Few topics divide grassroots football quite like this one.
Mention the word “poaching” on social media and the comments arrive almost immediately.
“It’s just football.”
“They’re only trying to improve.”
“Players should be free to play where they want.”
“It’s destroying grassroots football.”
The truth is…
Almost everyone agrees players should have the freedom to choose where they play.
The disagreement begins with how those players end up moving.
There is a huge difference between a family deciding it’s time for a new challenge…
…and adults actively encouraging children to leave a team.
One feels natural.
The other leaves clubs devastated.
Every season, hundreds of grassroots coaches spend years developing children.
Teaching them the game.
Building confidence.
Creating friendships.
Supporting families.
Only to watch players disappear after one conversation on the touchline…
One message on social media…
Or one invitation to “just come and have a look at our training.”
Technically…
Nothing may have been done wrong.
Morally…
Many people feel very differently.
The uncomfortable reality is that grassroots football needs player movement.
Children outgrow teams.
Families move house.
Coaches change.
Some players genuinely need a new challenge.
Nobody should ever feel trapped at a football club.
But surely there’s a difference between welcoming a player who’s looking for a new team…
…and persuading one to leave a happy environment.
The people who suffer most are rarely the adults.
They’re the children.
Friendships disappear overnight.
Teams lose players they’ve grown up with.
Volunteer coaches begin questioning whether all their hard work was worthwhile.
Sometimes clubs fold altogether because they lose just two or three players.
And once one child leaves…
Others often follow.
Like dominoes.
Of course, the other side of the argument deserves to be heard too.
What if a child isn’t developing?
What if they’re unhappy?
What if they’re sitting on the bench every week?
What if another club genuinely offers a better experience?
Should loyalty come before opportunity?
Probably not.
Children should always come first.
Which is why this debate is so difficult.
Perhaps the answer isn’t stricter rules.
Perhaps it’s better behaviour.
Imagine if every club followed a simple code.
Don’t approach children directly.
Don’t message players without parents knowing.
Don’t recruit from the touchline.
Don’t undermine another coach.
If a family contacts you first…
Welcome them professionally.
If they don’t…
Leave them alone.
Respect the work another volunteer has already put in.
After all…
Every grassroots coach is trying to do exactly the same thing.
Help children enjoy football.
Maybe we spend too much time competing with one another…
…and not enough time protecting the game we all love.
Because when clubs fight over children, grassroots football rarely has a winner.
So here’s the question.
Where do you think recruitment ends… and poaching begins?
We’re genuinely interested to hear every perspective.
Whether you’re a parent…
A coach…
A committee member…
Or a player.
Let’s have the conversation respectfully.
Because if we’re prepared to listen to one another, we might just find a better way forward.








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