(Part 2) Best sports & outdoors books for children according to redditors

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We found 62 Reddit comments discussing the best sports & outdoors books for children. We ranked the 29 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Subcategories:

Camping books for children
Baseball books for children
Basketball books for children
Cycling books for children
Football books for children
Gymnastics books for children
Hockey books for children
Martial art books for children
Motor sports books for children
Olympics books for children
Racket sports books for children
Soccer books for children
Water sports books for children
Winter sports books for children
Track & field books for children

Top Reddit comments about Children's Sports & Outdoors Books:

u/joshing_slocum · 24 pointsr/MLS

Help Jeff recover from this setback by buying his children's books centered on sports stories: 1) Tom Brady and Bill Bellichick; 2) Cavaliers win 2016 NBA title; 3) 2016 Chicago Cubs; and 4) Crimson Tide. Bonus book: NASA sending men to the moon.

Jeff Attinella: Husband, father, sports warrior, 2-time MLS Cup runner-up, Timber, and author.

u/cthulhu-kitty · 6 pointsr/girlscouts

I’m not sure what ages or levels you’re leading, or whether you’re inheriting a previous troop or starting from scratch, so here’s my most general advice...

Don’t burn yourself out trying to do the badges. Sit down alone with the badge list and look through the requirements for each badge. Then make a list of the ones that you know you can facilitate. Then present that list to the girls to vote on and have them narrow it down to the top 3 that they’re most excited about.

Don’t buy the binders. You can find the badge steps and sample meeting plans online. People scan and post the binder innards to Pinterest. My local library even has copies if I need one. I also tell all my families to save their money and just buy the basic uniforms.

I stay organized with an $8 Girl Scout planner from Amazon and a Band (free app/website that’s private and only open to our troop and parents). We post our calendar and photos and information there.

And speaking of your troop calendar: set up the troop meetings and events according to your schedule. Don’t bend over backwards trying to meet Tuesdays after school if Saturdays fit you best. Plan out your year (but stay flexible).

Don’t take it personally if girls leave because they have other commitments or families decide it doesn’t fit their schedule. As long as you’re not kicking a girl out for disciplinary issues, just leave the door open for them to return at a later date.

Be absolutely crystal clear with parents about how the troop bank account works and the rules for the money if they leave the troop. I’ve heard horror stories about parents demanding “their cut” of cookie sales or asking for checks to be cut to them when their daughter leaves the troop. Nip that in the bud upfront. I’ll PM you the text of a ‘welcome letter’ that I give to all new parents that covers everything.

It’s the girls’ money, not mine. So if they earn $500 from cookie sales and they vote as a group that they want to have a blowout party with pizza and bowling and roller skating? OK! My job as the adult leader is to remind them that they might also have upcoming camping trip expenses, or upcoming supplies needed for a project, and to help them manage their budget. $500 is not a “real” amount of money to 8-year-olds, but even they can see that blowing 2/3 of their entire bank account on one party might not be wise.

And listen to the girls! Don’t burn yourself out trying to do badge work if they would rather do arts & crafts. Don’t force them to do big involved volunteer service projects if they’d rather be doing STEM activities. Don’t drag them to museums if they’d rather be camping.

Yes, there’s room for new experiences and growth and change, but if you’re miserable and the girls are miserable and nobody is having fun then something is wrong. As each troop grows and changes they tend to have their own characteristics. Some troops just wanna have fun. Some troops are gung-ho about breaking cookie sales records. Some troops focus all their time on community service. Some troops are happy to do arts & crafts every week. Be upfront with new parents about what your troop is like. (My girls love STEM and camping and field trips. I’m laid-back about cookies, so if you sell 50 and you’re happy? I’m happy. If you sell 300 and you’re miserable? I’m not happy. I’m strict and I don’t allow phones while we’re having meetings or camping. I’m all about free field trips and saving the troop money for camping and travel.)

u/analogboy56 · 2 pointsr/baseball

Does this help?

http://www.amazon.com/Baseball-You-Manager-Nathan-Aaseng/dp/0822515520

It's a little before the time frame that you gave, but it sounds close to it.

Edit: How about this:

http://www.amazon.com/Play-Book-Baseball-Manager-Shots/dp/0316836249

u/rossrhea · 2 pointsr/hockey

Well, there's always the classic Scrubs on Skates series. Published in the 50s and written by Neil Young's dad Scott.

As for non-fiction, I really liked From the Broadcast Booth by Brian McFarlane. He also has a series profiling the Original Six teams. Link to Leafs one because bias.

u/stonewalled87 · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Lately I have been trying to run more so to increase my stamina I have also done a lot of hiking. I have this book about the Giants on my wishlist, it might be the only sports related thing I have.

Walking on sunshine

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/pics

In 6th grade I wrote a paper about this book and sent it to Gary Paulsen. He sent me back this book, with this inscription, which reads:

>For SGMD1,

>With every good wish -

>Gary Paulsen

>I'm sorry I don't have time to write a personal letter to you. Hope this makes up for it.

>P.S. It was a great thesis.

One of the fondest memories of my childhood.

u/MusterYourWits · 1 pointr/exchristian

Things that were banned in our household (from what I remember - I'm probably missing some things):