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What is a coach?

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What is a coach?

 

I have just bought a lovely old book from Way’s bookshop in Henley on Thames.  It is Roy Meldrum’s ‘Coach and Eight’, first published in 1932.  Meldrum was a leading coach of the time who was a leader of the orthodox school of rowing who were epitomised by the Lady Margaret BC and in opposition to the Fairbairn types from Jesus College BC.

 

Meldrum starts the book with the following passage;

‘A coach is someone of either sex, usually a man at present, who borrows a bicycle and rides beside a crew.  When there is a gale or a poor choice among bicycles, he sometimes rides behind the crew; and sometimes sees for the first time things he had not suspected.  He can see as much and in greater comfort if he has a bicycle of his own; as much, but perhaps with less comfort if he is honoured with a horse.’


 

There is a lot of wisdom in this short passage. Leaving aside the horse, about which I am not qualified to comment, let us think for a moment about what a coach is.  Like many I started my coaching career when I could no longer row.  Was it not G B Shaw who said ‘He who can does, he who cannot, teaches’?  Relatively few of the top coaches around were top performers themselves.  Is this because the success top performers had has satisfied their thirst?  Is it that the sad people who coach are those who failed to achieve and now eke out a miserable existence warming their egos at the fires of the next generation?  I like to think that coaching and performing are so different that few people have the breadth of personality and diversity of skill to succeed at both.

 

An associated question that is exercising many around the world at this time of year is ‘How to identify a good coach?’  The season has already seen its share of coaches moved on, dropped or not re-employed and the searches for their successors, discreet and otherwise, are starting.  Every year sees a similar merry go round.  The same coaches are shuffled between the same jobs, and off we go again for another season.  It has echoes of the greater idiocies perpetrated by the owners of football clubs.

 

May I suggest to those searching for a coach that they first look at themselves and their own failings before setting out to find a coach whom they can blame when things go wrong next season?

 

To return to the headline; ‘What is a coach?’   Did you hear the one about the rugby club who called guy who ran their practices Bus, because he certainly wasn’t a coach?!

Duncan Holland 

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