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Best job in the state?? What does that mean? Is it the ability to win, is it having the best equipment a great weight room, facilities , support? This job will gain interest for sureWhat! Best job in the state
Yes great facilities down thereI know a job opening that has 4 out of those 5 SammyK! Believe you saw them twice this year lol.
Headed back to VA from what I heard. Not sure I’d classify it as the best job in the state given current climate in CMS.Probably headed to South Carolina
It's been the climate in CMS. Embarrassing what they pay their coaches. A Coach who wins numerous State Championships, will make the same stipend of a coach who wins 5 games in 3 years. No financial rewards for coaching in CMS. You're definitely not doing it for the money. Build up your resume, and get out.Headed back to VA from what I heard. Not sure I’d classify it as the best job in the state given current climate in CMS.
You don't need a working dryer to win coach!I do wonder if that program has a working dryer
I would disagree. While the pay is embarrassing MOST of the coaches in the state and any other are not coaching for the money. They are coaching for the love of the game and the mentorship to young adults. This is especially true in small suburban NC. You enter large liberal cities you get a different response.It's not just CMS it's the entire State of NC! That's why it's so rare now a days to see coaches like Snow and Willert who have been at the same school 15-20 yrs. Everyone gets experience wins a few games and bounces. Frankly I don't blame any of them. Pay our dang coaches more
Huh? U telling me Charlotte coaches dont care about the players? Would fully disagree. Charlotte coaches care very much and sacrifice themselves moreso than small suburban coaches IMHO.I would disagree. While the pay is embarrassing MOST of the coaches in the state and any other are not coaching for the money. They are coaching for the love of the game and the mentorship to young adults. This is especially true in small suburban NC. You enter large liberal cities you get a different response.
That is true of Charlotte area coaches too. Raleigh as well. To insinuate that they are coaching for other reasons is ridiculous.I would disagree. While the pay is embarrassing MOST of the coaches in the state and any other are not coaching for the money. They are coaching for the love of the game and the mentorship to young adults. This is especially true in small suburban NC. You enter large liberal cities you get a different response.
I never said they didn't care about their players? I actually said the opposite in capital letters that MOST are coaching for that reason. Simply saying their salary plays a larger role into their decision making process than their care for the team. That's pretty obvious. If it didn't NC would not be losing coaches to other states as frequently as we are.Huh? U telling me Charlotte coaches dont care about the players? Would fully disagree. Charlotte coaches care very much and sacrifice themselves moreso than small suburban coaches IMHO.
The ridiculous aspect of this is blanket assumption you are making.That is true of Charlotte area coaches too. Raleigh as well. To insinuate that they are coaching for other reasons is ridiculous.
And neither of those statements are false? I made no statement that coaches in large liberal cities care less for their players, only that money is a larger factor. Large cities generally are liberal and I don't see coaches from Robbinsville or Reidsville heading to SC or Georgia for money. They tend to be products of the systems and proud to represent the schools they are at.You made the statement. U even biased it by saying liberal big city. Especially true small town. Your words
Well, both those coaches are older so highly doubt they’d move even if they were in a city, but winning at the same level/pace.And neither of those statements are false? I made no statement that coaches in large liberal cities care less for their players, only that money is a larger factor. Large cities generally are liberal and I don't see coaches from Robbinsville or Reidsville heading to SC or Georgia for money. They tend to be products of the systems and proud to represent the schools they are at.
Until they are offered 20K more to represent another school in SC.Coaches in cities are just a proud to represent their program as coaches in more rural areas.
You can be proud as any, but when a chance comes to raise your salary that much(or more and $20K a year raise is a lot of money in education/HS coaching) and give your family a better life and you pass it up for community pride then I’d like to know what you are smoking.Until they are offered 20K more to represent another school in SC.
I am not 100% certain, and I could be wrong, that you are fully grasping small town community pride. Maybe you haveYou can be proud as any, but when a chance comes to raise your salary that much(or more and $20K a year raise is a lot of money in education/HS coaching) and give your family a better life and you pass it up for community pride then I’d like to know what you are smoking.
Exactly.I am not 100% certain, but I could be wrong, that you are fully grasping small town community pride. Maybe you have
some experience outside of Charlotte but there are more than a few quality coaches in small towns that aren’t leaving for any reason.
Lived outside of Charlotte before, parents live in a great small town north of the city now. Much easier to live where they do with low cost of living and such which tango hit on.I am not 100% certain, and I could be wrong, that you are fully grasping small town community pride. Maybe you have
some experience outside of Charlotte but there are more than a few quality coaches in small towns that aren’t leaving for any reason.
Also, being a product of a community more tight knit than any you’ll find in a city in Charlotte Catholic I get it in a sense. Tango’s commented on it many timesI am not 100% certain, and I could be wrong, that you are fully grasping small town community pride. Maybe you have
some experience outside of Charlotte but there are more than a few quality coaches in small towns that aren’t leaving for any reason.
I have read your posts before and it’s certainly not ignorance on your part. Twenty K is a lot of money but sometimes money doesn’t buy what you are proud of and comfortable with. I see your point.Lived outside of Charlotte before, parents live in a great small town north of the city now. Much easier to live where they do with low cost of living and such which tango hit on.
Got many a friend who coach in small communities or are from them. Different feel for sure, especially if you are from there. I grew up around powerhouse St. Thomas Aquinas in FL so maybe it’s just ignorance on my part, but like I said a raise of $20K or more is a pretty big deal for many. Especially if you are raising a family.
Which I also totally get.I have read your posts before and it’s certainly not ignorance on your part. Twenty K is a lot of money but sometimes money doesn’t buy what you are proud of and comfortable with. I see your point.
Back in the 1960''s well into the 1990's there was nothing like going to Newman Park to watch a really good Legion opponent come to play Rowan. Crazy.I envy small town sports. While New Hanover County has 234,000 people which is nothing compared to CLT, RDU and the Triad, it’s massive compared to the small eastern NC communities.
As best I can tell, it’s me and Port City that post on this board from
Wilmington. WRH has about 6.
When I played American Legion baseball in 1980 we were lucky to get 200 at a playoff game. There would be 1500 when we played Rowan County watching batting practice before the game!