Fairhope, AL โ€ข Troy University Grad โ€ข Head Football Coach / AD @ Ashford High School @ashford_fb #GoJackets

Joined September 2014
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Assistant coach advice from one to another.. Write down EVERYTHING. Keep EVERYTHING.. practice schedules for example. Find a binder or start making notebooks. Soak up anything and everything. You will be able to go back and find nuggets from anything you liked OR did not like.
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Coach Chestnut ๐ŸŒฐ
Please join us in welcoming Coach Chestnut to the @ashford_fb family !! Coach Chestnut will be teaching history at the middle school and coaching TEโ€™s and H-Backs for the varsity football team !! Coach Chestnut is a Wicksburg Native who started OL for 2 years at Wicksburg.
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
Please join us in welcoming Coach Chestnut to the @ashford_fb family !! Coach Chestnut will be teaching history at the middle school and coaching TEโ€™s and H-Backs for the varsity football team !! Coach Chestnut is a Wicksburg Native who started OL for 2 years at Wicksburg.
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Part 2 of notes I took at next gen academy 3 years ago.. Listening to Coach Smith!
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Some old notes from a head coaches / young coaches clinic I went to in Vestavia Hills 3 years ago.. Great stuff from some great head coaches! Still look through these every year.
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Go Trojans!!
Jun 14
Troy eliminates Ole Miss for its first MCWS win in program history!
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
Jun 14
Troy eliminates Ole Miss for its first MCWS win in program history!
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Work hard , play hard
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
Jun 6
TROY IS HEADING TO OMAHA FOR THE FIRST TIME IN PROGRAM HISTORYโ€ผ๏ธ ๐Ÿ“ธ @TroyTrojansBSB
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Summer week 1 โœ…
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
One of the biggest misconceptions in high school sports is that coaching is primarily about practices, games, and wins. The reality is that coaching has become one of the most challenging roles in education because coaches are expected to wear dozens of hats while being evaluated from every direction. Every parent, player, administrator, and community member often has a different expectation of success. One family wants college recruiting to be the priority. Another wants playing time. Another wants winning. Another wants player development. Another wants discipline. Another simply wants their child to enjoy the experience. The challenge is that those goals frequently conflict, and coaches are often expected to satisfy all of them simultaneously. Most coaches are balancing far more than what happens between the lines. They manage team culture, player conflicts, parent concerns, academics, transportation, fundraising, budgets, equipment, scheduling, eligibility, social media issues, and the emotional needs of teenagers. At the same time, every roster includes athletes with different abilities, goals, motivations, and commitment levels. Some dream of college athletics. Some are trying to make varsity. Some simply want to belong. Building one program that serves all of them is incredibly difficult. Perhaps the greatest challenge is decision-making. Who starts? Who plays? Who sits? Who travels? Who gets moved up? Who gets cut? Every decision creates opportunity for one athlete and disappointment for another. Even well-intentioned decisions can be viewed as favoritism or politics when seen through the lens of an individual family. Recruiting adds another layer of complexity. Coaches are expected to help athletes pursue college opportunities while also managing the needs of an entire team. Supporting one athlete can sometimes raise questions from another family about their childโ€™s opportunities. Social media has amplified many of these challenges. One lineup decision, one difficult conversation, or one emotional moment can quickly become public discussion, often without the full context. There are also pressures many people never see. Pressure from administrators to represent the school well. Pressure from parents to provide opportunities. Pressure from athletes to help them achieve their goals. Pressure from communities that often measure success by wins and losses. Pressure to retain athletes in an era of increasing transfers and movement. And all of this occurs while coaches are trying to develop young people, not just athletes. What makes coaching difficult is not that people donโ€™t care. Itโ€™s that everyone cares deeply, but often about different things. Parents focus on their child. Players focus on their opportunities. Administrators focus on the school. Communities focus on results. Coaches must somehow balance all of those interests while making decisions they believe are best for the team. As a former college coach, athletic director, and high school administrator, Iโ€™ve learned that most coaches are not trying to hold athletes back, play favorites, or make life difficult for families. Most are simply navigating competing priorities, limited resources, and difficult decisions while trying to do whatโ€™s best for kids. Because at its core, coaching has never really been about managing games. Itโ€™s about managing people. And thatโ€™s what makes it both incredibly challenging and incredibly important
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
Day 1 .. write our own story โœ๐Ÿผ
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
WH Brown was active today! Thankful for the opportunity to coach our bunch again! We are all here for a reason!
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
A player I recruited years ago had one scholarship offer. Just one. Not because he lacked talent. Because he wasn't the right fit for everyone. He chose the school that believed in his development. Four years later, he graduated, became an all-conference player, and changed the trajectory of his life. Recruiting isn't about collecting offers. It's about finding the right one. Fit and development build careers.
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David C. Stapleton III retweeted
Replying to @coach_stapleton
True to it. Not new to it!
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