Lawyers, and Coaches Seeking Clubs, and Clubs Seeking Coaches, Oh My!!!
A long time ago, before the explosion of full-time clubs in the U.S., when I was a webmaster for USA Table Tennis, I put together a page for Coaches Seeking Clubs and Clubs Seeking Coaches. At the time there were only a few full-time clubs – less than ten – and there just wasn't much demand for this in either direction. And so it wasn't very active.
But things have changed. Over and over we're finding new full-time clubs looking for full-time coaches to help their club, since most successful full-time clubs are oriented around the coaches, who are the ones who bring in new players to fill up the club. (That's the model that led to the "explosion" noted above.) Most of these coaches are from China, which has about ten zillion top players looking to become professional coaches. (Being a top player doesn't make one a top coach, but the ranks of top coaches tend to come from them. And most top players become at least decent coaches, and with experience, many become excellent coaches.)
But how do we get these coaches into the U.S. and into the clubs that need them? (Or start up new clubs centered around them, as often happens, but that's a separate issue.) There are all sorts of immigration issues. I'm only tangentially knowledgeable about these issues. At the request of lawyers, I've written a number of letters of recommendation for coaches, mostly for my club but for others as well. How these letters are used and the specifics of the immigration process, well, I think most of us know more about intelligent life in Andromeda than this process, which is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. (Sorry Winston.)


Photo by Donna Sakai


