Post by Coach Campbell on Apr 11, 2010 18:25:00 GMT
Expectations for Coaching Staff
Coaches are expected to be dressed and in the locker room before players report. Never leave the locker room unsupervised. Coaches have lost their jobs because of this.
Get drills ready — cones, dummies, etc.
Work with every player that comes on the field. Don't allow players to go unnoticed.
Be properly dressed; look professional, look like a coach.
Do not use foul language, grab or argue with a player, if he is unbearable, send him to the head coach.
If you jump on a player hard verbally, be sure that before he leaves after practice you have talked with him.
After practice make sure you go through the locker room and say something, if not acknowledge each of your position players or any player you felt good about that day.
Don't allow anything to lie around the athletic area, which includes the locker room.
Don't run off right after practice, pitch in there's always something to do.
Don't expect anything less than perfection in every aspect of the football program.
As a program you and your staff control your own destiny. Whether you win or lose should be determined by you; not by your opponents. As a staff you must spend a great deal of time with fundamentals. Your program must get better every day by working very hard on blocking and tackling. As a staff you should try and cover every situation that might arise in a game and instill in your players the proper way to react with poise and confidence.
One of the most important ingredients necessary to win is to associate yourself with coaches and players who love football and can't live with losing. If you have players who don't like football, you will constantly find yourself compromising your beliefs in order to keep them from quitting.
It is the athlete's responsibility to please the coach and not the coaches' place to please the players. Our job as coaches is to run a top-flight program that will eventually lead to success.
As coaches you have an obligation to run a disciplined program that will be successful in the long run. To do anything else is unfair to the athletes who want to win.
You as a coach have an obligation to place your athletes in a first class environment and to improve on your facilities each year.
In coaching, you at some point will be faced with adversity; you must be prepared for it. Don't sit and wallow in self-pity, face it head on.
We believe it's better to have great coaches than great athletes. You can't win without athletes, but you can lose with them and this is where coaching becomes a factor.
You shouldn't care what a good coach is paid; it isn't enough. Anything a poor coach gets paid is too much.
Enthusiasm is nothing more than being positive. It is impossible to be negative and be enthusiastic.
Everyone associated with the football program needs to feel that they are important to the success of the program players like discipline. They do not like harassment. Discipline breeds success. Harassment breeds contempt.
Championships are decided on the little things. Thus, meticulous attention must be paid to the seemingly "Little" aspects of the program. Simplicity should be one of the greatest guides in helping your selection when it comes to the technical aspects of the game.
Coaches are expected to be dressed and in the locker room before players report. Never leave the locker room unsupervised. Coaches have lost their jobs because of this.
Get drills ready — cones, dummies, etc.
Work with every player that comes on the field. Don't allow players to go unnoticed.
Be properly dressed; look professional, look like a coach.
Do not use foul language, grab or argue with a player, if he is unbearable, send him to the head coach.
If you jump on a player hard verbally, be sure that before he leaves after practice you have talked with him.
After practice make sure you go through the locker room and say something, if not acknowledge each of your position players or any player you felt good about that day.
Don't allow anything to lie around the athletic area, which includes the locker room.
Don't run off right after practice, pitch in there's always something to do.
Don't expect anything less than perfection in every aspect of the football program.
As a program you and your staff control your own destiny. Whether you win or lose should be determined by you; not by your opponents. As a staff you must spend a great deal of time with fundamentals. Your program must get better every day by working very hard on blocking and tackling. As a staff you should try and cover every situation that might arise in a game and instill in your players the proper way to react with poise and confidence.
One of the most important ingredients necessary to win is to associate yourself with coaches and players who love football and can't live with losing. If you have players who don't like football, you will constantly find yourself compromising your beliefs in order to keep them from quitting.
It is the athlete's responsibility to please the coach and not the coaches' place to please the players. Our job as coaches is to run a top-flight program that will eventually lead to success.
As coaches you have an obligation to run a disciplined program that will be successful in the long run. To do anything else is unfair to the athletes who want to win.
You as a coach have an obligation to place your athletes in a first class environment and to improve on your facilities each year.
In coaching, you at some point will be faced with adversity; you must be prepared for it. Don't sit and wallow in self-pity, face it head on.
We believe it's better to have great coaches than great athletes. You can't win without athletes, but you can lose with them and this is where coaching becomes a factor.
You shouldn't care what a good coach is paid; it isn't enough. Anything a poor coach gets paid is too much.
Enthusiasm is nothing more than being positive. It is impossible to be negative and be enthusiastic.
Everyone associated with the football program needs to feel that they are important to the success of the program players like discipline. They do not like harassment. Discipline breeds success. Harassment breeds contempt.
Championships are decided on the little things. Thus, meticulous attention must be paid to the seemingly "Little" aspects of the program. Simplicity should be one of the greatest guides in helping your selection when it comes to the technical aspects of the game.