The Drive Coach and the Technician
The two roles that aren't at the controls: the coach who runs strategy and the technician who keeps the robot connected and ready.
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The drive coach: the brain of the field
The Game Manual describes the drive coach as a guide or advisor for the drive team, and it is the one role allowed to be filled by a non-student (often a mentor, though many teams use a senior student). The coach is the strategist and communicator, and the golden rule is: the coach decides, the driver executes. Note that the drive coach may not operate the robot.
Per FIRST's Best Practices for Drive Coaches, the coach's responsibilities span the whole match cycle:
- Before the match: attend the alliance strategy meeting, agree on each robot's job in auto/teleop/endgame, and plan field routes to avoid congestion with partners.
- During the match: watch the field, not just your own robot. The coach tracks opponents, partner positions, the score, and the clock, then issues concise callouts to the driver and operator.
- After the match: debrief — what worked, what didn't, and what to communicate differently next time.
The coach also protects the driver's focus: minimizing distraction, avoiding contradictory instructions, and keeping confidence up during a rough match. A panicked, chatty coach makes a driver worse; a calm, clear coach makes a driver better. FIRST's guide emphasizes positive interactions with your own students, other teams, and volunteers.
The technician: keeping the robot alive
The technician is the drive team's technical lifeline — the manual defines the role as a resource for ROBOT troubleshooting, setup, and removal. The technician is not in the alliance station during play; they work in the event-designated technician area near the field and handle the robot before and after the match.
A good technician deeply understands the chain that connects the human to the robot:
- The operator console / driver station laptop and its USB devices.
- The robot's control electronics: the NI roboRIO (or roboRIO 2.0), the Vivid-Hosting VH-109 radio, the power distribution module (REV PDH or CTRE PDP/PDP 2.0), and the battery.
- How to read the Driver Station's connection indicators and diagnose a no-comms situation fast — because a robot that won't connect at the start of a match can lose it before it begins.
Because the technician is often the most technically fluent person on the drive team, they frequently bridge to the pit crew, carrying knowledge of what broke and what needs fixing.
How the two roles complement each other
The coach owns strategy and communication; the technician owns the robot's readiness and connectivity. Together they let the driver, operator, and human player do their jobs without worrying about anything outside their lane. On strong teams, the coach and technician are chosen as carefully as the driver — they are not afterthoughts.
Key takeaways
- The drive coach is the strategist; they decide, the driver executes, and the coach may not operate the robot.
- The coach is the only role that may be a non-student and should watch the whole field, not just their robot.
- The technician handles setup, connectivity, troubleshooting, and teardown from a designated area near the field.
- A great technician understands the full chain: console, roboRIO, VH-109 radio, power distribution, and battery.
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
1.What is the drive coach's primary responsibility during competition?
2.Which task is the technician responsible for?
3.During a match, may the drive coach operate the robot's controls?
Answer every question to submit.