ABSTRACT

Many observers have pointed out what is wrong with youth sport: an emphasis on winning at all costs; parental over-involvement; high participation costs that exclude many families; lack of vigorous physical activity; lack of player engagement; and no focus on development. Currently, most attempts at righting the wrongs of youth sport have focused on coach education and curriculum, but in this book, the authors offer a different approach—one that involves changing the game itself.

Re-Designing Youth Sport combines vivid examples and case studies of innovative sport programs who are re-designing their sport with a comprehensive toolkit for practitioners on how to change their game for bigger and better outcomes. It offers a fresh and exciting perspective on the seemingly intractable issues in sport. It presents a practical and empowering pathway for readers to apply the examples and tools to the outcomes that they aspire to achieve in their sport, such as increased fun and excitement, life-skills building, gender inclusion, increased sportspersonship, greater parity and avoidance of one-sided competition, and positive parental roles. The book also reveals how community leagues as well as national and international sport governing bodies are using re-design to accelerate player skill development, tactical awareness, and physical fitness.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Changing the Game

chapter 1|8 pages

What is Sport System Re-Design?

chapter 2|11 pages

The Five Domains of Sport System Re-Design

chapter 3|13 pages

Why Change the Game … and Why Now?

chapter 4|18 pages

Sources of Inspiration

chapter 5|20 pages

Case Studies

chapter 6|15 pages

The Sport System Re-Design Toolkit

Part One

chapter 7|10 pages

The Sport System Re-Design Toolkit

Part Two

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusion