What Clubs Should
Do
by Scott Murphy on Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Do clubs have value? What is an athletics (Track & Field, and Cross
Country in the USA) club? What purpose should it serve? Who should
be the target audience, and users, of clubs?
My thoughts on these questions have not changed since my first encounter
with clubs, as a volunteer assistant high school coach, in 1998.
Absolutely, clubs have value. When they are designed, positioned,
and administered properly. Clubs have the ability in some states to
allow athletes to conduct safe and supervised workouts outside their
scholastic season. In other states, clubs are the only mechanism whereby
elite athletes may compete at a regional or national level during their
scholastic season. In all cases, clubs provide the opportunity for
athletes to compete in meets and seasons that are not available to
them through their school teams.
An athletics (or TFXC) club is simply an organization of like-minded
individuals who gather to share knowledge, gain inspiration, and demonstrate
their skills and abilities in the area of Track & Field.
The purpose of a club is simple. It should serve as the underlying
structure to permit the definition in the previous paragraph to be
executed. Clubs do not replace scholastic teams, but may serve as a
supplement. In that capacity, all involved coaches should consider
the priorities of the athlete when scheduling workouts and competitions.
The target audience of clubs is, and should be, any person who desires
to improve and contribute to the positive growth of the program. Improvement
may take the form of knowledge, skill, and/or performance. We should
keep in mind that current level of expertise is not a final predictor
of eventual level of expertise.
In some cases, clubs have been
seen to have a negative impact on the season (or career) of an individual.
Club coaches must be aware of the potential negative effects of over-training
- especially on youth athletes.
Clubs have historically contributed both great numbers, and great
individual performers, to the sport. There is no reason this should
not contiue indefinitely, if everyone involved remembers to place the
good of the athletes as the highest goal. |