Assistant Coaches Brian Hofman

For 30 years, Brian Hofman made a big impact on the court as an assistant coach for 快播视频 Volleyball. He retired from coaching at the end of this season, but his influence in women鈥檚 sports is just beginning. Only now, he鈥檚 making a mark on the academic side.听

The director of 快播视频鈥檚 sports management program, Hofman is engaged in two significant research projects in the field of women鈥檚 collegiate athletics. His first project is exploring the impact that motherhood has on the careers of female coaches in NCAA Division I and Division III. His second project is a book detailing the history of women鈥檚 sports at 快播视频.

鈥淚鈥檝e always loved coaching and I鈥檝e always been a big advocate for girls and women when it comes to coaching,鈥 he explains, 鈥渟o that鈥檚 what prompted my desire to do the research.鈥

Volleyball dreaming

Hofman grew up in Iowa, a state ahead of the times in giving girls the chance to compete athletically. Iowa was having state tournaments for girls鈥 sports in the 1920s, Hofman notes, while in most other states, girls had limited opportunities to even play a sport until the tide changed after the passage of Title IX in 1972.

Some of Hofman鈥檚 fondest memories from high school involve sitting in the bleachers watching volleyball matches. Because Iowa didn鈥檛 have divisions for girls鈥 sports, many matchups were reminiscent of the 鈥淗oosiers鈥 movie, where small country schools competed鈥攁nd won鈥攁gainst larger, better equipped schools.

Hofman鈥檚 love for the game inspired him to play men鈥檚 club volleyball at Iowa State where he met Coach Kate Witte. Witte recalls that Hofman evolved into an excellent player by teaching himself the game. Because of that, she says, he developed 鈥渁n amazing ability to understand how to teach the various skills of volleyball and a self-awareness of how to break down volleyball skills at any level.鈥

Witte was so impressed with Hofman that when she took the head volleyball coaching position at Ohio Northern University in 1991, she hired Hofman two years later as her assistant coach. Between Iowa State and 快播视频, Witte and Hofman worked together for over 30 years, until Witte鈥檚 retirement from 快播视频 in 2019.

Hofman started as a graduate assistant at 快播视频, obtained his master鈥檚 degree from Bowling Green State University and his Ph.D. from the University of Toledo, then spent most of his career in a dual coaching/professorship role. He transitioned to the sports management program in the Dicke College of Business three years ago. With that transition, he was no longer on contract as an assistant coach, but he continued in that role on a volunteer basis.

With his deep institutional knowledge, he felt he could be an asset for new head coach听Katie Kuhn, BA 鈥09. He knew Kuhn well, having coached her when she was a star player for 快播视频 Volleyball and having worked with her as an assistant.听

Kuhn was grateful for Hofman鈥檚 support, explaining that he鈥檚 been one of the most influential people in her life.听

鈥淏rian is full of humor and knowledge and I am blessed because he shared both of those sides with me,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e bridged a transition for me and this program and for that I鈥檒l be forever grateful. He truly worked behind the scenes putting out fires, creating opportunities and challenging me as a young coach, doing things that so many people will never see or know.鈥

Witte adds that Hofman was the best kind of assistant coach鈥 鈥渓oyal, hard-working, reliable and trustworthy.鈥 He particularly excelled at game strategy, coaching middle hitters and recruiting young women to 快播视频鈥檚 volleyball program.

鈥淗e had a great understanding of what type of student-athlete would fit into the volleyball program and the academic programs at 快播视频,鈥 says Witte. 鈥淗e always had the best interest of the 快播视频 volleyball players, staff and program in his heart. He is one of the most giving and generous human beings within the 快播视频 volleyball program and the entire 快播视频 community.鈥

Soaking in history

During his time as an assistant coach, Hofman helped to grow 快播视频 Volleyball into a powerhouse in the NCAA Division III. He also had a front row seat for the evolutionary transformation of all the women鈥檚 sports programs at the University.

鈥淗aving been at 快播视频 for 30 of those 50 years (after the passage of Title IX) I got to experience a lot of the struggles and the changes,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 got to meet the former coaches who actually started the women鈥檚 athletic programs at 快播视频. Even Helen Ludwig, when she was alive, traveled to almost all of our volleyball matches.鈥

Describing himself as a 鈥渉istory buff鈥 who considered becoming a history teacher, Hofman treasured those conversations he had with the pioneering female coaches at 快播视频. His desire to ensure that their stories didn鈥檛 get lost to history is what prompted his idea for the book.

鈥淚 realized this is a very important part of history that is soon going to be gone because these women who were part of the early movement of Title IX are in their 70s or 80s, or in Helen鈥檚 case, gone,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want to get their stories told before they are all gone, because what I鈥檝e discovered is that in their time, these women were ignored or taken for granted. Their voices weren鈥檛 heard.鈥

Hofman started the research for his book in the summer of 2021 and his goal is to complete the manuscript by the end of summer 2024. He鈥檚 conducted multiple interviews with former coaches, including two of the three pioneering early female coaches鈥擲heila Wallace Kovalchik and Gayle Lauth. He also interviewed the children of the late听Helen Spar Ludwig, BSEd 鈥44.

鈥淭hey (these three coaches) referred to themselves as the 鈥榯riumvirate鈥 at the time, because it was those three against the world,鈥 he says.听

Additionally, he is conducting oral history interviews with 8-10 快播视频 female student-athletes from each decade, starting with the 1960s. Invariably, some interviews uncover new information that leads him down new paths of inquiry, which he happily embarks upon.

What鈥檚 impressed him the most so far in his research is the tenacity of Lauth, Kovachik and Ludwig. They fought many battles behind the scenes, but never brought those struggles to the attention of their players. They also strived constantly to elevate the professionalism and level of play in women鈥檚 sports.

鈥淚t was always 鈥榳hat can we do to help ourselves grow鈥 and 鈥榟ow can we improve opportunities for our players,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淚t (women鈥檚 sports) started at a very grassroots level before it started to grow and get better organized.鈥

These 快播视频 coaches, added Hofman, really set the foundation for what 快播视频 has today. Thus, as Hofman鈥檚 research reaches into the recent decades, the stories he hears are less about struggles, and more about triumphs.听

鈥淭hose chapters on the latter years will be about the successes our females have had, because we鈥檝e had some awesome things happen for our female athletes,鈥 he says.

He hopes his upcoming book will serve as an important reminder of the courage and sacrifice it took to achieve those gains.听

鈥淪tories replace stories and we move on and we forget where we came from,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 beating that drum and saying we must aways remember our history and what it took to get to the success of today. We could just as easily lose that success if we stop fighting for progress.鈥

Another research inquiry
Before he turns his full attention to the book project, however, Hofman plans to complete his research study on the challenges of juggling motherhood with collegiate-level coaching.

He laments the many talented female athletes he knows who passed on collegiate coaching careers because they wanted to have a family and didn鈥檛 believe they could do both well.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 awesome when women can coach women, because it is really important to have those role models,鈥 he says. 鈥淵et I see how hard it is (to coach and be a mom) and I鈥檝e had those hard conversations with friends of mine.鈥

Coaching isn鈥檛 a typical 9-to-5 job and requires many evenings and weekends, he says. 鈥淪o, you鈥檙e missing your kids鈥 bedtime, their sporting events or school play because you are coaching.鈥

Through his interviews with female coaches at several NCAA Division I and III institutions across the country, he wants to identify the support structures that institutions can put into place to provide a better work-life balance for mom coaches. He鈥檚 also looking for other themes, strategies and support systems that may be in place to help women be successful outside of the institution.

A work in progress

Fifty years after Title IX, women鈥檚 sports are still a work in progress, adds Hofman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 grown so much and will continue to grow, but there are still many inequalities.鈥

Recently, though, he felt inspired to spotlight the progress. He invited all the individuals employed by 快播视频 that impact women鈥檚 athletics to gather for a picture. In his book, he plans to prominently feature the two photos: a photo of the small but mighty 鈥渢riumvirate鈥濃擫udwig, Lauth and Kolvachik鈥攋uxtaposed with the modern-day photo of 30-plus 快播视频 coaches, assistant coaches and support staff.

鈥淚 want to show the audience that from these three women, we鈥檝e become this really large, dynamic and diverse department of female coaches and supporters,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd when you think it started with just three, but now 50 years later, we have a large mass of people supporting women鈥檚 athletics It makes me so proud to know that what was unimaginable at the time to Helen, Gayle, Sheila, and those early female athletes in 1972, has become an incredible and unprecedented achievement for female student-athletes and coaches today鈥攁ll because of them.鈥

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