HOW AL WASHINGTON CUT HIS RECRUITING TEETH AND LEARNED HOW TO BUILD RELATIONSHIPS AT THE FCS, DIVISION II, DIVISION III LEVELS
Al Washington is just a few days away from helping lead one of college football's colossal brands into a battle on the sport's brightest stage.
It's late December of 2019, and even as he sits in an Arizona ballroom on media day, fresh off answering a bombardment of questions on how to contain Clemson's rushing attack or how to handle Trevor Lawrence in the College Football Playoff, there is no hesitation when asked to recall memories from 2007.
And, really, how could he forget?
Even at one of the lowest levels of the profession, that was the year his coaching career saw its true take-off moments. It was the first major step on a journey that helped bring him all of this – the 100,000-fan atmospheres, opportunities to work with and develop NFL talent and stashing more than $500,000 a year in his bank account.
All of that began with learning the best ways to build relationships and recruit at a small private research school on the east coast.
Washington accepted his first non-graduate assistant college coaching job that year as a defensive line coach at Division III Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in the city of Troy – a smallish town sitting just outside Albany and nestled about halfway between the Massachusetts border and Schenectady in Upstate New York.
He was less than a year removed from his retirement as a defensive tackle, which was highlighted by 48 games played as a three-year starter at Boston College and a brief stint up north playing for Canada’s Saskatchewan Roughriders and Hamilton Tiger-Cats.
It’s not like it was a career destined for Canton. But still, here he was, at a level much lower than what he was used to, grinding as part-defensive line coach, part-admissions counselor and part-tour guide for RPI – a job he credits his stepmom for attaining since she sent RPI his résumé, unbeknownst to him, while he was on the precipice of leaving the world of coaching football behind.
At RPI, his duties included heading up information sessions with prospective students, taking families all over the university to show them the campus digs, doing laundry for the players and film exchange with opposing coaches in the Liberty League.
“I did it all, man,” Washington tells
Eleven Warriors, a grateful and telling open-mouthed smile forming as he leans back and reaches behind himself to grab those memories from the back of his head. “I was responsible back then – and this was only 12 years ago – to exchange film with the opponent. You would have to go travel and meet halfway with the other coach. So you drive two hours to meet at a rest stop, exchange the DVDs – back when DVDs were big – and then drive back.
“And it’s all on faith. ‘Cause I’m not gonna watch the tape until I get back to the school. I get back, and half of it doesn’t work. And then you have to set up another time to go back and get the rest of it. It was just a pain in the tail, but it was all those moments – the 24-hour nights – all those moments, man, they were kind of a headache in the moment, but now you just look back and laugh and enjoy those times. … (We did) anything that was needed. That’s the beauty of that level. I was a coach, but I had to do all the other pieces. I had to video exchange, cut film up, we all did that. Everybody did that. That’s just the way it was. It definitely shapes you. It makes you appreciate it.”
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“Every stop I’ve had, they’ve helped cut my teeth,” he said. “I wouldn’t say I made it. But you definitely look back at your experiences, man, and you appreciate where you are. They motivate you.”
Entire article:
https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio...iii-division-ii-and-fcs-levels-as-a-recruiter
Just sayin': Working at the Division III, Division II, and FCS levels is called "paying your dues". It's like that in most occupations, you have to work your way from the bottom up.
However, I guess there are exceptions like, if your father is the head coach at scUM and/or your uncle is the head coach of the Baltimore Ravens; and you are good with crayons, etc......