COLUMBUS — Inappropriate adult behavior at high school athletic events in Ohio has reached epidemic proportion.
When more than 2,000 high school athletic directors were asked in a recent national survey what they like least about their job, 62.3-percent said it was “dealing with aggressive parents and adult fans.”
The men and women who wear the black and white stripes agree. In fact, almost 80-percent of officials quit after the first two years on the job and unruly parents are cited as the reason why. As a result, there is a growing shortage of high school officials here in Ohio and in some sports like wrestling, swimming, and track and field, the shortage is severe. No officials means no more games.
If you are a parent attending a high school athletic event this fall, you can help by following these six guidelines:
- Act Your Age. You are, after all, an adult. Act in a way that makes your family and school proud.
- Don’t Live Your Life Vicariously Through Your Children. High school sports are for them, not you. Your family’s reputation is not determined by how well your children perform on the field of play.
- Let Your Children Talk to the Coach Instead of You Doing It for Them. High school athletes learn how to become more confident, independent and capable—but only when their parents don’t jump in and solve their problems for them.
- Stay in Your Own Lane. No coaching or officiating from the sidelines. Your role is to be a responsible, supportive parent—not a coach or official.
- Remember, Participating in a High School Sport Is Not About Getting a College Scholarship. According to the NCAA, only about 2% of all high school athletes are awarded a sports scholarship, and the total value of the scholarship is only about $18,000.
- Make Sure Your Children Know You Love Watching Them Play. Do not critique your child’s performance on the car ride home. Participating in high school sports is about character development, learning and having fun—not winning and losing.
Purchasing a ticket to a high school athletic event does not give you the right to be rude, disrespectful or verbally abusive. Cheer loud and be proud, but be responsible and respectful. The future of high school sports in Ohio is dependent on you.

Mr. Snodgrass. What are your priorities? You issue a warning to parents and fans, meanwhile you have a program at Dayton Dunbar with has physically attacked referees and still no action taken.
Those involved should be kicked off the football team and Dunbar’s membership in the OHSAA should be under serious consideration for termination if not a lengthy suspension.
What is happening at DDHS is not an isolated incident. It is a systemic problem within the Dayton Public Schools and the upright parents and fans of other OHSAA member schools demand action now.
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Mr. Snodgrass has ZERO INTEGRITY. OHSAA speaks of things like “fair play” and “sportsmanship”, yet the coach from Strongsville who obviously cheated THREE TIMES in as little over one year with playing extra players is doing business as usual. He draws his income from every school district taxpayer in Ohio, and doesn’t really care. JERRY, you should step down if you don’t have the stones to do the right thing.
You can reach him at 614-267-2502 ext 121. I hope everyone in Ohio floods his voicemail until he resigns and we get someone in there who will do the right thing. Give me a call back Jerry, I’ve been waiting..,
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I love what you are saying. It’s been like this for 20 years.
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I don’t Agree with you coaches lie to the kids all day
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