15 THINGS CHILDREN WILL NEVER SAY… BUT EVERY GRASSROOTS COACH NEEDS TO HEAR

Children don’t always tell us what they’re thinking.

Especially at football.

They don’t always have the words.

Sometimes they don’t want to disappoint us.

Sometimes they don’t want to look weak.

Sometimes they simply assume adults already understand.

The truth is…

If children could say exactly what they were thinking, many coaches would hear something very different from what they expect.

Here are fifteen things children may never say out loud.

But every grassroots coach should remember.

1. “I really want you to be proud of me.”

It isn’t always about scoring.

Sometimes they’re just hoping you’ll notice how hard they tried.

2. “I’m trying my best.”

Even when it doesn’t look like it.

Confidence can make effort difficult to see.

3. “I’m scared of making a mistake.”

One angry reaction can stay with a child for weeks.

One encouraging word can do exactly the opposite.

4. “Please don’t compare me to the best player.”

I already know who they are.

I just want to become the best version of me.

5. “Sometimes I don’t understand.”

Children won’t always ask.

That doesn’t mean they understand your instructions.

6. “When you believe in me, I start believing in myself.”

Confidence is often borrowed before it’s built.

7. “I notice when you encourage other players.”

And I notice when you encourage me too.

Fairness matters.

8. “I don’t expect to play every minute.”

I just want to know I’m still part of the team.

9. “The car journey home matters.”

What adults say after football often stays longer than what happened during football.

10. “Sometimes I just want football to be fun.”

Fun isn’t the opposite of development.

Very often, it’s where development begins.

11. “I remember the little things.”

The high five.

The smile.

The arm around my shoulder.

The ‘well done’ after a mistake.

Those moments stay with me.

12. “I don’t need you to be perfect.”

Children understand coaches make mistakes too.

They simply want honesty and kindness.

13. “Thank you for turning up.”

Children may never say it.

But your time matters more than you realise.

14. “One day I probably won’t remember the score.”

But I’ll remember how football made me feel.

15. “You’re helping me become more than a footballer.”

Every session teaches more than passing and shooting.

You’re helping shape confidence.

Character.

Friendship.

Resilience.

Kindness.

Respect.

Those lessons last much longer than football.


Volunteer coaches carry a huge responsibility.

Not because they’re expected to create professional footballers.

But because every training session is another opportunity to influence a young person’s life.

Most coaches will never know the impact they’ve had.

Years later, a former player might remember one sentence.

One conversation.

One moment of encouragement.

One coach who believed in them when they didn’t believe in themselves.

That is the true privilege of coaching.

Not the trophies.

Not the league titles.

Not the medals.

The opportunity to leave children with happier memories than they arrived with.

So the next time you stand on the training pitch…

Remember this.

Children rarely remember every drill.

They rarely remember every result.

But they’ll never forget how you made them feel.

And sometimes, that’s the greatest coaching achievement of all.

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