Do the girls you coach clam up on the field? Mine talk all the time…on the sidelines and during warmups.

Girls are happy to chat before they go in.
More chatting than soccer pre-game

But on the field? It’s like pulling teeth.

In a newsletter I read recently, a fifteen-year-old observed that girls were happy to pitch in on impersonal, non-relational topics but were sometimes reluctant to disagree with another girl or apologized for disagreeing. She said,

Girls frequently used phrases such as “no offense,” “I’m sorry, but…,” or “Please don’t hate me…” when stating opinions. 

That’s my girls. They don’t want to tell each other what to do. There’s an (unwritten) social code that prohibits disagreeing. It’s considered bossy, pushy, know-it-all. And it puts you at risk of being on the outs with your group. So instead of risking it, they lose their voice.

After all on the soccer field, who has time for niceties like…

This is girl-speak. And on the playing field, it needs to be rapid fire soccer speak. In soccer speak, Jill hears LINE! Caroline hears SUPPORT! and Allison hears YES! But girls won’t use it …unless you insist.

So how can we  give girls the language that will work and permission to use it? Practice it. And make it fun. I have a couple games I use:

Last thing (and you may not believe this); once you get players to speak soccer, tween girls and younger will ask:

“but coach if we call that out loud, the other team will hear and know what we’re gonna do!”

Yep – that’s the other reason girls don’t speak up. They’re trying to be tricky. And in practice where everyone has heard what they’re planning to do (and may run ahead of the play to foil their efforts), the trick is convincing them that quick execution beats the other team’s reaction every time.

Get them to try it on game day. Turn on the faucets, open the flood gates, use cartoon voices. Whatever works. Because once they connect on that combination and leave the would-be defender in the dust, they’ll trust each other and themselves. Then all that’s left is the high five and the…

 “Nice call!”

“No, nice pass.”

” No way, it was that great run you made.”

“No…

Girls after all will be girls.