“With a little bit of luck, with a little bit of luck, some other bloke
will do the bloomin’ work.”
Eliza Dolittle’s father got it right. If you can somehow manage to
avoid volunteering, someone else will do the job. Fortunately, there are a lot of
volunteers in this community to pick up the slack. I am talking soccer
of course, but the same applies for baseball, football, PTSA, and a long list
of volunteer opportunities.
Mostly I am pleased with the number of moms and dads that decided
to give their time coaching soccer this fall. The gravitational pull of the
soccer black hole not only eats up matter, but especially chews on that
ever-so-elusive concept of “free time.”
Free time is an oxymoron, if ever there was one. An oxymoron, by the way,
was the guy that sat behind you in algebra class breathing hard.
So with all this free time, I have to admit that I am pleased so many
returning coaches and first-timers signed on the dotted line. I know
coaching clinics are lost weekends, and the number of phone calls seems
incredible, but the whole thing somehow works. The games will be played.
Kids will have fun. Lessons of life will be learned. A few precious
memories will be recorded. If we are lucky, one good example will make the
difference in a life. Chances are as a coach that you will never know when that
moment happened until about 25 years later when someone calls you
“coach” in the checkout line at Target.
Mostly, the benefits are intangible.
Soccer registration is nearly finished. Here in Snoqualmie,
we doubled the number of signups over last year. I think that is pretty cool.
Don Fish and his “sandwich boards of fame” were a big help. I also
have to believe that Mrs. “Soccer”
Sackett at Snoqualmie Elementary surely started something significant. We
still have room for more soccer players in the Snoqualmie Valley Youth
Soccer Association. I especially would like to get more third-, fourth- and
fifth-graders playing soccer. My next soapbox will cover the middle and
high schoolers. Not counting the corner smokers, we could probably still
field a zillion teams.
I can report that new soccer fields at Snoqualmie Ridge and
Snoqualmie Middle School are coming along nicely. I have to let out a big
smile when I see the grass growing. Athletic fields are an expensive
investment in a dot-com economy where open land is as endangered as sockeye.
The school district is looking at how it can do a better job with athletic fields
and youth athletics. Personally, I would like to see an all-weather sports
complex here in the Valley. Yup, that’s bucks spelled with an “M” for
mega. We do need to prepare for the future. The cost of land will never be
cheaper. “Failing to prepare is preparing to fail,” Coach Wooden said.
Michael Lloyd is a local sports enthusiast and board
member of both the Snoqualmie Valley Youth Soccer Association and the
Sno-Valley Little League.