No comprendo. Nowhere did I say the head coach didn't need wrestling knowledge and experience. It could work, but it's always best to have someone knowledgeable about what they're managing. A good head coach will know how to manage the process of developing wrestlers. A good staff will allow him to assign responsibilities to assistants, measure progress, and make necessary adjustments. His attention should be more toward that process than teaching the kids on the mat, but it does not preclude him from instructing. A coach with name recognition and accomplishments, like Hahn or Boroughs, would hopefully know how to develop his wrestlers and accomplish it through his assistants. With the right person at the top, Ashnault, Labs, and one more highly skilled assistant will be an enormous improvement. That's what I'd like to see at Rutgers.In this analogy. Imagine if the trainer had no experience at that actual job. It’s hard to train someone to do something you have never done. To say to a wrestler, the night before your national championship match this is how you should eat, sleep and train, resonates more coming from someone who has actually done it.