One of my sons is on this path and I thought I had a pretty good idea of how things typically work... It often requires multiple years of volunteer and/or low-pay assistant position at smaller school or alma mater, making several jumps (still little or no pay except camp money, etc.) before a "decent" paid 1st assistant spot can be earned and maybe, eventually, a HC spot. We have compared it here to the plight of MiLB players... work 3 yrs, 5 yrs, maybe more for pennies before having the outside chance at one of the coveted spots that actually pay.
But, every once in a while, I see scenarios that seem extreme and I'm hoping others can provide more insight. Today, I browsed the staff of a D1 school....
- First asst. - spent 9 seasons in minors, 4 yrs at this school as a volunteer video coordinator and finally became a paid asst. He has a wife and baby.
- Volunteer asst. - spent 3 seasons in minors, going on his 8th season as volunteer asst. He has a wife and three kids.
- Director of Ops - going into his 8th season in this role after 4 seasons as team manager. I'm pretty sure the director of ops position doesn't pay much. It is volunteer at many D1 schools that are not P5 and most would not consider this conference to be P5 in baseball.
- Volunteer asst. #2 - appears to be in his 5th season as either student asst. or volunteer asst. in the program, so at least 5 yrs post-graduation as a full time volunteer.
So, just in this one program, there are multiple guys spending 10-12 years in either volunteer or very low paying roles. These are not old retired guys - they are young guys with degrees who have yet to start their paid professional careers, many with a wife and kid/s.
Please, someone tell me that this is far from the norm. I could see three years, maybe five (if there is overlap while completing grad school) of volunteer work but this is crazy. You can't make a living, let alone support a family on camp money.
What insight and stories can others provide here?