Thanks, Kendall, wondered what they made "ballpark."I was told a while back by the staff they would have 3-4 total, and prior to their understanding how they would work some of them joked about where they would put all of them and where they would work. Perfect chance for a young coach to show their stuff and get a chance to move up when openings happen, and very little risk for UK - don't make nearly as much as a coach but decent enough pay for a mid 20's young coach (think around $50-80k) and provided help with critical parts of the job.
Seriously?Morris is the man give him a chance coach Stoops....great motivator.......:football:
You want to win don't you?I know we are just keeping up with the Joneses, but this reminds me of the Pentagon who never saw a weapon system they did not absolutely have to have for national security. Honestly, how many more staff positions can a team really need? Outside of game week and spring practice, what do two or three quality control coaches do the other 36 weeks a year that is essential and not already being covered by somebody already? What do they do all day? Learn to really make killer latte's for the OC and DC?
I read a couple of years ago that somebody compared the team picture of the last two Ohio State NCs, in 2002, and 2014. The 2014 team had literally twice the number of non players, i.e., staff members, in the picture. Now in just 12 years, in what economic system does that make sense? Football cannot possibly have become that much more complex in just 12 years, with the exact same number of players and games.
I know we are just keeping up with the Joneses, but this reminds me of the Pentagon who never saw a weapon system they did not absolutely have to have for national security. Honestly, how many more staff positions can a team really need? Outside of game week and spring practice, what do two or three quality control coaches do the other 36 weeks a year that is essential and not already being covered by somebody already? What do they do all day? Learn to really make killer latte's for the OC and DC?
I read a couple of years ago that somebody compared the team picture of the last two Ohio State NCs, in 2002, and 2014. The 2014 team had literally twice the number of non players, i.e., staff members, in the picture. Now in just 12 years, in what economic system does that make sense? Football cannot possibly have become that much more complex in just 12 years, with the exact same number of players and games.