brodashaw 0 Report post Posted February 1, 2012 Last fall I had some issues with my Pony League team (ages 12-14) staying 'into' the game. I would be coaching third base and see several kids out of the dugout talking with their parents. This year I am going to set the precident that we cannot leave the dugout during the game, but I am looking for other ideas on how to keep kids engaged in the game at all times. I have thought about an incentive program that runs the entire year that if I ask someone how many outs, or where the play is, or what the count is and they don't get it wrong so many times throughout the year we'll do something as a team. My goal is to get them to pay better attention to the game and know what's going on all the time. I understand they have a short attention span, but I guess I selfishly want them to be so into the game, they can't look away. Anyone else have any ideas? Or anyone think I am asking too much out of kids at this age? I think by the time you hit 12-14 you are playing baseball because you want to, not because your parents want to.... but maybe I'm expecting too much. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hank 0 Report post Posted February 3, 2012 I think enforcing the rule of nobody leaves the dugout is a great one. I run that for my kids too (7-9).I grew tired of kids not being on-deck because they're sitting with Mom having a snack.At 12 and 14 kids shouldn't be wandering out of the dugout, but I'm not sure how to get them to focus on the game.I'm in my 30's and during my games I will lose track of how many outs we have. But I think rewarding kids a few times a game for knowing the count, who's up next, etc is a great idea.It certainly can't help. But with today's A.D.D. issues, you may be fighting a losing battle, hahaha. Good luck! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites