"Share something great." Find a great recipe, quote, movie, book, life hack, or a great play. Share relentlessly. Don Meyer was a great coach and an amazing sharer. Answered questions online...
Coach Michael Neighbors is a sharer, including many "Things I Have Stolen."
Here's an abbreviated list from Leadership Expert Jeff Janssen.
- Character - Based Credible Coaches are people with great character.
- Competent - know the strategies and skills of their sport
- Caring - real passion for players and coaching
- Confidence Builder - their athletes feel good about themselves
- Communicator - talk and listen well
- Consistent - consistent philosophies and moods
At its core, Radical Candor is the intersection of Caring Personally and Challenging Directly. When a parent approaches a coach about playing time, the "Radical" part is being honest about the child's current skill level, while the "Candor" part is doing so without being a jerk.
Here is how to navigate those high-tension conversations using these principles.
The Radical Candor Approach
In this framework, silence or "sugar-coating" is considered Ruinous Empathy, which ultimately hurts the athlete because they never learn what to improve. Conversely, being blunt without empathy is Obnoxious Aggression.
Three Dos
Do: Focus on the "Future State." Instead of justifying past benching, frame the conversation around the specific growth required to earn more time. This moves the conversation from a complaint to a roadmap.
Do: Schedule a "Cooling Off" Window. Radical candor requires presence of mind. Implement a "24-hour rule" after games so that both parties can move out of an emotional state and into a collaborative one.
Do: Provide Objective Benchmarks. Use data or specific technical milestones. "I care about your child’s development, and right now, their defensive rotation is at a level that limits their safety/efficacy in high-speed play."
Three Don'ts
Don't: Discuss Other Athletes. Radical candor is about the individual relationship. Comparing a child to a teammate is a shortcut to "Obnoxious Aggression" and creates a toxic culture.
Don't: Use the "Feedback Sandwich." (Positive-Negative-Positive). Parents often listen for the "bread" and ignore the "meat." Be direct about the performance gap immediately, then pivot to how you will support the child in closing it.
Don't: Take it Personally. When a parent isn't "listening," they are often in a state of protective bias. Maintain your "Care Personally" stance by staying calm, even if they become confrontational.
Navigating the "Non-Listener"
When a parent is too emotionally invested to hear the truth, the coach must shift from feedback to boundary setting.
If the parent refuses to acknowledge the performance gap, a tactful response looks like this:
"I hear how much you want [Child's Name] to be on the field; I want that for them, too. However, my responsibility to the team and to [Child's Name]’s safety is to play those who have mastered [Specific Skill]. I am happy to keep working with them on this, but my decision on playing time stands for now. Let's touch base in two weeks to see their progress."
Summary Table: Feedback Quadrants
| Quadrant | Coach's Response Style | Outcome |
| Radical Candor | Clear, kind, and evidence-based. | Growth and trust. |
| Ruinous Empathy | Avoids the truth to keep the parent happy. | Stagnation and confusion. |
| Obnoxious Aggression | Blunt, dismissive, or insulting. | Resentment and conflict. |
| Manipulative Insincerity | Passive-aggressive or talking behind backs. | Total culture breakdown. |




