I think the intermediaries have made the connections that express UF has chosen Frost and the agent has provided a guage to Frost's interest. All are waiting 'til UCF & their HC have played their very last game.
I know this has been hit upon, but it is very, very important that we get a scientific S & C coach -- God, it's the University of Florida! Get someone (GS) from the kinestheology "dept." and human physiology. Go for scientically adding musle-strength. Go for fortifying against injury, even remedying muscle soreness after games. Clad them all over with Tommy Copper compression sleeves. (Oh did y'all know that those weird "lines" of tape have to be prescribed by a medical proffessional trained by a 3-day course on the how-to and the whys of tape placement?) Comes with a textbook.
The greatest pure science book on maximizing strength-gains is entitled "The Power Factor". The science is simple i.e. you don't need electronic guaging, just written "journals" recording weight totals, # of lifts, length of rest-periods, etc. I read it long ago & have forgotten too much. It does show several techniques that today's strength trainers are doing wrong, even preventing strength increases. The Power Factor was published around 1945! That's good because its results came before the discovery of testosterone, the first steroid isolated. So no gains are due to unnatural boosters.
I remember they emphasized that the greatest contributor to muscle strength gains is "the rest-period". And every person has their own unique "rest-period". You see, you stress your biceps muscle in the lifting. Your muscles should be sore afterward. You have caused microtears in your muscle fibers that need to rest & heal. Your miraculous biofeedback system says : "Hell, if he's gonna put that new heavier stress on these biceps, then I'm gonna build back these torn fibers even stronger so that weight can be lifted smoothly without tearing & sore pain".
This is from sketchy memory. Bench press ... doing full bench presses is counter productive. Starting with the bar on your chest puts your arm muscles at too much mechanical disadvantage (bone lever angles) because the arm muscles are not suppose to work from there. It is a weakest position. So a lifter has to cut down the weight to satisfy this weakness. From the chest, the lifter has to work out with 225 lbs; but if the spotter hands him the bar at a partially higher start position, he can stress his muscle fibers with 245 lbs. If you work out and would like surer strength-gains, order the book from Amazon.
But surely no high-salaried S &C coach should be without this book.