Can an unnatached athlete who doesn't attend the coaches school receive coaching from the coach? Sort of confusing language but I think it makes sense.
Can an unnatached athlete who doesn't attend the coaches school receive coaching from the coach? Sort of confusing language but I think it makes sense.
Schumacher and Smith.
Yes, absolutely
This happens all the time. A large number of NCAA coaches have other athletes that they are training alongside their NCAA sanctioned team.
Sort of a grey area; to my knowledge it's fine?
Both my college head cross coaches had athletes on the side that were receiving training plans and sometimes even having their workouts directly overseen by our coach outside of practice hours.
Parker Valby probably wrote this question
Yes although there is probably a restriction if the person could be considered a potential recruit. So it might be a violation to send it to someone still in high school but not to a post-grad. Many college coaches coach pro athletes on the side.
No. She is a college runner.
No caps wrote:
Parker Valby probably wrote this question
Why do people think there is only 1 person in the world who can coach Parker Valby?
samcallan wrote:
Yes although there is probably a restriction if the person could be considered a potential recruit. So it might be a violation to send it to someone still in high school but not to a post-grad.
I know of a college coach who got permission from his college to coach some high school seniors after they had already committed to a different college and were no longer considered recruitable.
I thought we have and have had a few of our sub 4 HS guys train with college runners.
Generally yes. But it depends on the employment agreement the coach has with the college if it permits doing side work that does not conflict with the team. Also, some coaches don't have the time/interest to coach post-collegiate runners even if they can.