joke. We can have a good laugh because we know better, but the truth is this jerk doesn’t and is a prime example of a huge problem within many youth soccer programs. As another poster clearly points out, the emphasis at this age should be developing soccer skills not winning/losing mentalities, but far too frequently the coaches have no skills to teach so they resort to this BS. Not only should this jerk be banned from the sidelines, he should be banned from ever coaching again, and social services should visit his house to make sure he isn’t beating his own kids as well.

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  • kay |  April 1st, 2009 at 8:38 am

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    I picture this guy riding his horse in a “Braveheart – we’re going into battle” motivational speach. Hurrah!

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  • Mike |  April 1st, 2009 at 10:32 am

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    If I had a daughter and she were playing U-7. I would hope to be coaching, but if I could not coach then I would gladly let this guy step in.

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  • Kelly |  April 1st, 2009 at 11:32 am

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    I agree with Mike, as a girl I can say I also love his final paragraph and feel that should be emphasized in a all girls sports, because it really isnt now.

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  • ScituateSoccerMom |  April 1st, 2009 at 10:19 pm

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    I know Mike. Guess what? He is not a jerk, he does not beat his kids, and some people just didn’t get the joke. Sorry.

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  • ScudettoStarved |  April 1st, 2009 at 10:23 pm

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    That was freakin brilliant.

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  • Dustin Edwards |  April 2nd, 2009 at 12:37 am

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    “My heckling of the refs is actually helping them develop as people.”

    Better not heckle me or I’ll correct his Spelling!

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  • miele |  April 3rd, 2009 at 1:59 am

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    Oh how I wish that he could’ve been my coach when I was 7 *eyes mist over*

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  • gogreendeath |  April 4th, 2009 at 5:33 pm

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    agree or disagree, show your support at http://www.gogreendeath.com

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