Team Roller
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Team Roller
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Breaking down the team
When children are young, they have some difficulty grasping the full breadth of teamwork, especially when it has to do with large teams, such as soccer or baseball or football. Children tend to focus on two facets: offense and defense. For them either they have the ball or the opposing team has it.
Many of the drills that younger children participate in involve two-person drills. Simple and direct. These drills attempt to instill a sense of working together to accomplish a common goal. For example, most early drills in soccer involve to players passing and dribbling the ball together with the goal of moving down the field.
This ability to simplify the game, and the notion of teamwork, helps children to develop core values of sharing and relying on others to accomplish their goal.
Working together
When children learn to work together to achieve something, whether it's scoring or moving down the field, they begin to have the earliest seeds sown of teamwork, which will be important later in life. As they mature and become more skilled at their sport, and their position, they begin to incorporate more teammates into the process of achieving their goals.
During this phase, it becomes important that parents pay attention to their children and how they are treating their teammates and how they are being treated as well. Some children will naturally be more gifted in certain sports while others will not develop the same level of skills. It is important at these stages in their development that they don't take on too much responsibility for the team, and therefore ignore certain teammates.
Maintaining a level of participation
In this modern age of competition, coaches and parents want to see their children succeed and win. This tends to lead to seeking out the best athletes on the team to 'carry' them to victory. This approach is not only detrimental to the skilled and talented players, but also to those who are merely doing the best that they can.
Teaching children the value of teamwork doesn't stop when it's a matter of winning or losing. Team sports are the perfect venue to instill a sense of community and respect in our children. We can start this process even before they set foot on the field, too. Playing simple games, such as beanbags, can offer the opportunity to teach the concepts of working with a team by creating unique variations on the activities that require teamwork.
Being a part of a team requires commitment from the beginning to the end in teamwork and the benefits of these lessons can stretch through an entire lifetime.
Dave Roth runs SC Cornhole Games, a website devoted to the increasingly popular game of Cornhole. This site offers a wide variety of regular cornhole bags, weather-resistant cornhole bags, and cornhole game sets.
The Effect Of The RSROA On Roller Skating
In 1937 a group of roller-rink operators determined to band together and make a serious attempt to elevate the sport's standards and management. Several amateur competitions were fostered. On April 3, 1937, seventeen operators met at Detroit and organized the Roller Skating Rink Operators Association (RSROA) of the United States. It set up as its main objective the advancement of amateur roller skating.
Perry Rawson, a retired New York broker and amateur ice skater, who had thoroughly studied International Style figure and dance skating, visited England in 1937 and saw for himself what had been accomplished on rollers in that country. When he returned to America, Rawson brought back motion picture films showing that the International Style, which was prevalent on ice, was possible on rollers. The films showed British champions doing school figures, free style, and dancing on roller skates.
The exhibition of these films in many rinks throughout the United States aroused great enthusiasm. In October of 1938, James and Joan Lindstone, the British champions, came to the United States and toured the country, giving exhibitions at many of the leading rinks. Their spellbinding act greatly impressed American skaters, and from that point the International Style came into its own in the United States.
The first national meet to be sanctioned by the RSROA was the speed-skating championships held at the Sefferino Rollerdrome at Cincinnati in 1938. In the following year, the RSROA held its first national figure- and dance-skating championships, the figure-skating events being held at the Arena Gardens Rink in Detroit, and the skate-dancing competitions at the Mineola Skating Rink, Mineola, N.Y.
In 1940, figure-, dance-, and speed-skating championships were combined, and an all-inclusive national championship meet was held at the Cleveland Public Auditorium. The four-day meet catered to almost five hundred amateur skaters participating in all the classes of the three branches of the sport.
The meet was so successful that the membership of the RSROA decided to hold the National Championships at the same auditorium in 1941, when for four days, once again, the big auditorium was filled with amateur skaters. There were many more competitors than in the previous year, and ages ranged from six to thirty-six, all competing in dancing, figures, and racing for national titles.
At this time the RSROA founded an annual professional school where the country's leading instructors could get together in a group, exchange information, and agree on the standardization of skating and teaching procedure. It established rules and regulations for the game of roller hockey and for the organization of amateur roller hockey teams and leagues. It arranged a series of graded proficiency tests for dance, figure and speed skating, for which bronze, silver, and gold medals were awarded.
Meanwhile, roller skating had been publicized in three motion picture short subjects, had been included in two feature films, and had been the subject of many magazine articles and at least one full-length novel. Books were published, containing the various rules, regulations, tests, and amateur competitions for all branches of the sport. The first regularly scheduled newspaper column devoted exclusively to roller skating started in the New York Journal-American in 1940. The RSROA was very effective at getting the general public to accept and get excited about roller skating.
About the Author
Roller Skating Tips Exposed-Totally Uncensored And Uncut, Revealing How To Learn All The Different Techniques In Less Than A Week
Click here for FREE online ebook!
http://www.rollerskatingtips.com/
Would you ever join a roller derby team?
Truthfully no! I am lousy at skating.
Rock n’ Rollers return for second season
A lot can happen for a new roller derby team during the off-season of its first and second seasons.
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