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What Every Youth Sports Parent Needs to Hear: Lessons from Rebecca Lowe, Abby Wambach, and Julie Foudy

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What Every Youth Sports Parent Needs to Hear: Lessons from Rebecca Lowe, Abby Wambach, and Julie Foudy

What Every Youth Sports Parent Needs to Hear: Lessons from Rebecca Lowe, Abby Wambach, and Julie Foudy. When NBC’s Premier League host Rebecca Lowe sat down with Abby Wambach and Julie Foudy on Welcome to the Party, it was part comedy routine, part survival guide for sports parents. Rebecca came with questions—about snacks, wagons, and whether she should be attending every practice—and Abby and Julie responded with the kind of wisdom you can only get from parents who have lived it all.

As someone who works on the podcast and has been focused on helping families navigate youth sports for more than a decade, this episode felt like a gift. It captured everything we try to give parents here: practical advice, laughter at the absurdity, and a reminder that joy should always be the North Star.


Why This Episode Mattered

Rebecca’s honesty as a soccer mom of a nine-year-old made the conversation relatable. She voiced the questions we all have but rarely say out loud: Am I a bad parent if I don’t go to every practice? Do I really need a wagon and a tent just to sit on the sidelines?

Abby and Julie’s answers were grounding, freeing, and sometimes hilarious. They made it clear: parents don’t need to complicate this. In fact, we usually make it harder than it has to be. Their message: pull back, give kids the space to lead, and don’t let youth sports hijack your family’s life.


Big Takeaways for Parents

Here are some of the standout lessons, with timestamps so you can listen in:

  • Encourage multi-sport play (27:00) — Abby explains why her headers on the national team wouldn’t have been possible without basketball.

  • Stop talking (29:21) — Julie pleads with parents to quit yelling instructions; Rebecca wonders if a simple “Go on, Ted!” is allowed. Spoiler: positive cheering yes, coaching no.

  • Snack sanity (23:19) — Forget overthinking. Donut holes, cookies, Pirate’s Booty… keep it simple, let kids have their treat, and add your own flair. Abby even recalls the U.S. Women’s National Team pregame spread: PB&Js, candy, and sometimes cinnamon rolls bigger than your head (23:45).

  • “Special wins,” not outcomes (35:21) — Abby reframes post-game talk around leadership and effort instead of the scoreline.

  • Practice is not for parents (37:01) — Maybe the most liberating line: “Do not go to practice.” It’s kids’ time for mistakes, risks, and growth.

  • The two best post-game lines (49:31) — “I love watching you play.” / “Did you have fun?”

  • Blame, Shame, or Claim (49:52) — Abby describes how kids process mistakes: some blame, some spiral into shame, and a rare few claim responsibility. Teaching them to move toward claim builds resilience and accountability.

  • Let your kid lead (54:18) — Parents drive, pay, and support. Kids decide if they want to play and how much they want to invest.

  • Joy as the North Star (52:30) — Julie’s most important reminder: if it’s not fun, why are we doing it? Make joy the guiding principle.

  • Don’t let sports take over your life (59:41) — Vacations, weekends, and family time matter too.

  • Don’t badmouth teammates or coaches (1:02:13) — Conflict navigation is one of the best life skills sports gives kids—don’t rob them of it.


Why This Matters

Almost 70% of kids quit sports by 13, and the number one reason is because it stops being fun. (Aspen Institute, Project Play). This conversation was a master class in keeping fun front and center—without guilt, pressure, or over-involvement.

Rebecca admitted she has “a long 10 years ahead” but what makes her a great parent is the same thing that made her a great guest: she’s willing to ask the questions we all have, and she’s willing to laugh at herself along the way.

 

Julie and Abby’s Cheat Sheet:

✅ Do 🚫 Don’t
Encourage multi-sport play Go to every practice
Stop sideline coaching Fixate on wins/losses
Cheer positively (for effort, not outcome) Let sports run your whole life
Smile & model joy Badmouth coaches or teammates
Ask the post-game “magic lines” → “I love watching you play” / “Did you have fun?” Make every game mandatory
Let your kid lead & take responsibility Talk during the game (even “helpful” instructions)

🎧 Listen to the full episode here: Welcome to the Party: Rebecca Lowe on Youth Sports
📺 Subscribe on YouTube: Welcome to the Party Show

Primary Sidebar

  • What Every Youth Sports Parent Needs to Hear: Lessons from Rebecca Lowe, Abby Wambach, and Julie Foudy
  • The Death of “Every Kid Gets a Trophy”
  • Shame, Blame, or Claim: How Does Your Kid Handle the Hard Stuff
  • Can We Spot ACL Injuries Before They Happen?
  • What a NASA Study Discovered About Kids That Every Parent and Coach Needs to Understand
  • When Your Athlete Isn’t Getting Playing Time: A Parent’s Survival Guide

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  • Sports Parenting
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  • High Performance
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We Believe In The Power Of Sports

Injuries in young athletes have soared. Costs to compete have skyrocketed. Kids are quitting in record numbers. But we believe strongly in youth sports, and the many ways it improves our childrens’ lives.

We are here to help parents regain balance and sanity, and to help restore the joy, accomplishment, and core values derived from sports.

Begin your journey today.

 

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According to a survey conducted over 30 years by two coaches and athletic administrators about what young athletes want to hear most from their parents after a sporting event, it turns out it is: “I love to watch you play.”

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