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How to become a student manager for college basketball


College Basketball Manager Requirements | Work

By Chron Contributor Updated September 16, 2021

They arrive at the gym an hour before the players and depart long after practice ends, and do whatever is necessary for the team's well-being. The job of college basketball team manager requires serious dedication as managers must have the passion for the game. If you have an interest in working as a team manager, you must understand all that the job requires, and you must prepare yourself for success.

Academic Requirements

Basketball team managers generally attend the college as students. These student managers must maintain good academic performance in their classes. If they fail to maintain satisfactory grades, coaches may remove them from the position or suspend them. Team managers also must attend classes unless they are traveling with the team. They must notify teachers in advance of scheduling conflicts and arrange for submitting assignments at other suitable times.

Basketball Team Manager Job Description

Coaches and players spend their time focusing on practice and games. This leaves the team manager to deal with many of the behind-the-scenes organizational tasks. He arranges meals, packs players’ bags for road games, cleans uniforms, orders and maintains equipment, carries and fills water bottles, reserves gyms for road practices and corresponds with hotel personnel, bus drivers and managers for opposing teams. As ESPN reports, mostly the job is behind-the-scenes prep work and cleanup. With dozens of tasks to tackle each day, the manager must have strong organizational skills. He must manage time well and be orderly.

Broad Basketball Knowledge

Team managers must possess a broad knowledge of the game. These student managers must understand all signals used by basketball officials, and they must be able to follow the game. They must understand the terminology used in basketball, and they must understand the rules of college basketball and the rules of the National College Athletic Association. For example, the NCAA manager is forbidden from performing coaching activities and from participating in practice drills or scrimmages.

Technology Skills

The team manager uses software programs and a laptop or tablet computer to keep statistical information from all of the team’s games and practices. Coaches use stat reports to monitor the team’s performances. Team managers also send statistics to the school’s sports information director, who sends statistics to local and national media, and use social media to report breaking news and generate interest in the team. Team managers produce and edit game and practice video, too. There's a lot of problem solving using basketball simulation game technology.

Behavioral Requirements

Student managers must exhibit proper conduct when representing the team. They must follow the rules of the team, the NCAA and the university or college. Team managers must show sportsmanship, respectfulness and courtesy, and they must adhere to team policies for dress and appearance. Team managers must not involve themselves in gambling on college sports and must not provide any information to individuals involved in gambling on college sports. They cannot violate local, state or federal laws, and team managers must follow team rules regarding the consumption of alcohol in and out of season.

References

  • NCAA: Rules and Regulations
  • ESPN: The Tales of a College Basketball Student Manager

The life of a college basketball student manager

Jul 9, 2015

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Four years ago, as Duke was prepping for its Countdown to Craziness, Ryan Kelly was wheeling a tub of Gatorade down a hallway in Cameron Indoor Stadium. He lost control of the dolly he was using and the orange liquid spilled everywhere -- just as Mike Krzyzewski rounded the corner.

"Oh my god. I thought I was going to get fired,'' Kelly said.

It's not easy getting a manager recruiting gig. Here's some of what it will require. Courtesy of Michigan State

For the record, Krzyzewski laughed, turned to someone and joked, "Must be a freshman."

His peers know his horror.

"You don't want to be late with anything at practice,'' Michigan State senior Andrew Novak said. "Coach [Tom Izzo] will yell, 'Let's go. Let's GO. LET'S GO.''

And so they scurry, this bastion of hoop servants who are often seen yet never cited, reacting like Pavlov's dogs to a timeout horn to set up chairs and distribute water bottles, towels and whiteboards.

They have been chosen from rigorous selection processes that include interviews, job shadows and even essays.

They are the few, the proud ... the managers?

Seriously?

"We do take our jobs seriously, but we have serious jobs,'' said Alessandro Sant'Albano, a Duke manager by way of Turin, Italy.

Was it really necessary for the Duke Blue Devils managers to protect an injured Tyus Jones from prying eyes with a curtain of towels as if he were a horse on a track after a catastrophic injury?

Do candidates for the Kentucky Wildcats really need to work camp to prove their worth?

To be water boys (and girls)?

The answer is yes, and yes.

Student managers might be the lowest rung on the athletic food chain, but they have become a vital cog in the basketball machine. And while being a real Cinderella in the NCAA tournament might require a lot of hard work and sweat (or mopping up someone else's) these menial jobs are coveted on-campus gigs because they have some serious fairy godmother benefits.

The obvious attraction is access (an insider's entre to big-name programs), but the less obvious attraction is ... also access. Most mangers have their eye on a future career in sports and have seen how their predecessors have parlayed the art of making Gatorade into full-time gigs.

The Duke managers are all smiles here, but the work isn't all fun and games. Actually, it's a lot of hard work. Courtesy of Mike Bradley/Duke Blue Planet

Brian DeStefano, former Duke manager, is now associate head coach at Harvard.

Mark Evans, now the equipment manager at Kentucky, was with Calipari at both Memphis and Kentucky as a student manager.

Katherine Vosters graduated from Wisconsin in 2013, after having served three years as a manager. She just finished her second season as the Badgers' director of basketball operations.

And then there are the Paugas, the patron saints of managers. Brian, the younger brother, turned his undergrad experience at Michigan State into an internship with the San Antonio Spurs. Eight years later, he's the team's director of scouting. His brother, Kevin, went from Spartan manager to a full-time director of operations position and owner of a well-read analytics report, the KPI.

So feel free to laugh at their earnest efforts as servants to their peers. They'll have the last laugh when they cash their first paychecks.

"I've seen how many guys have moved on,'' Novak said. "I saw this as an opportunity.''

Plenty of others do, too, but not everyone makes the cut. The odds, in fact, of becoming a manager at an elite program are about as stacked as the odds of playing for an elite program.

Each of the Final Four schools sift through hundreds of applications annually, choosing no more than three or four managers each year.

The application process at all four is rigorous. Michigan State includes job shadowing and an essay. Kentucky asks aspiring managers to work camp before inviting a few for interviews. Wisconsin holds mock workouts. Duke puts candidates through multiple rounds of interviews.

And so we pause here to ask again: Take this stuff a little seriously, people?

"You need people who are here for the right reason,'' said Evans, from Kentucky. "When I say that, the best way to explain what we do is we're the first people to turn the lights on and the last ones to turn the lights off. You have to want to do this.''

Kids who show up and want the perks -- the good seats on the bench, access to the inner workings of the big-name program, the gear, the travel, in other words, the "glamour" -- generally aren't chosen.

Because, as Vosters points out, that's a very small part of the job. Mostly it's behind-the-scenes prep work and cleanup. Often it's for little to no pay. Wisconsin managers receive a small stipend; Duke and Michigan State's groups get no pay at all.

Katherine Vosters parlayed her job as a manager into a bigger role with Wisconsin basketball. AP Photo/Nati Harnik

Kentucky, on the other hand, has a scholarship fund for its managers, named after Bill Keightley, the school's beloved equipment manager of 48 years who died in 2008.

So instead of people looking for glitz and glamour, schools are looking for students who want to:

• Haul luggage onto planes and buses in the wee hours

• Fill and refill Gatorade tubs

• Cut and edit film until their eyes cross

• Chart hustle plays and other obscure stats at games

• Work camps in the summer

• Sacrifice weekends and holiday trips in exchange for practices

• Stand, as they do at Duke, just so far apart, ball tucked under one arm, other arm on hip, towel over shoulder.

In other words, people who are willing to do just about whatever they are asked to make life easier for basketball players their own age.

So who in the world are these people?

Most have a similar story.

Kelly grew up in Massachusetts, a self-described lifelong Duke fan with eyes on a career in physical therapy. He was invited to the staff of 12 as a freshman.

"I was the happiest kid in the world," he said. "I was running around the dorm like a nut.''

Now a rising senior, he headed to New York last month, invited by Justise Winslow for the NBA draft. In March, he'll take part in senior day, at Cameron Indoor Stadium, against North Carolina. His father, Terry, a factory worker, will be there (his mother passed away).

"It can't get better than that,'' he said.

Duke manager Ryan Kelly has been a part of the Blue Devils' staff since he was a freshman. Courtesy of Mike Bradley/Duke Blue Planet

Novak is from outside of Chicago, an ex-high school baseball and basketball player. He's in the Michigan State business school and would love a career in either college or professional sports. He's been tubing, pulled on a pontoon boat driven by a happily crazed Izzo, who was intent on whipping the boat so fast his managers would fly off into the water.

Vosters is a Wisconsin native, the daughter of season-ticket-holding parents who was never going to college anywhere but Madison. The lifelong Badgers fan allowed herself a moment to look down the bench this season, as the final seconds were ticking away in Wisconsin's upset of Kentucky.

"It's a feeling I can't describe,'' she said. "I knew how hard everyone on that bench had worked. It was truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience.''

A three-sport athlete in Elmira, New York, Evans had a high school friend who was a student manager at Alabama. With designs on a career in sports himself, he took a chance and went to Memphis, where he found the competition to take care of the basketball team wasn't too fierce. He signed up as a freshman, but a year later John Calipari was off to Kentucky.

"I was like, 'Uh-oh. Was this all for nothing?'" Evans said.

Instead, Evans asked Calipari if he could stay on staff if he also made the move to Lexington. Calipari agreed and Evans transferred.

In 2012, he was on the bench when the Wildcats won the national championship.

There has to be an outlier in every bunch.

That would be Sant'Albano, the curly-haired senior manager at Duke. His father was once the CEO of Juventus, one of the world's premier soccer teams, and is now international CEO of Cushman & Wakefield, a multibillion dollar commercial real estate firm.

And he spent the past year wiping up Jahlil Okafor's sweat?

"My family taught me hard work,'' he said. "They believe you have to start any job from the ground up to really know it.''

Ground level on a recent June day saw Sant'Albano giddy with triumph after the managers beat the campers in a game of knockout.

"We haven't won in eight years,'' he said. "We could sweep if we win the third session.''

He was serious.

They all are, serious about a job at which most of us would scoff.

But when they graduate with letters of recommendation from Bo Ryan, Izzo, Calipari and Krzyzewski, guess who will be laughing then?

How to Become a College Basketball Coach • BUOM

By Indeed Editorial Team

March 12, 2021

If you are good at basketball and enjoy teaching others how to play, you might want to consider becoming a college basketball coach. These professionals work with college students on the basketball team and teach them how to be more effective in the sport. College basketball coaches require a certain amount of experience and education to be considered for this position. In this article, we'll take a look at what a college basketball coach does, the requirements to become one, and the steps you can take to choose this career.

What does a college basketball coach do?

College basketball coaches teach students how to play basketball as part of a team. Many college students who are part of a basketball team already have some level of skill in the sport, and a coach must help team members hone those skills and work together as a team to win basketball games. A college basketball coach should expect and be able to:

  • Perform administrative duties, including filing medical forms, completing lists, budgeting for the team, developing training schedules, and ordering equipment needed for training and practice.

  • Learn the rules and objectives of the various basketball organizations that must be followed when playing as part of that organization.

  • Keep team members safe during training and games.

  • Recruit new basketball players for the college team.

  • Work one on one with players to help them develop their skills.

  • Select players to fill certain positions in an efficient way.

  • Organize team building events to promote a sense of teamwork and camaraderie.

  • Development of team rules and enforcement of rules during practice and games.

  • Create game plans for each game based on knowledge available to the other team.

  • Participate in public relations activities to increase awareness of the basketball team and the college as a whole.

  • Conduct media interviews and participate in fundraising events to raise money for the team.

How to Become a College Basketball Coach

Here are the steps you need to take if you want to pursue a career as a basketball coach:

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Most college basketball coaches originally started as players themselves. If you're in high school, join the basketball team and learn everything you can about how the game works. Spend time every day playing basketball to better understand the ins and outs of the game and the skills needed to be a better player.

2. Get a bachelor's degree

After you graduate from high school or get your GED, you should continue your undergraduate studies. Common subjects that aspiring college basketball coaches choose to study include physical education, coach training, and related fields. Majors that emphasize leadership are also good choices for those looking to pursue a career as a college basketball coach. There is no specific specialty that a basketball coach must master; rather, most colleges that hire basketball coaches just want to make sure you get your bachelor's degree in general.

3. Gain coaching experience

Most college basketball coaches are not hired straight out of college. Rather, they usually spend time coaching lower levels such as high school or high school before they qualify to coach at the college level. One idea is to teach part-time and coach at a local middle or high school. Schools are more likely to hire sports coaches who also teach at their school.

After you have gained experience as a lower-level basketball coach, you can apply for a college basketball assistant coaching position. You may also consider applying to be the manager of the college basketball team you would like to eventually coach. Both of these positions give you hands-on college-level coaching experience and teach you the finer points of learning and preparing for practice.

Most college basketball coaches spend several years training on the staff of the basketball program, so every position you hold on that staff will be valuable to your future coaching career.

4. Get certified as a basketball coach

Many colleges that hire basketball coaches are looking for candidates who are certified as basketball coaches. One of the most popular basketball coach certifications is the USA Basketball (USAB) Associate License. This license requires a background check and a series of courses. Once this is done, you will receive a license for the season. You can also get a USAB Coach Gold License, which is required for those who coach at NCAA certified events. Other certifications that are important for college basketball coaches include first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

5. Choose whether you want to coach men's or women's basketball.

Another important step in your college basketball coaching career is deciding whether you want to coach men's or women's basketball. Although there is no significant difference between the two, it would be nice to understand how each type of basketball differs and what are the expectations for each of them individually.

6. Participate in networking activities

There are several opportunities to network in the field of college basketball. USA Basketball Coaches Network is the place to find and build relationships with other aspiring and current college basketball coaches. You can also use online networking platforms or attend college basketball events that will be attended by other coaches and coaching staff members. A good network can help you find a job as a college basketball coach, as well as if you decide to change positions in the same field in the future.

7. Continue to gain professional experience to advance to higher positions.

Most college basketball coaches do not start their careers as the head coach of a major college basketball team. College coaches spend years in smaller positions on the coaching staff, such as coordinator, manager, or assistant positions. When you first apply for a college basketball position, look for these opportunities first before applying for a head coaching position, especially if you have no previous experience as a college basketball coach.

How can I become a basketball coach? Kiiki

Ninety percent of basketball fans, in addition to playing basketball, would like to become a basketball coach. This is because today's coaches were once yesterday's players.

Therefore, this How to Become a Basketball Coach article explains in detail the requirements to become a basketball coach, the complete guide and how much you can earn as a basketball coach.

Becoming a basketball coach will become less strict if you have the right information.

Basketball has about 825 followers and over one hundred thousand teams. In fact, the history of basketball dates back to 1891, when James Naismith, a Canadian physical education instructor, introduced it as a less injury-prone sport than football.

Becoming a basketball coach requires certain qualifications, experience, physical strength, and a performance-oriented mindset. In fact, legendary coaches are known for their resilient spirit and drive to achieve their goals.

The table of contents below contains a number of frequently asked questions about becoming a basketball coach, which are properly answered in this article.

Is basketball a game or a sport?

At its core, sport is physical activity performed according to an agreed set of rules for the purpose of recreation. It can be competition or self-gratification or a combination of both.

Whereas, a game is a recreational activity involving one or more players determined by a goal that the players are trying to achieve within some set of rules.

Thus, the difference in goals distinguishes sport from play in combination with the concept of individual skill or mastery. While games are primarily played for entertainment or enjoyment, sports can be competitive or for personal enjoyment.

Basketball is a sport because it is a physical activity played according to set rules, and a game because it is fun.

What is basketball?

Basketball is a team sport in which two teams, usually consisting of five players each, play against each other on a rectangular court. Its origins date back to 1891, when James Naismith invented the game as a less-injury sport.

Two teams of five players each. So, we have ten players on the court at the same time, and a maximum of seven on the bench.

Usually in a game, one team tries to prevent the other team's players from scoring. However, each normal score is two points, and if a player shoots the ball into the hoop from behind a large arc-shaped line on the court called the "three-point line", three points are scored.

In addition, there are several officials in this game who do not belong to any of the teams, but are ready to help. These are the judge, referee, timekeeper, scorer and shot clock operator.

SEE ALSO: Best Football Prep Schools in the USA | Ratings

Who is a professional basketball coach?

Every sport or game needs players and someone to guide and teach the skills for how those players should excel on the field. These teachers or directors are called coaches.

In this way, a professional basketball coach teaches professional basketball players all the skills they need to succeed on the court.

In addition, a professional basketball coach conducts training, selection of players and conducts games during games. They often analyze the strengths and weaknesses of their team as well as their opponents.

In addition, professional basketball coaches also evaluate and track individual performance and create games that capitalize on the strengths of their players. They can work hand in hand with assistant coaches to bring out the best in their players.

Finally, most professional basketball coaches started out and became record-breaking high school basketball coaches or even coached college and high school basketball. Some of the legendary basketball coaches include

Jim Calhoun

Winning over 600 games in four final four games, he won national championship titles. In addition, Jim Calhoun turned the Connecticut Huskies into one of the elite college basketball programs. As a result, his legendary and professional basketball coach won over 600 games. In 2005, he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
Subsequently, six years later at 68, he became the oldest coach in Division 1 history with a national title.

Dean Smith

Similarly, Smith is one of the greatest innovators in college basketball. Apparently, he is the developer of the Four Corners crime. In addition, Smith turned the Tar heels into one of the most successful basketball programs in the country after taking over in 1961.
He amassed 870 wins and 11 final fours, as well as two national championships. In addition, almost 97 percent of its athletes received a degree.

Bobby Knight

This Hall of Famer coach is known for his edgy style, nicknamed The General; Bobby is the second-best winning coach in Division I men's basketball.
In fact, this legendary professional coach has 902 career victories. In addition, he led the American team to the gold medal at the 1979 Pan America Games and 1984 Olympics.
In addition, the Indiana Hoosiers turned into a perennial powerhouse, reaching five of Bobby Knight's Final Fours. In addition, he also won three national championships.

SEE ALSO: 15 Largest College Football Stadiums in the US | 2021

What is a high school basketball coach?

A high school basketball coach is a coach who works with basketball teams at the high school level. Thus, the high school basketball coach will perform all the activities and duties of a coach for the high school team.

Basketball is one of the games for recreation, entertainment and sports among schoolchildren. Basically, former students often become basketball coaches.

In addition, these professionals are in high demand today, so you can try to become a school basketball coach for girls or boys. However, you may need the following to start your career as a high school basketball head coach.

  • Continue
  • Cover letter
  • Portfolio
  • Interview

Essentially, you should include the following information in your portfolio

  • Why are you interested in the position of
  • What is your philosophy of coaching
  • of the Great Coach
  • Your communication style
  • Your strengths
  • Development of player
  • Your goals for the program
  • Academics
9000 NBA?

NBA stands for National Basketball Association. First, finding such a position is not easy. Becoming an NBA coach is exciting but hard, landing hard. However, it is still possible0003

Second, basketball coaches hired by this association become NBA coaches. Mostly, these coaches had to work as college basketball coaches, high school basketball coaches, and more importantly, professional basketball coaches.

Third, according to a business insider, all NBA coaches agree that two things are important. One is networking and the other boasts a strong resume. In addition, different path to the NBA following stories Coaches and players will also help you move up the career ladder.

What degree do I need to become a basketball coach?

There are no minimum education requirements to become a professional basketball coach. However, many coaches begin their careers at the high school or collegiate level, and these positions may require a bachelor's degree.

You can also take a bachelor's degree program that includes physical education and exercise.

You should expect and excel in coursework that covers fitness and wellness throughout life, anatomy and physiology, and motor development. Subsequently, you can also learn how to earn online certifications in sports history, rules and strategies.

In addition, you need all the experience you can get to advance in this career. Basically, you may need an assistant basketball coach in college and high school.

In addition, you can try to gain experience as a head coach in smaller schools and programs before moving on to larger opportunities and teams.

How can I become a basketball coach?

First, most high school basketball players go to coaching after high school. To be a college or high school basketball coach, you must have a keen interest in this career. Also, you can check out other 9 high paying careers0110 too.

Step 1: Get a Bachelor's Degree

Basically, you need a bachelor's degree to become a basketball coach. So, you're in an exercise and physical education program, or better yet, you're taking a coaching course.

In fact, the coach education program helps you learn how to work with athletes and develop game plans, as well as plan and implement fitness and skill development programs.

In addition, it is important that you get a personal experience of playing basketball. This gives you a more comprehensive knowledge of the sport and allows them to communicate better with their players.

You can also learn teaching skills as many schools hire trainers who are already working as public teachers. Some of the programs you can offer

This program features coursework in sports psychology, human movement, and coaching principles. It is available as undergraduate, graduate and certificate programs. Basically, a bachelor's certificate in Athletic Coaching prepares you to be an effective leader and health advocate for athletes, no matter the sport. Some of the courses you can offer include:

  • CPR and First Aid
  • Human Nutrition and Trauma Treatment
  • Player Motivation
  • Sports Psychology
  • Coaching Pedagogy
  • Sports Program Administration

. These programs must meet four goals: reliability, professionalism, quality of service and confidence.

In essence, any of these degree programs will introduce you to basic principles such as:

  • Prioritize the well-being of the individual
  • Provide services only in areas of competence
  • Issue public statements truthfully and objectively
  • Law with a high level of personal conduct
  • Remain proficient in professional practice and performance of professional duties
  • Maintain professional integrity
  • In addition, to obtain an online certificate in sports training from Columbia University : This will cost you an average of $480/semester credit hour.

    Step 2: Gain coaching experience

    In fact, before you can get a job as an assistant coach, you need to have coaching experience. So, you need to start working with basketball teams at different levels. It is advisable to volunteer in high school, high school, or even on a college team as a team manager.

    Actually, learn to watch as many game tapes as possible. This will help you understand, break down the actions and strategies of teams and players.

    In addition, both volunteer and game recordings will teach you how to reorganize various attacks and defenses. This is essential to becoming a basketball coach in both high school and college.

    Step 3rd: Working as an Assistant Basketball Coach

    Basically, to become a basketball coach, you must start your career as an assistant basketball coach. This is easier to get as support jobs are on the rise. However, this can lead to increased liability.

    At this stage, you should work more closely with the players individually before and after practice to help them improve their basketball skills.

    4th step: get certified

    The degree is excellent accompanied by experience as a basketball coach, but certifications are very important. Basically, certification programs deal with a selected part of a broad area.

    So while a degree in physical education is great, certifications in CPR, first aid, and coaching may be required for coaches looking to work in public junior or non-teaching staff at the school.

    Step 5: Grow your career path.

    You are now a certified basketball coach and can serve as head coach in public high schools, high schools and colleges. Since most high school coaches work part-time and do not receive the salary or benefits of a full-time coach, you should consider moving to college or professional basketball.

    However, this may require many years of experience and the successful work of your team,

    In fact, you have to keep winning and chasing big opportunities until you join the Naismith Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame.

    How much does a basketball coach earn?

    Basketball coaches make an average of $100,000 when they work with small school teams.

    However, coaches at any of the highest paying schools in the NCAA earn about $1 million or more a year.

    How to Become a Basketball Coach

    Basketball coach salaries vary depending on your current employer, team level, qualifications and experience. . For example, of the 65 teams that competed in the 2014 Men's National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) tournament.
    In general, the coach with the lowest earnings earned about $171,000.
    Also, in the professional league, according to CBSSPorts.com, the average salary is about $3.05 million.

    A high school basketball coach is a coach who works with basketball teams at the high school level. Thus, the high school basketball coach will perform all the activities and duties of a coach for the high school team.

    To be a college basketball coach, the level you want to coach will determine the degree requirements.
    Basically, at Div:1 level, you just need a degree. However, as you progress to the lower level, many schools are looking for a master's degree applicant.
    In addition to your qualifications, it is important to note that coaching is based on contacts, not knowledge. So you need a strong resume and a network connection too.

    Conclusion

    Basketball is an interesting game and being a basketball coach is also an interesting career path. This World Scholarship Forum article explains the main difference between a game and a sport,

    Although there is a difference, this post explains why basketball is both a sport and a game.

    In addition, it sheds light on who basketball coaches are, their various levels, and a detailed guide on how to become one.

    Basically, you may first need to show interest in a career to become a basketball coach. In addition, you will need a bachelor's degree and a certificate with extensive experience to succeed in this coaching career.

    This post also shows tips on how to become a high school and college basketball coach.


    Learn more