Non-Fiction / Sports
Date Published: November 12, 2019
In This Is How We Roll athlete, trainer and social worker Nadia Kyba brings you easy-to-understand social work concepts and tools that you can apply to transform your team to growth and performance. Full of stories and examples, this is your guide to the often difficult conversations required for true, lasting conflict resolution.
This Is How We Roll is a light, fun journey through the process of creating a unique team brand that will set your team apart in every practice, game and tournament. Both on and off the court, ice or field, witness your team transform through the conflict resolution method of champions.
Excerpt:
Five years ago, I was out for a walk and
bumped into my friend Dave, who was the president of a local hockey association
at the time. Easygoing and positive, with a quick smile and a certain joie de vivre, Dave is well known and
well liked. He did an enormous amount of volunteer work—he was a real
upstanding member of the community. I knew him as the father of one of my
daughter’s classmates, as well as through hockey, as my other daughter had been
playing on a team in the association of which he was president. The day I
bumped into him, he looked like he had the weight of the world on his
shoulders. He could barely muster a smile.
When he looked at me, I saw a lightbulb go
off for him. Looking back, I think he must have remembered in that moment that
I was a social worker. He knew that I had recently started training on managing
conflict through communication and mediation. When I asked how hockey was
going, he said he had had a really tough season full of all kinds of problems
with a few of the teams in the association. Issues with one team in particular
had been taking up a lot of his time, and he was having trouble getting on top
of the problems. “There are lots of dynamics,” he explained. Some parents believed
some players were bullying the others, and many felt the parent coaches were
not doing enough to address the problem. The coaches saw the problem
differently. As president, he had tried his best to sort through what was
happening by sending emails, holding team and parent meetings, meeting with the
individuals involved and meeting with the board. He had collaborated with the
vice president to strategize. He was finally at a loss.
I asked him when this conflict had begun,
and he said it was about two months prior. I asked him how many hours he
figured he had spent attempting to mitigate it.
After a long pause, he answered: “Including
the other board members assisting in finding a resolution…one hundred.” One hundred hours. And he wanted to hire
me to help out.
My friend and the other board members of the
association whom I got to know through working together were not incapable
people. Dave was the vice president of a large company and managed 75
employees. He likely dealt with conflict every day. The other board members
held similar workplace roles, as did the coaches.
I was not surprised by Dave’s situation. I was glad I
ran into him when I did because I knew I could help. As a social worker, I have
seen that short-term interventions from qualified helpers who offer fresh
perspectives can be incredibly effective. I have also seen what is at stake if
conflict is not managed well in a sports team or organization. Sport can do so
much for young people, for adults and for communities, but conflict in sport
brings with it a high level of emotion. There are weekly local stories about
games where escalating problematic behavior on the sidelines has had parents
fighting and coaches behaving in crazy, abusive ways, leaving governing boards
at a loss. Dave’s scenario represented a president, coaches and players on the
brink of leaving their sport because of unmanaged conflict.
What does
social work have to do with sports? Everything. Think of it this way: What do
you do at the end of a season and the start of another? As a coach, you
probably reflect on what the heck just happened and look ahead to consider
improvements for next year. When you do this, you are unknowingly turning to
your inner social worker…really,
you are! Take a look at this definition:
Social work is concerned with helping individuals and groups
enhance their individual and collective well-being. It helps people develop
their skills and their abilities to use their own resources and those of their
broader community to resolve problems.1
Does this sound like the work you do
as a coach? It does to me. I have seen coaches like you use the social work
skills described above, every day. As a coach, refining these skills will make
your life easier and improve your team’s performance.
By thinking like a social worker, your concern will turn to team
interpersonal development which, when strengthened, will improve performance.
If this sounds like a bunch of fancy words that do not make sense yet, don’t
worry. We are going to get into detail in the book. For now, all you need to
know is that many make the mistake of focusing their coaching style primarily
on skill development and strategy—both of which are important, but they are not
enough on their own. For your team to do well, consistently, you need to know
how to efficiently fix personal clashes when they come up.
Willie
Desjardins, head coach of the L.A. Kings hockey team, Team Canada 2018 Olympic
coach and former head coach of the Vancouver Canucks, holds a Master of Social
Work degree. I remember watching the Canucks under his leadership and paying
close attention to the interactions between the players. As a social worker
myself, I was curious to see how he used the skills he had acquired through his
academic and professional training to manage the relationships between the
athletes on his team. I wanted to know how he developed a cohesive, successful
team in a highly competitive sports environment. We know that sports are about
much more than competition. Relationships and human interaction—the very values
that social work concerns itself with—are fundamental to all sports.
About the Author
Nadia Kyba is a lifelong athlete with a deep love of sport. She believes a single positive experience in organized sport can be life changing for the young, the old and the in-between. Working in the field of alternate dispute resolution in the child welfare system for 22 years, Nadia has developed tried-and-tested techniques and unique methods of conflict management that can be effectively applied in coach-athlete-parent-trainer dynamics in all individual and team sports.
Nadia currently applies her skill as a trainer at the Justice Institute of British Columbia and other agencies where she trains social workers, and in sports leagues where she helps teams take advantage of differences rather than falling into the many traps of divisive behavior.
Nadia’s company, Now What Facilitation, assists athletic organizations in simplifying their work by developing their capacity to manage and resolve conflict. She focuses on essential policies, protocols, training and techniques for effective decision-making. Her clients have included provincial sport administrators and coaches, as well as athletic teams ranging from the high school to the collegiate level.
Nadia has also learned much from her husband, Jim, and daughters, Lucy and Abby, all of whom are multisport athletes and coaches. They have provided invaluable and up-close insight into the foundation of her approach to conflict resolution in sport.
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