Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure it’s more than 8 weeks. We’re Div 1 and they start tryouts in Early May and the teams are swimming by mid-late May. It’s at least 12 weeks for the head coach actually at the pool. Lots of admin before though hiring all the assistant coaches, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our pool pays $10K and can’t get a coach to stay because our parents suck. It’s summer swim. Have fun. Your kid is not going to the Olympics.
Wow. Our DS made half that last summer.
10K is a good amount for the time involved and the number of weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our pool pays $10K and can’t get a coach to stay because our parents suck. It’s summer swim. Have fun. Your kid is not going to the Olympics.
Wow. Our DS made half that last summer.
Anonymous wrote:Our pool pays $10K and can’t get a coach to stay because our parents suck. It’s summer swim. Have fun. Your kid is not going to the Olympics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are in top 5 divisions and pay 10K.
10K for 8 weeks? That’s too little.
I am paying my golf coach $200/hour. I take lessons twice a week. He is booked from 11am to 7pm, Tuesday through Sunday.
Seriously. This in not part time work, once you add up all the time spent coaching morning and evening practices (5-6h/day), Saturday meets, not to mention all the planning for practices, communicating with assistant coaches, and admin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are in top 5 divisions and pay 10K.
10K for 8 weeks? That’s too little.
I am paying my golf coach $200/hour. I take lessons twice a week. He is booked from 11am to 7pm, Tuesday through Sunday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy cow. Our swim team is staffed by college students coaching the HSers, HSers coaching the little guys, and parent volunteers managing it all. Coaches get minimum wage or community service hours.
The best way to run it on a budget is to have a "manager" coach who is/are a parent volunteer(s) that do everything except spell out the workouts. Comms, entries, everything.
Then have a "coach" or coaches for the practices and meets. Agree, college student, 17/18yo swimmers, anyone good with kids and somewhat knowledgeable about strokes etc. Lets face it, its not real training, its maybe getting strokes right and having fun. The skilled kids already have a coach and know what to do.
OTOH, if your team has the dough and wants a turnkey solution, throw some bucks at a real coach, club practices are often dialed back that time of year so they're available. But whatever way you go, make sure the duties and expectations are spelled out explicitly. Make sure the club coach is actually up on the admin parts of coaching if they will be doing those things.