How to Deal With Difficult/Bully Coaches [Podcast]

Handling Bully Coaches in Youth Sports

Ultimate Sports Parent Podcast

Ultimate Sports Parent Radio interviews Christopher Hickey, executive director of the National Council for Accreditation of Coaching Education.

In this week’s Ultimate Sports Parents podcast:

Hickey talks about how parents can deal with difficult or bully coaches. Mental game expert Dr. Patrick Cohn provides commentary.

Download the How to Deal With Difficult/Bully Coaches Podcast (right click and “save as” to your computer)

Download our FREE E-book: “10 Tips to Improve Young Athletes Confidence and Success


*Subscribe to The Sports Psychology Podcast on iTunes
*Subscribe to The Sports Psychology Podcast on Spotify


Help Young Athletes Boost Confidence in Sports!

The Ultimate Sports Parent

Every day, we receive letters from parents like you who want their children and teens to excel in sports. However, these parents can see fear, doubt, and frustration on the faces of their kids who struggle with the “inner” game of sports. But these parents have no idea how to help their kids overcome the worries, expectations and self-defeating thoughts that prevent their young athletes from feeling confident and successful.

You can benefit from our 15-plus years’ of work in sports psychology and sports parenting research. Now, you can tap into our secrets to sports success through a cutting-edge, 14-day program that helps young athletes overcome the top “mental game” challenges that sports parents face—and the top challenges young athletes face.

2 thoughts on “How to Deal With Difficult/Bully Coaches [Podcast]”

  1. My daughter is 13 years old and will be going into 8th grade in the fall of 2012. She just finished club volleyball this year and tonight had a preliminary practice for the CYO team of next year. The coach this year is known to us but this will be the first year she is coaching volleyball at our parish. My daughter came home tonight after the first practice saying that the coach must not “like” her. I asked why and she said that they were learning an exercise drill and my daughter followed the pattern. The coach then asked her if she had an attention problem. The coach had her run a lap and as my daughter turned to run the lap, she heard the coach ask her friends if my daughter did well in school, implying that she was not intelligent. I find this apprehensible and very much a bullying behavior, certainly not something I would expect from a CYO coach. My daughter wants me to ignore the situation but I am feel justified in my anger and want to report the coach. I don’t think she is building character, she’s attempting to break it!

  2. My son has a school coach who is a bully. Put downs in sports do not help kids, no matter how old they are. What can parents do? Help me help my son!

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.