Hey everyone, my name is Matt Lisle, I am the new Head Baseball Coach at Gallaudet University in DC. I just moved here from Nor. California about 2 weeks ago.
I am currently looking for another assistant coach especially someone who can work with catchers.
The salary pays about $2500-3000, based on experience. We started camp 3 days ago, and tryouts begin Wednesday.
If interested please email me your resume at coachlisle@comcast.net. I'm looking for someone to start in the next week or 2 at the latest.
You do not need to know sign language but it definitely helps. I know a little and I have another assistant coach that knows none. (we have 2 hearing coaches and 1 hard of hearing coach). I am hearing.
Here are some details:
Season: Jan 18-May 4
Salary: $2k to $3k
Hours: we will practice different days usually from 4-6pm or 6-8pm. (in that range). We will also have a lot of individual one hour practices throughout the day (pitchers/catchers, infielders, etc.) Usually in the morning.
Games: 40 games (18 conference which are Wed’s and DH on Sat). Non-Conference are mostly on weekends with a few 3:30pm starts during the week.
My first choice would be someone who can work with our catchers, I’m pretty spread thin doing P and IF and the catchers. But right now, I know I can’t be too picky and will take anyone who can commit to the season and knows the game well.
If they can throw a good BP that’s a plus too.
I appreciate any help you guys can give. Its hard just moving here not having built any coaching relationships like I have back in California.
Feel free to forward this email to a few people you know that might be interested. If you do know of someone whose interested, just have them email me a little resume or background and we can go from there.
If they want to know more about me and my background they can goto www.gallaudetathletics.com , click on baseball and read my bio/press release.
Gallaudet University is the world leader in liberal education and career development for deaf and hard-of-hearing undergraduate students. The University enjoys an international reputation for the outstanding graduate programs it provides deaf, hard-of-hearing, and hearing students, as well as for the quality of the research it conducts on the history, language, culture, and other topics related to deaf people. In addition, the University’s Laurent Clerc National Deaf Education Center serves deaf and hard-of-hearing children at its two demonstration schools and throughout the nation by developing, implementing, and disseminating innovative educational strategies.
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