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The Dad Edge Podcast

How to Show Up for Your Kid When the Environment Around Him Is Toxic

The Dad Edge Podcast

Larry Hagner

Education, Self-improvement, Health & Fitness

4.8 β€’ 1.6K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 13 May 2026

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, Larry and Uncle Joe tackle one of the most relatable questions any sports dad has ever asked β€” what do you do when the environment your kid is playing in is toxic, and it's breaking his spirit?

The question comes from Mike β€” a dad of two boys whose 11-year-old has recently had his love for baseball crushed by the culture of travel sports. The kid is now telling himself he's not good enough and that quitting is the answer. Mike is doing the work, modeling emotional regulation at home, and feeling like an imposter because none of it seems to be helping.

Larry shares his own story of pushing his son too hard in wrestling, learning to let him lead, and watching him play football for ten years before deciding on his own to walk away. Joe drops an ancient Chinese archery proverb that reframes the entire conversation β€” and explains why the need to win literally drains a kid of every skill he has. Alliance member Calvin adds a coach's perspective on getting to the root of what's really going on with your son.

This is a short, punchy, deeply practical episode that every sports dad needs to hear β€” especially if you've ever wondered whether the investment of time and money in travel sports is actually worth it.

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Timeline Summary

[0:00] Introduction to the Dad Edge mission and the movement to raise leaders of families and communities

[1:02] Mike's question: my 11-year-old's spirit is being broken by travel baseball's toxic culture β€” what do I do?

[3:47] Larry's wrestling story β€” getting excited about a scholarship, pushing too hard, and learning to follow his son's lead

[6:26] Dr. John Delany's take: travel sports is ruining the dinner table of the American family

[7:37] The stats β€” only 1.5% of kids who play youth sports will play in college

[9:03] How kids start attaching their identity to their performance β€” and why that's dangerous

[11:47] Whatever you start, you finish β€” the Hagner family rule and why it matters

[12:32] The hockey coach who got kicked out of games three times β€” and the son who never played hockey again

[13:41] 82% of kids quit a sport because of the coach β€” not the sport itself

[15:33] Joe's ancient Chinese archery proverb β€” when an archer shoots for nothing, he has all of his skill

[16:39] Why travel ball brings out the worst in parents β€” the lottery mindset and the toxicity that follows

[17:12] If you play for somebody else's approval, you play half the game you would have played

[17:45] Be the anti-venom β€” how to show up as the most positive presence in the stands

[20:25] Calvin's perspective β€” get down to his level, ask the real questions, and watch how he shows up at practice

[22:14] Mike's takeaway β€” finish the season, support his decision, and help him find his football whatever that looks like

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Five Key Takeaways

  1. Only 1.5% of kids who play youth sports will play in college. Before you invest five figures a year in travel sports, ask yourself who this is really for β€” your kid or you.
  2. When a child's identity gets attached to their performance, and the environment around them is relentless and critical, they don't just quit the sport β€” they start believing they aren't good enough at life.
  3. Whatever you start, you finish. Let your kid know you support whatever they decide when the season is done β€” but the commitment they made to the team matters and they're going to honor it.
  4. The need to win drains a player of every skill they have. When a kid stops playing for the love of it and starts playing for approval, they play half the game they're capable of.
  5. You can't insulate your kids from toxic environments β€” but you can be the anti-venom. Be the most positive person in those stands, speak life into every kid, and let your son see what that looks like.

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Links & Resources

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Closing

If there's one message from this episode that stands out, it's this: the goal of youth sports was never the scholarship β€” it was the lesson.

The kids who look back and love what sports gave them aren't the ones who made it to college or the pros. They're the ones who had a coach who believed in them, a parent who cheered for effort instead of outcomes, and a teammate who made them laugh on the bench eating Big League Chew.

Be the anti-venom. Finish the season. And let your kid find their football.

Go out and live legendary.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. The Dad Edge movement creates leaders of men, leaders of families, and leaders of communities. We will not only impact this generation of fathers, but the next generation as well. The kids we are raising will have better chances and odds stacked in their favor because of the amazing example

0:21.2

that their fathers emulated for them. We are here to change the world. We are here to change

0:27.6

relationships. We are here to positively disrupt this generation of fathers so no man goes to their

0:33.6

grave with regret. We disrupt the drift of busyness and replace it with razor-focused intention,

0:40.3

passion, purpose, and direction.

0:43.7

We are the Dad Edge,

0:45.7

and we're here to change the game.

0:47.8

We're here to change the game.

1:27.6

I don't know. What's up, Legends? Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. I'm Larry Hagner, your host and founder of this podcast, this show, and movement. This is our Wednesday Q&A. You're going to be able to find all the show notes today because I think we're going to cover something really, really important today. If you guys go to the dad edge.com forward slash 1477 for this show. I got my man, the myth, the legend, who's got the periodic table. Why have, have, have I ever noticed this, Joe? I don't know. Maybe you have.

1:29.9

It's like, it's just part of my nerdism.

1:32.7

You know, you guys, I'm, I'm an engineer at heart. So, you know, I've got, you know, I've got the periodic table behind me.

1:37.5

Yeah.

1:37.7

Gosh, dude.

1:38.9

That, that brings back absolute horror for me.

1:42.3

Like, I was so bad in chemistry that I had to take a five credit class because I had to go every day in order to learn it.

1:50.9

And then I had to be like a part of the study group with the other, you know, idiots who never really got chemistry.

1:57.2

But how much chemistry did you take?

2:00.8

Me? Yeah. Oh, not that much. did you take? Me?

2:01.7

Yeah.

2:01.9

Not, not that much.

2:03.5

Okay?

2:04.3

It's just like, I got, I got, this, this is Ivy.

...

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