they know how to manage people and motivate them, as long as the people they work with have the skill and desire then they are a winning combination.
My friend told me that Wayne Gretzky was a bad hockey coach because his eye and mind for the game were so sharp, that he couldn't teach his ability to other pro hockey players. I don't know if that is true, but I do recall hearing elsewhere that he was not great as a hockey coach.
Funny about the bodybuilding world - it seems like the "formula" for success is to start coaching some good clients who are already on the way up, and then, once they turn pro, you get "credit" for having coached someone who turned pro, even though that person was likely going to turn pro anyway.
I know that George Farah was coaching Jeff Long when he turned pro around a decade ago, and he started working with him when he was already competing in pro qualifiers. Next thing you know, Jeff Long [or another top amateur] turns pro, and then Farah gets a reputation as being a Pro Maker. In fact, wasn't Hany Rambod's nickname "The Pro Maker"?
So basically, you "coach" a handful of guys who are already coming up, and you offer them a good deal initially, and then by the time they turn pro, you get credit for having helped a handful of guys getting their pro cards, when that was just inevitable anyway.
Then other amateurs and bodybuilding enthusiasts see you as being a guru of sorts, and then more come to you, and you build up a clientele by rinsing/repeating the above formula of working with guys on the verge of acquiring pro status anyway, and it becomes sort of self-fulfilling, eventually with a big enough lineup of guys that you helped to advertise for you.
Am I missing something here?
Also, what is the education required to be a "diet guru"? Do either Hany Rambod or George Farah have a specific education in nutrition or "bodybuilding science"?
Remember that Tom Platz posted online that he was a "Professor of Bodybuilding Sciences".

I love bodybuilding...but what an odd industry at times.
