All Articles by Brooke de Lench

Sports Creams Can Be Dangerous

Most sports creams contain methyl salicylate, a toxic chemical which, absorbed in large enough amounts through the skin, can result in serious injury or, even in rare cases, in death from poisoning.

Game Officials Deserve Respect of Parents, Players, and Coaches

Parents and youth sports officials never seem to be on the same page. There always seems to be some tension between them. It often seems to parents that the person officiating must be seeing a different game than they are. Every call seems to go against their child's team. But it doesn't have to be that way.

How to Balance Youth Sports with Family Life

Research shows that parents intuitively know how to balance their child's development. Yet more and more parents seem to be ignoring their own intuition by over-scheduling and over-stressing their child.

Focus On Youth In Youth Sports

The stresses of sports competition can overwhelm the coping skills of parents increasingly led by our winner-take-all society to believe that a child who fails at sports will fail as an adult. Given an environment in which survival virtually requires parents to become overly focused on and invested in their children's success in sports it is no wonder so many act out in inappropriate ways.

Ways for Sports Parents to Set a Good Example

"Children learn self-control by watching you display self-control. Like a coach who remains calm and under control in tough situations, parents who exhibit good sideline behavior provide young athletes with an appropriate role model for handling the emotional ups and downs of competition."

How To Talk To Your Kids Coach

Since it simply isn't possible to shield our children completely from bad coaches, when we feel that we have something to say, no matter how unpopular, we should speak up. If your intuition is to speak, speak. There is no dishonor in voicing an opinion; there is no dishonor in trying to protect your child.

Keeping Our Children Safe On the Playing Fields

As our sons and daughters begin a new school year and the fall sports season, I wonder whether we are truly doing everything we can to reduce the risk that they will be seriously injured or, even die, playing sports. Are those that run the nation's youth sports programs, town recreation directors, and school athletic directors doing every thing they can to make sure that children don't become a statistic in the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research Center.

Suddenly And Silently: Second Impact Syndrome Is Killing Our Children

Each day between 70 and 100 e-mails are sent, redirected or forwarded to me. I try to read, file, redirect or forward each one by the end of the day. The majority of these are directly related to producing our New Media site. Many are press releases, from non-profit organizations to pharmaceutical companies, asking us to plug "the first-over the counter dye-free liquid pain reliever, to publishers with a new book release, and so on.

Father Dies After Hockey Dad's Fight

This week marks the 1-year anniversary of the senseless beating death of youth ice hockey coach and father, Michael Costin. Thomas Junta allegedly beat Costin to death after a pickup hockey in front of Costin's three sons. The beating was so brutal that it has become a national symbol of youth sports parent rage.

Not To Win But To Take Part

The founder of the modern Olympic games, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, first stated the Olympic creed in 1896, and it is as much a cherished ideal today as it was more than a century ago: "The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part."