{"id":51991,"date":"2013-05-24T08:00:12","date_gmt":"2013-05-24T13:00:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=51991"},"modified":"2013-05-23T22:39:51","modified_gmt":"2013-05-24T03:39:51","slug":"with-lessons-from-york-cavanaugh-sets-off-on-his-own-head-coaching-path","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2013\/05\/24\/with-lessons-from-york-cavanaugh-sets-off-on-his-own-head-coaching-path\/","title":{"rendered":"With lessons from York, Cavanaugh sets off on his own head coaching path"},"content":{"rendered":"
The year was 1992 and email blasts were still a thing of the future.<\/p>\n
To get your resume in front of the eyes that matter, one actually had to stuff a bunch of envelopes and lick a lot of stamps.<\/p>\n
And Mike Cavanaugh licked plenty of them.<\/p>\n
Bitten hard by the coaching bug after winding up his playing days at Bowdoin, Cavanaugh mailed out a hand-addressed offer for his services to dozens of Division I coaches.<\/p>\n
“I said, ‘I’d like for you to consider me as a graduate assistant,'” Cavanaugh said.<\/p>\n
And then he waited for the responses to come rolling in.<\/p>\n
Only two of them did, but one — from Bowling Green’s Jerry York — was the one that changed his life and set him on a coaching track that has now led him to Connecticut.<\/p>\n