Photo Credit: Indy Eleven |
Imagine that every single person of those 24 to 25 coworkers rely on you to schedule their meals, accommodations, and travel arrangements.
Now imagine that in that first business trip, nearly everything that you had planned for all those individuals goes sideways right before their big presentation.
That is exactly the life that Indy Eleven Manager of Team Administration, Shelby Gilmore, has been doing for six seasons (including this upcoming one). So I thought it would be good to pull back the curtain on a member of the Indy Eleven organization to allow Indy fans, and maybe other soccer fans, a chance to get a glimpse of what goes on behind the scenes of a lower division professional soccer team.
Shelby didn't find soccer when she was a kid. Like most kids who grow up in Indiana (specifically the west side of Indianapolis), Shelby played a lot of basketball, and like most kids in Indiana that play a lot of [insert sport here], Shelby didn't expect to be working in a sports-related profession. When Shelby headed off to college at IUPUI, she had intentions of getting a degree in Elementary Education. A profession that she quickly realized was not what she wanted to do. However, while lifeguarding at her local pool, she began talking to her manager who was in the Sports Management program at IUPUI, which peaked Shelby's interest. Despite having played sports her entire life, it had just never registered for her that there was a way to have a career in sports without being an athlete. With a newfound direction in life, Shelby majored in Sports Management in 2018 with a minor in Business from the Kelley School of Business.
[sidenote from Shelby on her time as a lifeguard: "I was a lifeguard through college and got the opportunity to work some high profile events and guard for Olympians. I even got to see Katie Ledecky break a world record in person which was really cool."]
A degree in hand, Shelby first worked with our hockey-playing counterparts, landing an internship with the Indy Fuel in their Operations department. The one-semester internship turned into a full year gig though as she finished the season with the team.
"I found I really enjoyed Operations and the skills I got to use, and they gave me a ton of great opportunities that pushed me and challenged me."
While interning at the Fuel, Shelby was introduced to then Indy Eleven Game Operations Coordinator James Fields, who mentioned that Indy Eleven was looking for a Game Operations intern for the 2019 season. Shelby applied, interviewed with Andy Piggush and James, and landed a season-long internship with the team.
"I worked hard during that season and was, again, given some opportunities to lead and challenge myself again. I don’t think I am tooting my own horn when I say I impressed Piggush and got very fortunate with some timing."
As the 2019 was coming to a close, the previous Team Administrator was leaving the club, opening the position for somebody else to grab. Another round of interviews, with an intimidating interview with all the coaches that included a question about The Office from goalkeeper coach Andy Swift (a question that she bombed), and a solid recommendation from Andy Piggush, and Indy Eleven had found their next Team Administrator.
Before we get more in detail about Shelby and her job with Indy Eleven, let's circle back to that first business trip in March 2020 to Memphis (a come from behind, 4-2 win for the Boys in Blue against a Tim Howard in goal 901 FC squad) as Shelby navigated her first road trip in her new position:
So the first [memory] that stands out is quite literally the first ever regular season match that I worked for, or worked with, for Indy Eleven. That was Memphis in 2020. Memphis is always a bus trip for us, just based off of the league protocols that we have to follow. Same with Pittsburgh. Getting down to Memphis was completely fine. No issue at all there.
However, match day comes around and it started off in the morning with Coach Rennie coming out and asking our equipment manager at the time where his runners were. I think he was going to use the hotel gym to go for a quick workout or whatever. Equipment manager goes to grab his runners out of the coaching bag only to realize that the bag got left in Indianapolis.
So, obviously with it being a 7-hour trip and we just found out that information at like 11:00 AM, it wasn't really going to work out that we were going to get all the stuff that we needed in time for kickoff. Because of that, the equipment manager and myself went out around Memphis and we kind of bought everything that we needed for the coaches when it comes to their boots, their gear, whatnot. Specifically for that trip too, our one assistant coach, Juan Guerra was leaving from Memphis to go to Tampa for a coaching course so we had to go out and buy all of the toiletries that he needed, because that was all still in Indianapolis as well.
While we are running around Memphis trying to find all this stuff for the coaches, I get a call from the hotel and they tell me that they cannot do our pre-match meal, which throughout the entire weekend (breakfasts, dinners, everything), the pre-match meal is the most important meal that we have during the weekend. And with me being brand new, I didn't have everything memorized or know that this was super important, so I called our assistant coaches that were on the trip at that time, Juan and Swifty [Goalkeeper Coach Andy Swift] and was like, "the hotel said they can't do the pre-game meal." Only with their reaction did I realize how bad the situation was. So Juan and Swifty kind of helped me figure out we can go to this restaurant and get the things that we need, so we were able to kind of work that out.
But overall I just have a distinct memory of being in an Uber in Memphis, driving around and being like if this is how every game is, I don't think I'm going to be able to make it. This is insane. This is everything that I'm dealing with on the very first trip and very first regular season game that I've ever worked.
Preseason may be crazy, but Shelby describes the offseason as magical. "Offseason is the best and most magical part of my year. The first two weeks are us coordinating with players who are moving on to new teams or getting [returning] Indy Eleven players back home [for the offseason break]. We do full cleanouts of the apartments, including moving furniture. Normally, once we get to Thanksgiving, things start to die down. Things then pick back up at the start of the year as we prep for preseason."
Game Beckons: Obviously, there's a lot that goes into your job to keep you busy (not counting your magical offseason), but how do you spend your time when you're not ushering around soccer players and coaches? Rumor is that you're a big Taylor Swift fan.
Shelby: Outside of work I enjoy watching reality tv competitions (Survivor being my favorite, which I hope to be on one day). I really like watching "popular" TV shows/movies too and keeping up with the discourse around said shows/movies. I also really enjoy reading, but I find the best time to fit that in is actually when we are flying. Nothing like a good book to distract you from the fact that you’re thousands of feet in the air in a metal tube (can you tell I don’t like flying?). I have a cat named Chelsea (no, not after the team) who I love with all my heart. I am a HUGE Taylor Swift fan. Got to see her twice during the Eras Tour and have seen her 5 times total (just to prove I’m not a bandwagon fan). I also love listening to Megan Thee Stallion and have recently got into Doechii, but overall I would classify myself as a basic pop girlie when it comes to my music preferences.
Shelby: One of the things I like most about my job is that not every day is the same. Sure, I have "norms" and processes, but my weekly schedule is normally dictated by what our match and/or travel schedule looks like.
Shelby: I always say that home and away games are two different beasts.
Game Beckons: Let's start with the home games at Carroll Stadium.
Shelby: As for home matches, it’s much much easier leading up to match day [than away days], but are significantly longer day of. Before match day, I do my Sam’s Club run to get our match day needs. I then have to drop off cases of water and Gatorade to the hotel where the opposing team is staying and drop the rest of those cases off at Carroll.
Shelby: 2024 was the first year I traveled to every single game with the team, but I have traveled with the team plenty before that and was even our acting Kitman on the road for the latter half of the 2023 season.
Shelby and Josh Frankham Photo Credit: Indy Eleven |
El Paso, specifically, has never given us a ton of luck, which just makes me super excited to travel there this year [more sarcasm...]. Weirdly enough, though, El Paso, once you get into the city, it's one of the best cities that we travel to, in my personal opinion. But unfortunately the air travel there and back has never been super lucky for us. In 2021, this is my first ever flight that I was taking with the team and also, kind of the first flight that I had ever done personally, within like 10 years. I didn't fly much growing up, so this first flight, I'm checking the flight number just to make sure that everything is scheduled and on time right before I'm leaving Grand Park to head towards the airport, and when I look up our flight it says that it's canceled, and I was like, well that's weird. Why? Why does it say that? So I check again. I check like three other websites. They all say cancelled, but I haven't heard anything from our air travel agent. I shoot her over a text and I'm like, "hey, is this correct? What's going on?" And she calls me and says "yeah, it looks like it's canceled, we're going to have to figure out something." And so, we spent the next probably 2 hours figuring out what flights we could get on and, ultimately, we got in at 11:00 p.m. El Paso time, which was 1:00 a.m. Indy time, which made for a very long match day. The next day we got back fine, that trip.But then in 2023, everything getting there was completely fine. But when we were on our way back is when we got stuck in the airport for 12 hours. We got everybody checked in and, unfortunately, with flying commercial we have to arrive on time no matter what. We pretty much knew before the team even showed up that we were delayed a little bit, but at that point it was kind of too late to make the logistical changes that we needed to make. So we get everyone to the airport, we get through security and whatnot, and the flight just continues to keep getting delayed and delayed and delayed. It's about every hour that they're pushing it back another hour because of the mechanical issue they were dealing with at DFW. We had been there for long enough that we had to get everybody vouchers, but because they couldn't send vouchers out to everybody individually because it was a group, under one name to an extent. So all the vouchers got sent to me, then I had to divvy them up between everybody. It was a whole thing there. Also, I don't know if you've ever been to El Paso [editor: I have actually.], El Paso has like 4 gates, no [electrical] outlets anywhere, and they have about 3 different options in terms of the food you can eat at the airport. So not a super ideal situation for us to get stuck there for, again, 12 hours.
Finally, we see that the flight is taking off from Dallas to El Paso. In the meantime of all of that, we've missed our connector at this point. I'm now working with the El Paso kind of head person with American. And so we get confirmation that DFW is going to hold a flight for us, so we already knew basically that once we got on this plane in El Paso, when we landed in DFW, it was going to be getting off the plane, sprinting to the next gate, and then they would be holding the flight for us, which was huge. Oftentimes we aren't able to kind of confirm that. So knowing that helped kind of ease a lot of stress. So then we see that the flight is finally taken off from Dallas. It's on its way to El Paso.
And I'm not joking when I say it felt like the cruelest joke that's ever been played on us as a team.
The plane is literally coming off the runway and heading towards our gate and like staring us straight in the face and all of a sudden I see the lady that's been working at the desk all day start talking to other people and I'm hearing her yell "oh, you need to run to this gate, run, run, run!" So then I'm like that's not good. Anytime someone that works at the airport is telling you to run, it's never a great sign. So I go up to the desk and I'm like, "hey, what's going on?" And she looks at me and she says, "we're going to have to cancel this flight." I looked at her and I was like "you've got to be joking me, right?" She's like, "no, and there's no other planes out of here today that's going to be able to fit all 23 of you on any airline. I'm like "right! super! Can you explain to me why that's the case?" And that's when she goes on to tell me that the crew that got on the flight in Dallas was unable to do the return flight because they were going to hit their FAA regulated number of hours that they're allowed to work in the day. It's one of the few times that I cried in the airport because I just genuinely could not believe that American Airlines kept us in the El Paso Airport for at least 12 hours, just for them to cancel the flight as soon as it's literally right in front of us. So then Josh Frankham and myself stay back at the airport. The hotel staff in El Paso was absolutely amazing. They sent kind of like party bus-type style vehicles to pick up the team and the bags so we didn't have to worry about getting Ubers. They were able to get us accommodated with rooms for an additional night, and then we also got very lucky that we were able to book a bus for the next morning because we had to leave the hotel at, I believe 3:30 in the morning the next morning to get on a flight at 5:00 a.m. to take us to, I think it was Phoenix, and then we got back to Indy that way.
So that's El Paso for you. Beautiful city. Just try to drive there if you need to.
So this one was us getting back to Indy from Charleston after the playoff game in 2023. Obviously, not the most ideal situation, nor an ideal result. A 5-0 loss never makes the next travel day any sort of fun. Everything's looking good, we get to the Charleston airport. Charleston Airport is really nice, a bit cramped at the ticketing area, but, ultimately, we get everyone through security. We're all waiting at the gate, then we board our flight. We're sitting there waiting, and then we get to the takeoff. I think that we were delayed maybe 20 minutes from pushing back from the gate and getting onto the runway, because I knew that we had a tight connection, and I can remember telling myself that as we're rolling out to the runway, "OK, as long as everything goes good, we have plenty of time. We'll be pushing it, but we'll get to the gate, no problem at all." And so we start, we get to the runway, pilot goes pedal to the metal to get us up to full speed and we're at maybe full speed for about 3-4 seconds, and then slams on the brakes.
He comes over the PA, and he's like, "I just need everyone to stay in their seat. We're going back to the gate. As soon as I can provide you an update, I'll do it." As I mentioned before, I don't like flying. In that moment, I was like, "cool, we're dying. We're dying on the Charleston runway after a 5-0 loss. This is going to be just a great way to go." But we start making our way back towards the gate and the pilot comes over and he's like, "hey, everyone, one of our engines is not putting out enough power. This plane is not going to be going anywhere, so I would recommend that as soon as you get off the plane, head to the desk and we will start kind of rebooking you on new flights."
I don't know how it always manages to happen this way, but when we get booked on our air travel, we almost always get thrown to the back of the plane. I don't really know why? That's just kind of always the situation that happens. So I already knew right then and there, well we're screwed because we're towards the back of the plane and all the flights that we could get players and staff out on earlier are probably going to get booked with everybody else that's on our flight. At that time, I can't remember which coach, but one of our coaches was kind of up towards the front, so I sent them a message and was just like, "hey, as soon as you get off the plane, get in line, I'll join you as soon as can. They message back saying "there are some flights open." "I know, but we need to see what the airlines are willing to do for us at this point."
At some point between then and me getting off the plane, I'm not sure what kind of communication was or was not had, but by the time I made my way to the line to join the group, we had a small handful of guys that had already booked themselves on new flights. I think, unfortunately, with the result from the previous day, everybody just wanted to get home. We're essentially in offseason at that point. So the last thing they want to do is wait around, which I completely understand. It just made things a little bit more difficult to deal with as we're moving through the rest of the day. There were also a few guys that were honestly just a little spooked by that situation. I didn't realize it in the moment, but having an engine basically go down as we're getting ready to take off is very scary. So I don't blame them, but some of the guys just wanted to get in a rental car and drive. Because of this, because we had different guys on different airlines, and we had a small handful of guys, as well as two of our coaches, that wanted to drive home. It was a situation where we were just split.
So I'm working with, at this point, the league because we have to notify them of when situations like this happen. They then had to get with the Players Association [PA] because we've never had a situation where guys have wanted to drive themselves home after a match, so we needed to make sure that that wasn't against CBA rules [Collective Bargaining Agreement] or PA guidelines or anything like that. So I'm working with a number of different people while also making sure that guys that are booked on this flight, have it paid for with this card, and what about the bags? What are we going to do with that? Then I had to make sure that our coaches were taken care of with the rental cars that we were booking.
We had everybody get back to Indy that day, but we had three different rental cars. Two were filled with players and assistant coaches. Then that resulted in me and Josh Frankum getting to drive back from Charleston with all of the bags in our rental vehicle filled to the brim to the point where we couldn't see out our rear view mirror.
I think that gives you an idea of the crazy situations that I deal with in terms of travel.
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