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When Your Athlete Isn’t Getting Playing Time: A Parent’s Survival Guide

When Your Athlete Isn’t Getting Playing Time: A Parent’s Survival Guide

When Your Athlete Isn’t Getting Playing Time: A Parent’s Survival Guide. Watching your child sit more than they play is hard — sometimes harder for us as parents than it is for them. You know they’ve worked, trained, and dreamed of being in the game. Instead, they’re spending most of their time cheering from the sideline.

It’s tempting to fix it, to push for answers, or to silently stew in frustration. But these moments can also be powerful teachers — for them and for us. With the right approach, we can help our kids grow through this season instead of letting it shrink them.

Take our Quiz to Find Out What Kind of Sports Parent You Are

Here’s your survival guide.


1. Keep Their Confidence Alive

When minutes are scarce, their self-worth can take a hit. You can help keep it intact:

20 Questions Every Sports Parent Should Ask Themselves


2. Talk in a Way That Lifts, Not Weighs

The car ride home sets the tone for how they’ll remember the game.


3. Be the Parent Every Team Needs

Your presence can strengthen the entire team dynamic.


4. Help Them Be Ready When It’s Their Moment

Sometimes the opportunity comes unexpectedly.


5. Have a Practical Game Plan for Yourself

Your mindset impacts theirs.


6. Zoom Out to See the Bigger Picture

This is the perspective piece that keeps both of you grounded.


👉 For more like this and support along your youth sports journey, visit ilovetowatchyouplay.com and follow us on Instagram @theilovetowatchyouplay.

More articles you might enjoy:

What No One Tells You About Being a Sports Parent

A Father’s Ode To His Son’s Last Game

Nine Signs Your Child Has Burnout

The Reasons Girls Should Play Sports

About The Author

Asia Mape is a 3-time Emmy Award-winning journalist, former Division I athlete, youth sports advocate, and founder of Ilovetowatchyouplay.com. She’s a mom to three daughters—one Division I athlete, one soon-to-be, and one who ‘retired’—and all of their journeys through sport have shaped her mission to help other families navigate the chaos, pressure, and beauty of raising young athletes.

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