During a recent conversation with a colleague
who is serving a Division I college football program (American Football), he
remarked that some of the important dates, seasons, and opportunities
associated with college football were a complete mystery to him. After 23
seasons, I have taken for granted much of that information and the ministry
opportunities associated with them.
Below, please take a few moments to consider
which of these seasonal opportunities may be yours as well as mine. These are
from my perspective as a Division I FCS program, and could be moderately
different if you are at a Division I FBS school, Division II, Division III, or
an NAIA school. I hope these thought raise some new opportunities to serve for
you.
January –
·
This is a pressure packed month for recruiting
as coaches are both in players’ homes and welcoming them and their families to
campus.
·
During the week of the Division I national
championship, the American Football Coaches Association hosts their annual
convention. This is an excellent place to connect with coaches from all across
the USA and even abroad. http://www.afca.com/article/article.php?id=Convention_News
·
There are also some Glazier Clinics held during
January, also a great place to interact with coaches. For dates and locations
of clinics, see - http://www.glazierclinics.com/coaching_clinics/cities_and_dates
February
–
·
The NCAA letter of intent signing date is
always the first Wednesday of February. This is even better than Christmas Day
for coaches as they see years of recruiting come to fruition as their fax
machines buzz with completed forms.
·
This month and the weeks prior to spring
football practices make for a good time to meet with coaches, to plan for the
spring, summer, and even fall.
·
These weeks can also be a good time to
interject a weekly discussion on leadership or a Bible study. If you offer it,
this may be the perfect time to start such a ministry with the coaching staff.
·
This period may also be a good time to meet
with the aspiring team leaders to help them prepare for their roles of leadership.
March –
·
At some point, Division I and II have spring football
practices. Division I gets 15 practices, and I believe Division II gets a few less.
·
To be at these practices, even for just a few
minutes, pays huge dividends. Everyone knows there are no games on spring
Saturdays. When they see you at practice, they know it’s neither glamorous nor
convenient, but it speaks to your commitment to them.
April – May
-
·
Most teams will have a spring game of some
sort. That may be similar to a real game with the team broken into two halves,
or it could be a scripted scrimmage with lots of prescribed down and distance, game
situations, and engineered stressful moments laid out ahead of time.
·
April and early May is also a time when coaches
can go on the road to observe high school junior players in the recruiting
process. Rules severely limit the contact they can have, but this is often when
players are given invitations to summer camps on the school’s campus so the coaches
can get first-hand information, reliable times and measurements, and a look
into the player’s personality.
·
Being available to simply drop in on coaches
and to ask them about family, travel, their summer plans, or the players’
academic performance is a solid way to build relationship in this season.
June –
July –
·
This is summer camps season and most teams will
host numerous camps. Camps provide a great environment for ministry, mostly as
we show up, serve, and build relationships with the coaches hosting the events
as well as the coaches attending with their players.
o
Individual camps – these are for assessment of
players in their recruiting process.
o
Team camps – these vary from state to state,
but usually allow whole teams to compete in full pads.
o
Elite camps – these will usually focus on a
particular position group and are usually by invitation only.
o
7 on 7 tournaments – these are focused on the
passing game of football and usually run one day.
·
Last summer, I started meeting with our five
team captains at my home on Wednesday mornings to prepare them for leading
their teammates.
August –
·
This is GO TIME! Months of planning and
preparation have gone into the preseason process and coaches work well over 16
hours a day during this season between early August and the start of school.
·
The preseason is a wonderful environment for
ministry as the players are sequestered from normal life, they spend all day
and all evening together, and if you are allowed to be at practices, team
meetings, or team meals, get there! Being with them in these days, even without
anything programmatic happening, builds your bond with them like nothing else.
·
Over the years I have done many Sunday morning,
6:00 chapel talks on the 50 yard line prior to a team stretch. I have done team
building exercises with our teams for nearly 15 years. I have eaten countless
team breakfasts, lunches, and dinners with players and coaches.
·
Once school starts, things find a more normal
rhythm and the NCAA twenty hour rule takes effect. The coaches are limited as
to the time they can spend with the players. This also gives us opportunity as
we are not limited by the rule and we can enhance the coaches’ roles by
leading, encouraging, serving, and loving the players.
September
through November –
·
This is the regular season of college football.
Its weekly schedule is similar to this (some will vary slightly):
o
Sunday us usually an off day for the players or
the coaches may have them come in to lift weights and stretch as well as watch
video of the last game. The coaches grind on this day, reviewing video of the
last game, grading player performances, watching video of the next opponent, and
more.
o
Monday is either an off day or a return to
practice. The coaches are usually now working on game plan for the next
opponent on Saturday. Monday practices are often a return to fundamentals and
skill enhancement drills.
o
Tuesday is normally the day to install
particular elements of the upcoming game plan. They will drill these until they
are in synch. There is also a lot of video review to be done by the players
with their coaches.
o
Wednesday and Thursday are for practice and
preparation of this week’s points of emphasis.
o
Friday is either a walk through (at home), or
travel to the site of Saturday’s game, or both. Many teams hold their team
chapel on Friday nights in the team hotel, before or after the team dinner.
o
Saturday – game day. The timing varies widely,
depending upon time for the kickoff, but some teams will hold their team chapel
prior to or following the team’s pregame meal. Some teams will hold a
Protestant chapel on Friday night and a Roman Catholic mass on Saturday. This
day is full of ministry opportunity simply because of the pressure it contains
and the significance of each play. Everyone feels the urgency and the pressure
to succeed, including the chaplain.
·
Many programs will hold a team banquet where
they will wrap up the season, give team awards, and say goodbye to the senior
players. This affords one opportunities to serve at the banquet, to say goodbye
to senior players, and otherwise to wrap up the season.
Late November
through December –
·
This begins the post-season part of the year.
o
That could mean a bowl game. If Division I FBS
teams win six games they are bowl eligible and could be chosen for a bowl game.
If so, that means more practices and that’s what the coaches value. It means
another game, that’s what the players value. It could mean a warm weather
destination, that’s what the fans value. It usually means a good amount of
cash, that’s what the school administrators value.
o
If in Division I FCS, Division II, Division
III, or NAIA the post-season could mean a playoff bid. These divisions play a
tournament to determine a national champion. This simply extends the
opportunities for the chaplain by 1, 2, 3, or even 4 weeks.
·
This is also often the most painful part of the
year as coaches are fired, leave of their own volition for other opportunities,
and uproot their families for their next coaching spot. Relationships are
broken, feelings are bruised, loyalty is challenged, and many other relational
issues bring opportunity to our door. We must be possessed of tremendous
emotional intelligence to navigate these stormy waters wisely and well.
·
These months also intensify the recruiting
process as coaches will be on the road making home visits, scheduling campus
visits, and otherwise connecting with players for their programs’ future.
Thankfully, NCAA rules require that they stop recruiting for some holiday time with
family, otherwise some would surely be making calls to players on Christmas
morning.
There it is, a thumbnail sketch of a college
football calendar with some notes for ministry opportunities. Please take time
to study your program’s schedule, feel its pulse, smell its culture, live in
its rhythm. Your heart will awaken you to the opportunities to serve as you
hear the Savior whisper in your ear, “This is the way, walk in it.”
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