elitefts™ Sunday Edition I have been a collegiate strength coach for 15 years now, and I have had my share of ups and downs, triumphs and tragedies. We have won games we should have lost, and we have lost games we should have won. I have been lucky enough to have had some first-round picks, and I have been unlucky enough to have had some guys who could not spell "NFL." It has been a diverse ride that has gotten me to this point, but it's been more like a roller coaster than a Sunday drive. So, I have taken the time to compile a list of the many perks of being a strength coach...but buyer beware: things are not always what they seem. Or are they? 1. Best Seat in the House on Game Day
It is unreal - getting to watch your players in action right in front of you! You get the opportunity to watch your athletes perform and compete at the highest level they can. Well, that's unless you spend half your time:- Pulling homicidal defensive line coaches off the field
- Getting yelled at by the referees to keep your head coach off the white line
- Screaming for non-existent equipment
- Getting redshirt non-players out of the way so that you can find substitutes to stand near their coaches even though they are never put in the game
- Calling up special teams
- Pulling that defensive line coach off the field again
- Untangling players from the chain crew
- Listening to the trainers telling me a player is out getting his ankle taped for no reason because I don’t coach a position
- Getting a water bath every five seconds for three hours because players can’t seem to hit their mouths with water bottles and just spray it all over themselves and everyone around them
- Pulling that psychotic defensive line coach back once again

Bowling Green High School, Missouri[/caption]
2. Getting to Train at a Top Notch Facility
We've just put in a brand new, almost half a million dollar weight room. It has everything needed to help our athletes improve their physical prowess. Better yet, my staff and I get to train for free, and we are able to focus on not only our players but also our own training sessions. Well, that is unless the old ass coach (the one that is on every staff in the country) comes in and starts doing exercises with five-pound dumbbells that were never meant to be done right in the middle of your last heavy set of DB incline. Or one of the six younger coaches comes in and asks you to take him through a workout even though he knows how to do it himself because you have shown him a thousand times. Or one of your staff members is getting ready to PR a deadlift and a 19th string walk-on comes in at and asks for an exercise to make him faster. Or you are getting ready to PR a log clean and press with Rage Against the Machine playing in the background, and right when the phrase "F#@% you Motherfu&*%$" comes on the 67-year old biggest booster walks into the weight room to see how things are going….3. Getting Free Gear
Definitely a plus! You put in thousands of hours and you never have to buy your own apparel. Of course, that is unless you like to wear clothes one or two sizes too big with other coaches' names on the tags, wondering why there are never any in your size or your staff's sizes. Or wondering why everything is on order and you have to make a double secret pagan ritual pacts with the student equipment managers just to get a long sleeve t-shirt for practice. Or why your staff member has to go to Wal-Mart to buy his khakis on game day because the equipment guy forgot he was traveling even though he has been on staff for over a year. Or why you grow and shrink with every piece of apparel you get - sometimes XL, sometimes XXL. Or why there is no size list for the entire team, and you have to go through every locker to figure out what size each player is so you can order summer workout shirts. Or why you have to steal your eight-year old son's school backpack for travel because bags were never ordered for the entire staff, just for the devil worshiping student managers. [caption id="attachment_87418" align="alignnone" width="600"]
Bowling Green High School, Missouri[/caption]


















































































