SHOULD EVERY CHILD GET EQUAL GAME TIME?

Few topics create more debate in grassroots football than game time.

Ask ten coaches whether every child should play the same number of minutes, and you’ll probably hear ten different answers.

Some believe equal game time is one of the foundations of youth football. Others argue that football is competitive, and selection should reflect commitment, attitude and performance.

So where should grassroots football draw the line?

Those in favour of equal game time believe children join football to play, not to watch. Families give up weekends, pay subscriptions and support their clubs because they want children to experience the game, not spend most of it on the sidelines.

They also point out that players develop at different speeds. The child sitting on the bench today could easily become one of the strongest players in two or three years. If opportunities are limited now, that development may never happen.

Many coaches would agree.

Confidence often comes from playing matches, making mistakes and learning through experience—not simply watching others.

However, there is another perspective.

Some coaches believe equal game time should never mean equal regardless of effort.

What about the player who rarely attends training?

What about poor behaviour?

What about commitment throughout the season?

Should those factors influence selection?

Then there are cup finals, title deciders and knockout football.

Many volunteers admit these are the hardest decisions they make.

Do they reward attendance and loyalty?

Or do they pick the strongest team available?

There is no answer that keeps everyone happy.

Perhaps that’s because one solution doesn’t fit every age group.

At younger ages, equal game time often supports confidence, enjoyment and long-term participation.

As players get older, many naturally begin to understand competition, accountability and earning opportunities through commitment.

Maybe the challenge isn’t deciding whether equal game time is right or wrong.

Maybe it’s deciding when development gradually gives way to competition.

Whatever approach a club takes, one thing remains essential.

Communication.

Parents don’t always expect coaches to make decisions they agree with.

But they do appreciate understanding the thinking behind them.

Most disagreements begin not with selection itself, but with confusion.

At the heart of every decision should be one simple question.

“What’s best for the child?”

Sometimes that means more minutes.

Sometimes it means patience.

Sometimes it means difficult conversations.

Grassroots football has never been about producing identical experiences for every player.

It’s about creating environments where every child feels valued, respected and motivated to keep playing.

How clubs achieve that may differ.

The responsibility to keep children enjoying football never should.

Over To You…

Should equal game time be expected at every age group, or is there a point where competition should begin to influence selection? If so, when?

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