/install group-sport-team-dynamics
Group Sport & Team Dynamics
⚠️ Educational only. This skill does not replace a professional sport psychologist, mediator, or HR professional. It does not address bullying, harassment, or abusive behavior, which require formal intervention. Team dynamics guidance is for recreational and amateur contexts. This skill does not provide legal advice about team liability or organizational governance. The user is responsible for fostering a safe and respectful team environment. If any team member feels unsafe, harassed, or excluded, seek appropriate formal support.
Description
Helps recreational team-sport players improve team communication, role clarity, and positive team culture. Provides frameworks and practices that make teams more cohesive, enjoyable, and effective — without professional-level intervention.
When to Use
This skill applies when the user wants to:
- Improve on-field communication and reduce confusion during play
- Clarify player roles and expectations within a recreational team
- Address low-level team friction, cliques, or miscommunication
- Build team rituals and culture that increase connection and enjoyment
- Create a more inclusive environment where all skill levels feel welcome
Required Inputs
To provide relevant team dynamics guidance, the skill needs:
- Sport and league type — the specific sport and whether it's casual pickup, recreational league, or competitive amateur
- Team size and composition — how many players, approximate skill range, gender mix, age range
- Current team challenges — what specifically feels off (communication, culture, cliques, unclear roles, skill gaps)
- Team goals — what the team collectively wants (win, have fun, improve, stay social)
- Communication patterns — how the team currently communicates during games, at practice, and between sessions
If any of these are missing or vague, ask clarifying questions.
Prompt Flow
-
Clarify the sport, team context, and specific challenges.
- Restate what you understand about the team and confirm accuracy.
- Narrow broad complaints ("team is dysfunctional") into specific, observable issues.
- Distinguish between performance problems and culture/interpersonal problems.
-
Suggest role definitions and expectations for a recreational team.
- Help define at least three distinct roles beyond "player": encourager, organizer, skill-builder, new-player mentor, communication lead.
- Clarify what each role is responsible for and what it is NOT responsible for.
- Emphasize that every role is valuable — not just the highest scorers.
- Rotate roles if appropriate to build empathy and shared ownership.
-
Offer communication protocols for on-field and off-field interactions.
- On-field: specific, actionable, timely — "man on," "switch," "I've got left" — not vague criticism.
- Between plays: quick, positive, forward-looking — "next point" not rehashing the mistake.
- Post-game: structured check-in format (rose/thorn/bud: what went well, what was hard, what to try next time).
- Group chat norms: no blaming individuals publicly; constructive feedback in private or in person.
-
Provide team ritual ideas for building connection.
- Pre-game rituals: team huddle, shared warm-up, a consistent phrase or cheer.
- Post-game rituals: debrief over food/drinks, player-of-the-day recognition (not always the top scorer), rotate who leads.
- Season traditions: mid-season social, end-of-season celebration, team awards voted by players.
- Emphasize that rituals build belonging — they matter more than people think.
-
Share inclusive culture practices to ensure everyone feels valued.
- Rotate playing time fairly regardless of skill (within league/competitive constraints).
- Actively invite quieter players' input during huddles and decisions.
- Celebrate effort and improvement, not just results.
- Address exclusionary behavior early and directly — not later, not through gossip.
- Make space for different motivations: some play to compete, some for social connection, some for stress relief.
Output Structure
- Role clarity framework — at least three defined roles with specific expectations and boundaries
- Communication norms and protocols — guidelines for on-field, between-plays, post-game, and group chat communication
- Conflict resolution guide — a step-by-step approach for addressing team friction constructively
- Team ritual and bonding ideas — specific, actionable suggestions for pre-game, post-game, and season-long traditions
- Inclusive culture checklist — practices that ensure all team members feel respected and valued
Safety Boundaries
- Does not replace a professional sport psychologist, mediator, or HR professional.
- Does not address bullying, harassment, or abusive behavior — these require formal intervention, not team dynamics advice. Explicitly state this.
- Team dynamics guidance is for recreational and amateur contexts.
- Does not provide legal advice about team liability, organizational governance, or dispute resolution.
- The user is responsible for fostering a safe and respectful team environment.
- If the user describes behavior that sounds like harassment, discrimination, or abuse, recommend formal organizational or legal channels immediately.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install group-sport-team-dynamics - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/group-sport-team-dynamics - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Group Sport Team Dynamics?
Provides recreational sport teams with role definitions, communication protocols, rituals, and inclusive practices to improve cohesion and enjoyment without... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 43 downloads so far.
How do I install Group Sport Team Dynamics?
Run "/install group-sport-team-dynamics" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Group Sport Team Dynamics free?
Yes, Group Sport Team Dynamics is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Group Sport Team Dynamics support?
Group Sport Team Dynamics is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Group Sport Team Dynamics?
It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.