Reagan Posted May 24, 2023 Report Posted May 24, 2023 This topic is in general reference to the Anahuac coach and reportedly good athletic son. Curious of the opinion's of others here: Given that the son, any coach's son, has the potential at being a great QB, should the Father/Coach find a coaching opening where his son will get the best possible training? And then once the son graduates then the coach find what he wants? For instance, if receivers job came open at Westlake under Todd Dodge, would it be wise to take that job for 3 years and Dodge train his son knowing Dodge's history at developing QB's? Or, should the coach do what's best for himself at the time and what ever happens to the son just happens whether it's good or bad? Thoughts?! Quote
89Falcon Posted May 24, 2023 Report Posted May 24, 2023 2 hours ago, Reagan said: This topic is in general reference to the Anahuac coach and reportedly good athletic son. Curious of the opinion's of others here: Given that the son, any coach's son, has the potential at being a great QB, should the Father/Coach find a coaching opening where his son will get the best possible training? And then once the son graduates then the coach find what he wants? For instance, if receivers job came open at Westlake under Todd Dodge, would it be wise to take that job for 3 years and Dodge train his son knowing Dodge's history at developing QB's? Or, should the coach do what's best for himself at the time and what ever happens to the son just happens whether it's good or bad? Thoughts?! A coach/father's first duty is to his family. It is likely that he could find a situation where he can combine the two objectives if he does his homework. If the father/coach were to seek the "absolute best" opportunity for his son and it did not happen to be his first choice for himself, it would certainly be noble and valid to put his son first and then seek his best place at a later date. It would not be uncommon for him to be able to accomplish both objectives in one shot. 2wedge 1 Quote
NHSBulldogFan Posted May 24, 2023 Report Posted May 24, 2023 3 hours ago, Reagan said: This topic is in general reference to the Anahuac coach and reportedly good athletic son. Curious of the opinion's of others here: Given that the son, any coach's son, has the potential at being a great QB, should the Father/Coach find a coaching opening where his son will get the best possible training? And then once the son graduates then the coach find what he wants? For instance, if receivers job came open at Westlake under Todd Dodge, would it be wise to take that job for 3 years and Dodge train his son knowing Dodge's history at developing QB's? Or, should the coach do what's best for himself at the time and what ever happens to the son just happens whether it's good or bad? Thoughts?! Right now Nederland is a dumpster fire and the current administration is taking a ton of heat over the volleyball coach the only varsity coach at Nederland that lead a team to the playoffs heading to PN-G Quote
navydawg31 Posted May 24, 2023 Report Posted May 24, 2023 3 minutes ago, NHSBulldogFan said: Right now Nederland is a dumpster fire and the current administration is taking a ton of heat over the volleyball coach the only varsity coach at Nederland that lead a team to the playoffs heading to PN-G Is that a done deal? Quote
NHSBulldogFan Posted May 24, 2023 Report Posted May 24, 2023 12 minutes ago, navydawg31 said: Is that a done deal? All that's left is the dotting of i's is what I'm told Quote
navydawg31 Posted May 25, 2023 Report Posted May 25, 2023 17 minutes ago, NHSBulldogFan said: All that's left is the dotting of i's is what I'm told What a joke of a ISD… losing a great coach that graduated from there to your rival.. Quote
WOSdrummer99 Posted May 25, 2023 Report Posted May 25, 2023 3 hours ago, Reagan said: This topic is in general reference to the Anahuac coach and reportedly good athletic son. Curious of the opinion's of others here: Given that the son, any coach's son, has the potential at being a great QB, should the Father/Coach find a coaching opening where his son will get the best possible training? And then once the son graduates then the coach find what he wants? For instance, if receivers job came open at Westlake under Todd Dodge, would it be wise to take that job for 3 years and Dodge train his son knowing Dodge's history at developing QB's? Or, should the coach do what's best for himself at the time and what ever happens to the son just happens whether it's good or bad? Thoughts?! Do what's best for the kid, only if it's best for the others kids as well. In that scenario, coaching WRs at Westlake under Dodge would be better than most of these other jobs I hear this hypothetical coach may be considering. IMO, this hypothetical coach should've either a) made this move last year or b) stayed where they moved to last year. What would keep him from doing this 3 years in a row? Maybe doing this 2 years in row. Unless the kid is really the next NFL MVP QB from Texas. Quote
Mr. Thornton Melon Posted May 25, 2023 Report Posted May 25, 2023 17 hours ago, WOSdrummer99 said: Do what's best for the kid, only if it's best for the others kids as well. In that scenario, coaching WRs at Westlake under Dodge would be better than most of these other jobs I hear this hypothetical coach may be considering. IMO, this hypothetical coach should've either a) made this move last year or b) stayed where they moved to last year. What would keep him from doing this 3 years in a row? Maybe doing this 2 years in row. Unless the kid is really the next NFL MVP QB from Texas. Didn't look like NFL material Quote
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