Jump to content

Non Faculty Head Coaches


countrygirl11
 Share

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 71
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

OK- I have watched this thread for several days now, and both sides seem to ignore the fact that your are part correct and part incorrect at the same time. So let me give you the view from where I stand.

 

First let me state my qualifications. I have been a non-faculty assistant coach for the past several years. I don't have 5 in yet, but I am close. To the horror of some of you, I coached the team that my daughter played on, and continued to assist with the team after her graduation. For anybody that thinks coaches do it for the stipend, they are crazy, you can make a bigger check delivering pizza than you can coaching High School ball, and stay alot warmer this time of year. Now if you want to argue we do it for ego, (including me) you might have an valid arguement.

 

Do I think you should have a non-faculty head coach....... No. There are too many things that need coordination between the school administrators and the Head Coach that the non-faculty person does not need to be involved in ie. grades, budgets, scheduling to avoid conflicts with other school functions, student disipline, etc.

 

Do I think there is ever a situation where a non-faculty head coach is called for...Yes. I know some of you might not believe it, but some schools do not have qualified coaches that are willing to devote their time to a noncompetitive softball program for what works out to be much less than minimum wage. Not only do you get to donate your time, you get to listen to parents complain about how unfair you are treating their precious daughter who is the next Jenny Finch! (Remember I am a parent too!.... you don't think I got some brutal questions from my wife when I got home about the way I treated our daughter.)

 

The bottom line is this, in a Utopian world each High School would have a qualified, motivated, knowledgeable FACULTY Head Coach willing to put in long hours in bad weather for lousy pay, with the added bonus of dealing with us parents. Last time I checked, I don't live in Utopia. Therefore the schools that cannot find that qualified staff person must look elsewhere. Are these people threats to the Master Degree teacher who wants the Head Coach position? In a few cases I would say yes, but for the most part no.

 

If you have a degree, and you prove that you have the knowledge, teaching skills, and love of kids and softball, people will search you out to coach their team. There aren't that many topnotch coaches out there. If you don't have the qualifications, it doesn't really matter whether you are a faculty member or not, it will show as well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK- I have watched this thread for several days now, and both sides seem to ignore the fact that your are part correct and part incorrect at the same time. So let me give you the view from where I stand.

 

First let me state my qualifications. I have been a non-faculty assistant coach for the past several years. I don't have 5 in yet, but I am close. To the horror of some of you, I coached the team that my daughter played on, and continued to assist with the team after her graduation. For anybody that thinks coaches do it for the stipend, they are crazy, you can make a bigger check delivering pizza than you can coaching High School ball, and stay alot warmer this time of year. Now if you want to argue we do it for ego, (including me) you might have an valid arguement.

 

Do I think you should have a non-faculty head coach....... No. There are too many things that need coordination between the school administrators and the Head Coach that the non-faculty person does not need to be involved in ie. grades, budgets, scheduling to avoid conflicts with other school functions, student disipline, etc.

 

Do I think there is ever a situation where a non-faculty head coach is called for...Yes. I know some of you might not believe it, but some schools do not have qualified coaches that are willing to devote their time to a noncompetitive softball program for what works out to be much less than minimum wage. Not only do you get to donate your time, you get to listen to parents complain about how unfair you are treating their precious daughter who is the next Jenny Finch! (Remember I am a parent too!.... you don't think I got some brutal questions from my wife when I got home about the way I treated our daughter.)

 

The bottom line is this, in a Utopian world each High School would have a qualified, motivated, knowledgeable FACULTY Head Coach willing to put in long hours in bad weather for lousy pay, with the added bonus of dealing with us parents. Last time I checked, I don't live in Utopia. Therefore the schools that cannot find that qualified staff person must look elsewhere. Are these people threats to the Master Degree teacher who wants the Head Coach position? In a few cases I would say yes, but for the most part no.

 

If you have a degree, and you prove that you have the knowledge, teaching skills, and love of kids and softball, people will search you out to coach their team. There aren't that many topnotch coaches out there. If you don't have the qualifications, it doesn't really matter whether you are a faculty member or not, it will show as well.

 

 

Very good post /thumb[1].gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":thumb:" border="0" alt="thumb[1].gif" />

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK- I have watched this thread for several days now, and both sides seem to ignore the fact that your are part correct and part incorrect at the same time. So let me give you the view from where I stand.

 

First let me state my qualifications. I have been a non-faculty assistant coach for the past several years. I don't have 5 in yet, but I am close. To the horror of some of you, I coached the team that my daughter played on, and continued to assist with the team after her graduation. For anybody that thinks coaches do it for the stipend, they are crazy, you can make a bigger check delivering pizza than you can coaching High School ball, and stay alot warmer this time of year. Now if you want to argue we do it for ego, (including me) you might have an valid arguement.

 

Do I think you should have a non-faculty head coach....... No. There are too many things that need coordination between the school administrators and the Head Coach that the non-faculty person does not need to be involved in ie. grades, budgets, scheduling to avoid conflicts with other school functions, student disipline, etc.

 

Do I think there is ever a situation where a non-faculty head coach is called for...Yes. I know some of you might not believe it, but some schools do not have qualified coaches that are willing to devote their time to a noncompetitive softball program for what works out to be much less than minimum wage. Not only do you get to donate your time, you get to listen to parents complain about how unfair you are treating their precious daughter who is the next Jenny Finch! (Remember I am a parent too!.... you don't think I got some brutal questions from my wife when I got home about the way I treated our daughter.)

 

The bottom line is this, in a Utopian world each High School would have a qualified, motivated, knowledgeable FACULTY Head Coach willing to put in long hours in bad weather for lousy pay, with the added bonus of dealing with us parents. Last time I checked, I don't live in Utopia. Therefore the schools that cannot find that qualified staff person must look elsewhere. Are these people threats to the Master Degree teacher who wants the Head Coach position? In a few cases I would say yes, but for the most part no.

 

If you have a degree, and you prove that you have the knowledge, teaching skills, and love of kids and softball, people will search you out to coach their team. There aren't that many topnotch coaches out there. If you don't have the qualifications, it doesn't really matter whether you are a faculty member or not, it will show as well.

 

Bravo! Well put. If the coaching position is aimed at the student/ahtlete and their future success then there would be no use for this post.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK- I have watched this thread for several days now, and both sides seem to ignore the fact that your are part correct and part incorrect at the same time. So let me give you the view from where I stand.

 

First let me state my qualifications. I have been a non-faculty assistant coach for the past several years. I don't have 5 in yet, but I am close. To the horror of some of you, I coached the team that my daughter played on, and continued to assist with the team after her graduation. For anybody that thinks coaches do it for the stipend, they are crazy, you can make a bigger check delivering pizza than you can coaching High School ball, and stay alot warmer this time of year. Now if you want to argue we do it for ego, (including me) you might have an valid arguement.

 

Do I think you should have a non-faculty head coach....... No. There are too many things that need coordination between the school administrators and the Head Coach that the non-faculty person does not need to be involved in ie. grades, budgets, scheduling to avoid conflicts with other school functions, student disipline, etc.

 

Do I think there is ever a situation where a non-faculty head coach is called for...Yes. I know some of you might not believe it, but some schools do not have qualified coaches that are willing to devote their time to a noncompetitive softball program for what works out to be much less than minimum wage. Not only do you get to donate your time, you get to listen to parents complain about how unfair you are treating their precious daughter who is the next Jenny Finch! (Remember I am a parent too!.... you don't think I got some brutal questions from my wife when I got home about the way I treated our daughter.)

 

The bottom line is this, in a Utopian world each High School would have a qualified, motivated, knowledgeable FACULTY Head Coach willing to put in long hours in bad weather for lousy pay, with the added bonus of dealing with us parents. Last time I checked, I don't live in Utopia. Therefore the schools that cannot find that qualified staff person must look elsewhere. Are these people threats to the Master Degree teacher who wants the Head Coach position? In a few cases I would say yes, but for the most part no.

 

If you have a degree, and you prove that you have the knowledge, teaching skills, and love of kids and softball, people will search you out to coach their team. There aren't that many topnotch coaches out there. If you don't have the qualifications, it doesn't really matter whether you are a faculty member or not, it will show as well.

 

 

 

Good reply!! but what school do you help coach?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Great post zachsdad!

 

I was a non faculty volunteer assistant coach for a middle school baseball team only because the head coach demanded from the administration a baseball guy. The administration doesn't want a non faculty of any kind for the most part for the reasons you stated. Liability and accountability. My stint got me $200 that the head coach got through the school board. Leaving an hour or two early from work every game day and providing my own transportation back and forth probably cost me closer to $1,000. It's not something you do for money. I can see the ego part, but in my case I didn't apply for the job. It was sort of asked of me.

 

The bottom line is that small schools with multiple girls and boys sports could not compete without volunteer coaches. Even at that, the administration will fill every position with any warm body that will do it if they can. There has to be a happy medium. Not all parents wear rose colored glasses where their kids are concerned and not all faculty members are qualified to coach because they have a degree in education. It's not an all or nothing proposition.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am curious : how many faculty coaches versus non faculty coaches make it to the state tournament on a regular basis? Can anyone answer this?

 

That comparison wouldn't hold water anyway. Unless there was an even amount of each, the numbers are going to be slanted. I'm guessing it is at least 50-1 faculty head coaches vs. non-faculty head coaches, so the numbers wouldn't support making that comparison. One other thing, the large programs such as Riverdale aren't going to have a non-faculty coach but would have a huge edge by sheer numbers and experience over a 1A school where a non-faculty coach would likely be coaching. I agree with NUNUNU...probably need to just let this subject go away since it seems to ruffle so many feathers.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That comparison wouldn't hold water anyway. Unless there was an even amount of each, the numbers are going to be slanted. I'm guessing it is at least 50-1 faculty head coaches vs. non-faculty head coaches, so the numbers wouldn't support making that comparison. One other thing, the large programs such as Riverdale aren't going to have a non-faculty coach but would have a huge edge by sheer numbers and experience over a 1A school where a non-faculty coach would likely be coaching. I agree with NUNUNU...probably need to just let this subject go away since it seems to ruffle so many feathers.

 

 

I was hoping someone would try and answer this question instead of dodging it so I could ask the real question. How many faculty coached have taught the girls how to throw, run, field, hit, or any other fundamental of the game and then went to state? A: 0. Faculty coaches get the benefit of athletes that have already been "trained". Question is not what percentage of faculty coaches to non-faculty coaches went to the "boro", but what travel team did the girls play for in the off season. I guarantee everybody on this post will recognize the names of the teams they play for in the summer. This horse is dead, you can't anything else out of it by beating on it anymore. In a dream world all teachers would be great coaches and all coaches would be great teachers, but hey we live in Tennesse(the real world).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bottom line is there are great coaches that aren't or wasn't great players. Just as there are great players that are not good coaches. If you are in a situation of an undesired coach rather it be in hogh school or travel sports.

get out and transfer schools while sacrificing the calander year or if unhappy in travel find a new team. There is a new one forned everyday!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

Announcements


  • Recent Posts

    • Dyersburg scrimmaged South Gibson last week
    • A complete cultural change happened at Greeneville and the administration and community opened up their checkbooks.  What a lot of people don't know is Ballard was Zeller's OC for many years and stopped coaching for two years because Zeller and Ballard didn't see eye to eye on some things.  Zeller lead Greeneville to it's first ever Semi Final appearance in 2000 and lost 28-12 at Maryville and had them in the Quarter Finals in 2002 and 2003.  Z was a great coach but lost some control when it came to making workouts mandatory. (He learned from that Mistake and it was at LC when i coached with him.).  Z was let go going into my Senior Year and was replaced by Steve McCurry who was the one that turned the program around.  Steve had won a 4a state championship at AC Reynolds in Asheville and made the administration completely redo the weight room with new equipment, had a football period at the end of the school day to lift, started devil camp, and brought in coaches like Danny Bentley (Still the OL coach), Ballard as the OC, Cody Baugh (QB coach and still there), and even Spradlen who is Greeneville's head coach now as the DB's Coach.  McCurry only coached for two seasons at Greeneville and took a team that had a losing record the year before and finished my Senior Year making it to the Quarters and having a 10-3 record and then followed it up with a Semi Final appearance the next year with an 11-3 record and back to back conference championships.  Loved McCurry to death but the recession hit and the story i heard was he was still buying new equipment for the team that the Principal didn't authorize and his response was "I don't answer to you and only to Niswonger and Bewley" (Two huge donors).  That was it for him and they Promoted Ballard shortly after that.   Greeneville had always been relevant ever since the the late 70's under Coach Fred Sorrell's.  Since Sorrell's took over in 1977 Greeneville overall winning percentage is over 76%.  The biggest reason people might not have thought Greeneville was "Good" until Ballard was Greeneville always played up Classification wise and could never get over the hump. (When there were 3 classifications we played 3a, when it went to 5 we played 4a).  Greeneville is the largest its ever been with 953 students and where playing teams 2 or 3 times there size back in the day (I had a little over 800 kids in the school when i graduated in 2008).  Other teams always would know they would be sore after a game but depth took over and never won a Championship until Greeneville played in the classification the TSSAA actually assigned them. You had names like Dustin Moore (1993 Mr Football for 3a and who Phillip Fulmer said was one of the greatest athletes he ever recruited), James "Mud Turtle" Mayes, Brigham Lyons, Byron Gillespie, Frankie Debusk (National Champion Qb at Furman with GQ), Jasmine Lowery, Cody Baugh, The Greenway Brothers, Joe Watson (Furman), etc.  Now the cultural is from the Pee Wee league up and you grow up as a young kid wanting to wear the Greene and White.  Here is a really good link when it comes to anything Greeneville Football related. https://greenevillefootball.com/   I also don't coach anymore.  Z told me i was to smart with how the school systems are ran these days and ended up going into real estate in Knoxville which has been a great decision for my life.
    • Yes, they will. I'm wondering what kinds of strides Sale Creek will make heading into the second season under Coach Fitz.
    • No yellow stripes on the rug last night. Biggest crowd I’ve seen at 825 since the alco debacle. 
    • I know most Pirate starters were seniors last year. Im not sure how accurate it is but someone said we only have 3 seniors. That Prep team will probably make some noise this coming season too. 
×
  • Create New...