It says he took the job as TE/Asst ST coach. Resigning his HC job, which is now open.I’m confused. Why would it say the head coach resigned and the Special Teams coach position is now open.
I’m confused. Why would it say the head coach resigned and the Special Teams coach position is now open.
Ok. No punctuation made it confusing.It says he took the job as TE/Asst ST coach. Resigning his HC job, which is now open.
He’s been involved in coaching the last seven Under Armour All-American Games in Orlando, as well as serving on the game’s board of directors. He’s made the Texas high school state playoffs for the past 14 years and has a record of 176-93 over 23 seasons. His team went 10-2 this season, losing in the second round of the state playoffs.
Wager served on the Board of Directors of the Texas High School Coaches Association, to which Rhule has a strong connection.
2 minutes ago, Mavric said:
Not sure if this is good or bad but he apparently gets after it.
Texas HS football is a ….different animal. IMO if you’re a HS football coach, working 90 hours a week, and hardly ever seeing your family, you’ve made some questionable choices and it’s probably not a good thing. I mean I’ll take the dedication but some perspective and risk/reward analysis would be helpful. I wonder what the ratio is of guys who parlay that into a bigger gig compared to all the lost family time.Why would that be bad?
Well about 21 of 24 days in the life of a fireman would show you that they are barely actually a fireman. Doing stuff around their house, yardwork, making extra money as a contractor….shopping for a new truck :lol: One used to live next door to us. First responder? More like never a responder because he only worked a few days a month.These videos always crack me up. The music, the tear jerking "I don't get to see my family" bit...even though you can watch film from anywhere and pretty much every state has maximum hours you are allowed to practice.
I could only imagine what thee "day in the life of a fireman" looks like.
Ok…..what does a hs coach do in 90 hours per week? I can maybe see it during the season. But, that’s 4 months out of the year? They don’t have to recruit year round like college. They don’t have to pour over hours of recruit video…etc.Texas HS football is a ….different animal. IMO if you’re a HS football coach, working 90 hours a week, and hardly ever seeing your family, you’ve made some questionable choices and it’s probably not a good thing. I mean I’ll take the dedication but some perspective and risk/reward analysis would be helpful. I wonder what the ratio is of guys who parlay that into a bigger gig compared to all the lost family time.
I have no idea but based in what I think I know about Texas High School football (and TX sports in general) I imagine they create crap to do year round to build and maintain their little dynasties. Played against some TX softball and volleyball teams when my daughter was doing the travel ball thing and the Texas teams and fans were just effin ridiculous. Not a healthy environment for the kids imo.Ok…..what does a hs coach do in 90 hours per week? I can maybe see it during the season. But, that’s 4 months out of the year? They don’t have to recruit year round like college. They don’t have to pour over hours of recruit video…etc.
So, in March, or June….what are they doing for 90 hours?
I believe he served as the Athletic Coordinator as well. Here in MN and probably most places that is a lot of time going to different games/activities. Maybe in Texas it is just a title to have money funneled from other areas to help pay the head football coach.Ok…..what does a hs coach do in 90 hours per week? I can maybe see it during the season. But, that’s 4 months out of the year? They don’t have to recruit year round like college. They don’t have to pour over hours of recruit video…etc.
So, in March, or June….what are they doing for 90 hours?