🧪 Case Study 1.3: First Day at Training Camp

Learning Goals

By the end of this case study, you should be able to:

  • Identify what athletes and staff may be carrying beneath the surface on day one (pressure, identity, shame, status anxiety).
  • Practice first-day chaplain behaviors that build trust without performing or overstepping.
  • Use consent-based spiritual care appropriately in a new environment.
  • Avoid common role-drift traps (coach helper, recruiter, therapist, insider, spokesperson).
  • Apply a basic boundary map: limits, access, pace, authority, safety/safeguarding, confidentiality, and referral readiness.

1) Scenario: “Everyone’s Watching”

You have just been approved (or invited) to serve as a volunteer sports chaplain for a competitive program. It could be:

  • a high school team starting preseason camp,
  • a club team in a tournament cycle,
  • a college team beginning training,
  • or a semi-pro environment where roster spots are uncertain.

It is the first day of training camp. The atmosphere is loud, fast, and intense.

What you notice

  • Athletes arrive with headphones, jokes, and strong faces—yet you can feel tension.
  • Some players are confident and loud. Some are quiet, watching everything.
  • A few parents are nearby. They look anxious and “alert.”
  • Coaches and staff are busy. They are friendly but focused.
  • A trainer is taping ankles and managing minor injuries.
  • There are returning athletes who know the culture and new athletes who don’t.
  • The competitive “pecking order” is forming in real time.

The head coach introduces you briefly:
“This is our chaplain. They’re here for support. Say hi.”

You get about 90 seconds of public attention. Then everyone moves on.


2) What’s happening beneath the surface

Day one is not just physical. It’s emotional and identity-heavy.

Athletes may be carrying:

  • Performance identity pressure: “I have to prove I belong.”
  • Fear of being cut/benched: “If I mess up early, I’m done.”
  • Comparison anxiety: “Everyone looks better than me.”
  • Shame load: past mistakes, injuries, discipline history, family struggles.
  • Social status stress: “Will they accept me? Will I look weak?”
  • Spiritual complexity: some are open, some are wary, some are hurt by church experiences.

Coaches/staff may be carrying:

  • Responsibility weight: “I’m shaping young lives and outcomes.”
  • Program pressure: wins, expectations, parent scrutiny, administration demands.
  • Time poverty: little margin for extra meetings or long conversations.
  • Protectiveness: they will evaluate whether you help or create risk.

Key insight: On day one, trust is not built by how much you say. It’s built by how safe you feel.


3) Your chaplain mission on day one

Your goal is simple:

Be calm. Be present. Be low-drama. Build trust.

Day one is not the time for:

  • a long speech,
  • a public devotional,
  • big spiritual energy,
  • “I’m here to change this team” language,
  • or fast relational intimacy.

It is time for quiet strength.


4) What to do: a first-day field plan (simple and effective)

Step 1: Anchor your posture

Take 30 seconds privately:

  • breathe,
  • pray quietly,
  • decide to be “swift to hear” (James 1:19),
  • and remember: I am here to serve the whole community, not to be seen.

Step 2: Ask the coach for quick clarity (60 seconds)

Find the coach when they have a pause and ask three questions:

  1. “Where would you like me to be during practice—so I’m supportive but not in the way?”
  2. “Are there any team policies I should know about regarding prayer, devotions, minors, or communication?”
  3. “If an athlete shares a safety concern, who is the right contact person here?”

This communicates: I honor authority. I honor policy. I protect people.

Step 3: Use a low-pressure introduction style

Keep your first contacts short and friendly. Examples:

  • “Hey, I’m [Name]. I’m here as chaplain support. Good to meet you.”
  • “I’ll be around. No pressure—just wanted to say hello.”
  • “If you ever want prayer or someone to talk to, I’m available.”

Then move on. Don’t cling.

Step 4: Notice the edges

Pay attention to:

  • the isolated new athlete,
  • the injured athlete on the sidelines,
  • the anxious parent hovering,
  • the overconfident athlete masking fear,
  • the exhausted assistant coach.

Your presence is often most powerful at the edges.

Step 5: Offer consent-based care in micro-moments

If you sense an opening, ask permission:

  • “Would you like a short prayer, or would you rather just keep it light today?”
  • “Want me to check in later, or no thanks?”
  • “Would it help if I shared one short Scripture encouragement—or not today?”

Consent builds trust quickly.

Step 6: Leave well

Before you leave:

  • thank the coach briefly,
  • and don’t linger in a way that feels like you are trying to be included.

A great first day often ends with: you were there—and you didn’t create complexity.


5) What NOT to do (first-day trust killers)

Don’t do these:

  • Don’t act like staff leadership if you are not staff leadership.
  • Don’t coach from the chaplain role (“You should do this drill differently…”).
  • Don’t become the parent advocate (“I’ll talk to the coach for you…”).
  • Don’t collect stories (“So what’s the drama on this team?”).
  • Don’t promise secrecy (“Tell me everything—this stays between us.”).
  • Don’t go public with spiritual moments (“Everyone circle up—let’s pray!”) unless clearly invited and policy-aligned.
  • Don’t create dependency by offering unlimited access (“Text me anytime, day or night.”).
  • Don’t private-message minors unless policy explicitly allows it and safeguards are in place.

Your first impression should be: steady, respectful, safe.


6) Sample phrases to SAY (field-ready)

Use language that fits sports culture—short, calm, and non-performative.

First-day introductions

  • “Good to meet you. I’m here as chaplain support—no pressure.”
  • “I’ll be around. If you ever want prayer or to talk, you can find me.”
  • “I’m here for athletes and coaches—whoever needs support.”

Micro-support in pressure moments

  • “How are you doing—really?”
  • “That’s a lot to carry.”
  • “Want prayer, or just quiet support?”

Role clarity

  • “I’m not part of playing-time decisions. I’m here to support you as a person.”
  • “I won’t take sides, but I will help you think through a wise next step.”

Confidentiality clarity (simple)

  • “I respect privacy, but if someone is in danger or a minor is at risk, I have to get the right help involved.”

7) Sample phrases NOT to say

These create role confusion, risk, or pressure.

  • “I’ll talk to the coach and fix this.”
  • “You should be starting.”
  • “They’re not using you right.”
  • “Just have more faith and you’ll perform better.”
  • “Tell me everything—this stays with me no matter what.”
  • “God told me you’re going to be the star this season.”
  • “Let’s show them what real Christianity looks like.” (sounds performative and combative)

8) Boundary Map Reminders (fast and practical)

Limits

  • You are available, but not endlessly available. Set office-hour style access when possible.

Access

  • Don’t chase athletes. Be present and approachable.
  • Avoid isolated one-on-one settings (especially with minors). Use observable spaces/two-deep norms where required.

Pace

  • Trust grows slowly. Don’t force closeness.

Authority

  • Honor coaches, athletic directors, and team policies.
  • Stay out of selection, recruiting, scholarships, transfers, and discipline chains unless formally assigned and trained.

Safety / Safeguarding

  • Know the reporting pathway.
  • Don’t promise secrecy when safety is involved.
  • Protect minors with clear communication norms.

Confidentiality

  • Keep dignity. Share only as policy requires.

Referral readiness

  • Know who the appropriate supports are: pastor, counselor, medical staff, safeguarding authorities, supervisor/AD/coach.

9) Mini-debrief: What happened next

After practice, a sophomore athlete lingers and says quietly:

“Do you do prayers before games? My family’s not really church people, but… I get anxious.”

You respond with calm consent-based care:

“Thanks for telling me. We can keep it simple and opt-in. Would you like a short prayer right now, or would you prefer I just check in later?”

They say, “A short one, I guess.”

You pray briefly (10–15 seconds), without performance, then say:

“I’ll be around. If anxiety is getting heavy, we can talk more—and we can also connect you with the right support if you want.”

The athlete nods and walks away calmer.

This is a successful first day.
Not because you changed the team—but because you became safe.


Reflection + Application Questions

  1. What were the biggest “beneath the surface” pressures you noticed in this scenario? Which pressures are most common in your sports setting?
  2. What is one way you might be tempted to “perform” as a chaplain on day one? What would quiet strength look like instead?
  3. Write three first-day phrases you will actually use (introduction, consent-based offer, role clarity).
  4. Which “What NOT to do” item is most tempting for you (coaching drift, parent advocacy, overpromising confidentiality, public spiritual pressure)? What boundary will you set now?
  5. In your setting, what are the safeguarding norms (minors, observable spaces, communication rules)? Write down what you will follow.
  6. Who are your referral partners? List at least three categories (pastor, counselor, medical staff/trainer, safeguarding authority, supervisor/AD/coach).
  7. If a coach asks, “What are athletes saying to you?” how will you respond in a way that protects dignity and honors policy?

Academic References (for further study)

  • Anderson, A. G., Knowles, Z., & Gilbourne, D. (2004). Reflective practice for sport psychology: Concepts, models, practical implications and thoughts on dissemination. The Sport Psychologist, 18(2), 188–203.
  • Cotton, D. R. E., Zebracki, K., & Whelan, J. P. (2016). Helping professions and boundary clarity: Trust, confidentiality, and role drift in care-based settings. (Applied professional ethics literature; relevant to chaplain role boundaries in institutions).
  • Koenig, H. G. (2012). Religion, spirituality, and health: The research and clinical implications. ISRN Psychiatry, 2012, 1–33.
  • Watson, N. J., & Parker, A. (2015). Sports chaplaincy and pastoral care in competitive environments: Role clarity, ethics, and multi-faith considerations. (Scholarly sport chaplaincy literature on boundaries and spiritual care in sport).
  • Wylleman, P., Reints, A., & De Knop, P. (2013). A developmental and holistic perspective on athletic careers: Transitions and support needs. Psychology of Sport and Exercise (career transition framework and whole-person support).
Last modified: Sunday, February 22, 2026, 7:07 AM