Edina Girls Coach
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Edina Girls Coach
Does anybody know who has applied for the Edina Girls Head Coach job, and if anyone has been hired yet?
Re: Edina Girls Coach
Applications were being accepted through Friday (yesterday). Interviews will start next week. I've heard many rumored names mentioned but I'm not sure who applied. The applicant pool should be substantial.NotfromMN wrote:Does anybody know who has applied for the Edina Girls Head Coach job, and if anyone has been hired yet?
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Interesting
Looks like they got some high profile names to apply, and must have had some people targeted before the search began, as they have called in some people who didn't apply to discuss the position. Looks like they aren't wasting much time and talking to people early this week.
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Re: Edina Girls Coach
Rumor is that it is down to 3 final candidates and the decision will be made this week, maybe as early as Wednesday.
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That's an excellent question. I don't know if I could name only one quality. A successful coach for any gender must have lots of qualities (and some talent to work with). I guess overall, in my opinion, girls are more literal than boys. They listen better than boys but be careful what you tell them because they generally follow directions (sometimes to a fault) even if it is sometimes right to bend the rules. I guess if I had to choose only one quality I would choose the ability to communicate and teach. I think a good coach (for boys or girls) must be a good teacher and together with the teaching quality be a good psychologist to know when to push and when to back off (essentially guaging the demeanor of his or her team and pushing the right buttons to get the best performance).rinkrat90 wrote:Not totally related to this exact thread. But, if you had to name one (and only one) quality that a coach must possess to be successful as a girl's hockey coach, what would it be?
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Communication is the key to any successful coach but I think it is more important with girls because they seem to take a coaches words more seriously. With our Sons, if their told that something isn't good enough he shrugs his shoulders and moves on, with our daughters, if their told something their doing isn't good enough they think your talking about their whole life. So if you have a coach that's a bad communicator or who isn't very knowledgeable in what he's coaching it affects the girls in much different ways than it does a boy.
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I agree with OnTheEdge and finance_gal on what it takes to be a successful girls high school hockey coach, in general. Communication, teaching the game, pushing the right buttons are all critical if you're going to get the most of your team.
The situation at Edina is unique from the standpoint that they have so much depth to work with. This will make it very difficult for the incoming coach in that there will be probably a half-dozen or more girls who could easily make most other varsity teams. This will put added pressure on the coach, because the parents of the girls who unfortunately don't make varsity will know this and inevitably be very disappointed. And for those that do make varsity, especially as 3rd/4th liners, playing time will become an issue, and no doubt lots of lobbying/complaining will be directed at the coach from both camps. Expectations will be set very high, as probably they should be given the overall talent level and depth that he/she will have to work with.
All in all it's a great opportunity for whoever they select, but the ability to communicate and keep things postitive will be especially important in Edina's situation.
The situation at Edina is unique from the standpoint that they have so much depth to work with. This will make it very difficult for the incoming coach in that there will be probably a half-dozen or more girls who could easily make most other varsity teams. This will put added pressure on the coach, because the parents of the girls who unfortunately don't make varsity will know this and inevitably be very disappointed. And for those that do make varsity, especially as 3rd/4th liners, playing time will become an issue, and no doubt lots of lobbying/complaining will be directed at the coach from both camps. Expectations will be set very high, as probably they should be given the overall talent level and depth that he/she will have to work with.
All in all it's a great opportunity for whoever they select, but the ability to communicate and keep things postitive will be especially important in Edina's situation.
I couldn't have said it better MNHockeyFan. Its a tough (and good) place for anyone to coach for all the reasons you list.MNHockeyFan wrote:I agree with OnTheEdge and finance_gal on what it takes to be a successful girls high school hockey coach, in general. Communication, teaching the game, pushing the right buttons are all critical if you're going to get the most of your team.
The situation at Edina is unique from the standpoint that they have so much depth to work with. This will make it very difficult for the incoming coach in that there will be probably a half-dozen or more girls who could easily make most other varsity teams. This will put added pressure on the coach, because the parents of the girls who unfortunately don't make varsity will know this and inevitably be very disappointed. And for those that do make varsity, especially as 3rd/4th liners, playing time will become an issue, and no doubt lots of lobbying/complaining will be directed at the coach from both camps. Expectations will be set very high, as probably they should be given the overall talent level and depth that he/she will have to work with.
All in all it's a great opportunity for whoever they select, but the ability to communicate and keep things postitive will be especially important in Edina's situation.
Who will it be?
The rumor is that they were going to make a decision by today, whatever they are doing they are keeping it pretty quiet. It will be interesting to see who they choose, there were a lot of big names that didn't get a call back.....could this position start a chain reaction of other positions?
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?
Like who? Who are the supposed big names that didn't get a call back?
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Edina Coach
From what I have heard there is only one current head coach in the final 3. So I am not sure that this is going to cause a "domino effect". The final three are all very good. Who ever gets this job, Edina will have a great coach.
Re: Edina Coach
I agree with Roman, they are going get a great coach and there will be little to no domino effect...from what I hear, they are most concerned about who the new head coach is going to bring with them as assistants.Roman Legion wrote:From what I have heard there is only one current head coach in the final 3. So I am not sure that this is going to cause a "domino effect". The final three are all very good. Who ever gets this job, Edina will have a great coach.
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One thing's for sure, it should not be a parent. The girls hockey program in Edina has been dealing with parent coaches who are only concerned with furthering their own kid for years, part of the reason they've never won a state championship. The coach and assistant coaches should be impartial people from the outside. All one has to do is sit in the stands during a high school girls summer training session to witness the over the top behavior of these parents.