![]() It was an idyllic setting for boys who loved sports. I grew up spending my summers at two-a-days with my little brother and Biff’s 3 boys. Biff and my dad developed a high school football program called ‘Building Men for Others’ when I was in elementary school. I will start with Biff Poggi (currently Assistant Head Football Coach at University of Michigan) and my dad. Yes, I did also play for a few transactional coaches along the way but my dad, Joe Ehrmann, always helped me through those challenging experiences. Transformational coaches taught me that you can win with humility and lose with honor. The transformational coaches I had the privilege to play for demonstrated the power and possibility of coaching to change the arc of my life and my teammates lives. Overall, I had amazing experiences in youth, high school, college, and professional sports. I meet these needs by providing a secure coach-player relationship, in a culture of belonging, for my students’ human growth and development. I coach because I love sports, I love competition, and most of all I LOVE meeting the social-emotional and developmental needs of my student-athletes. “I coach to develop secure relations where every student-athlete is seen, safe, and supported.” Barney Ehrmann’s Transformational Coaching Purpose. Barney Ehrmann Interview answering the four questions of InSideOut Coaching ![]() Here is some insight into why he coaches. ![]() Today, Barney coaches Varsity Lacrosse at Lucy Beckham Highschool in South Carolina. He was a 2012 graduate of Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business with a major in Management, where he was a Team Captain and three-time All American. If he goes someplace else or doesn’t want me to stay, then I’d look at other opportunities.Barney Ehrmann is the InSideOut Initiative’s Movement Leader and Trainer, and is responsible to provide strategic leadership and oversight necessary to fulfill the Initiative’s mission, growth, and sustainability. “I’ll be there, I hope, as long as Jim is there and wants me to stay there. “I’m going to Michigan with the idea that I’m going to be there until I finish coaching,” Poggi said. The 61 year old Poggi noted that he had serious discussions to be the head coach at another college program, and although he envisions being at Michigan for the long haul, he’d revisit his options if something were to change at Michigan. “But this is the last chance my wife and I will have to be with her.” Frances it was a highly competitive national program that we built from nothing,” Poggi said. This time around Poggi’s daughter is starting school at Michigan this fall, another factor that drew him to Michigan. When Poggi was with the program in ‘16, his son, Henry, was a fullback at Michigan. Frances to meet NCAA requirements for the new job at Michigan, and he’s agreed not to recruit any St. Poggi told the Baltimore Sun that he’s cutting all ties with St. Frances Academy in Baltimore - a high school that has produced two current Michigan players in running back Blake Corum and linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green. Poggi comes to Michigan after doing exceptionally well as head coach at St. “This was a chance to go one last time on a really big stage, to a legendary program.” Biff Poggi was an associate head coach and special advisor for the Michigan Football program back in 2016, and now he’s back in Ann Arbor.Īccording to the Baltimore Sun, Poggi is returning to Michigan’s staff as an associate head coach, helping head coach Jim Harbaugh “mentor younger assistants and working hands-on with the team’s offensive linemen.”
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