THE CHILD WHO ISN’T THE BEST PLAYER ON THE TEAM

Every grassroots football team has one.

Actually…

Most teams have several.

The child who isn’t the quickest.

Isn’t the strongest.

Doesn’t score the most goals.

Doesn’t get picked first in every drill.

Sometimes they don’t even believe they should be there.

They’re the child who quietly gets on with it.

The one who always turns up.

Always listens.

Always tries.

Always applauds everyone else.

They don’t usually get Player of the Match.

Parents don’t stand behind the goal talking about them.

Opposition coaches rarely notice them.

But somebody does.

Their coach.

Because good coaches know something many people forget.

Football isn’t a race to find the best eleven-year-old.

It’s a journey to help every child become the best version of themselves.

Some children develop early.

Others don’t.

Some are physically stronger at nine.

Others catch them at fourteen.

Some dominate youth football.

Some disappear before adulthood.

Some struggle through every age group…

…before suddenly flourishing when nobody expected it.

Grassroots football is full of stories like that.

The problem is…

Adults are often far more impatient than children.

We love certainty.

We love predicting the future.

“This one will definitely make it.”

“That one won’t.”

But football has spent decades proving us wrong.

Late developers become captains.

Quiet children become leaders.

Small players become outstanding footballers.

The goalkeeper who’s terrified of diving today…

Might become the player everyone relies on tomorrow.

Children change.

Sometimes unbelievably quickly.

That’s why labels are so dangerous.

“The weak one.”

“The slow one.”

“The substitute.”

“The difficult one.”

Children hear those labels.

Even when adults think they don’t.

The best coaches never coach labels.

They coach people.

Because every child deserves somebody who believes in them before they’ve fully learned to believe in themselves.

Perhaps that’s the greatest gift a coach can give.

Hope.

Not false hope.

Real hope.

The hope that says,

“I can see something in you.”

Sometimes that’s all a child needs.

A little patience.

A little encouragement.

A little belief.

The reality is that grassroots football isn’t just about discovering talent.

It’s about developing confidence.

Character.

Friendship.

Resilience.

Kindness.

The child who’s struggling today may never become the best footballer.

But they might become the teammate everybody wants beside them.

The captain who lifts everyone else.

The volunteer coach twenty years from now.

The referee.

The committee member.

The parent encouraging every child from the touchline.

Football needs those people just as much as it needs goalscorers.

So the next time you watch a grassroots match…

Don’t just watch the child scoring hat-tricks.

Watch the player chasing every lost cause.

The one helping an opponent back to their feet.

The one applauding teammates.

The one who never stops trying.

Because sometimes…

The child who isn’t the best player on the team…

Ends up becoming the very best thing about it.

And that’s a success no league table could ever measure.

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