Parents and experts use soccer team gloating as a teaching moment
Parents and experts are expressing disappointment in the U.S. women’s soccer team after it erupted in jubilant celebrations during a rout of opposing players this week, saying the behaviour sets a poor example for impressionable young athletes who look to sports idols for guidance.
Athletes should express empathy for their rivals and keep on-field celebrations short, said one sports psychologist, suggesting that if players don’t know whether they’re crossing the line, they should ask themselves how they’d feel if roles were reversed.
“Sports can teach life lessons. When you have a moment when an athlete behaves well or poorly, then we should talk about it,” said Gordon Bloom, a McGill University professor. “You can learn as much from when someone does something that’s wrong as when they do it right.”
Bloom said parents can look at the top-ranked American soccer team’s recent actions as a learning tool. The “over-celebrating” incident took place when the Americans trounced Thailand, which ranks 34th, at the Women’s World Cup on Tuesday. By game’s end, the score was 13-0 — the largest margin of victory in tournament history.