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A business owner, school teacher and an electrician. NRL coaches reveal on The Fan what they would be doing if they weren’t coaching and in the game’s current state it makes for an interesting conversation.

Manly’s Des Hasler was a school teacher during his playing career and would return to that, as would Cronulla’s John Morris – who has a degree in P.E. teaching.

Broncos coach Anthony Seibold also could see himself teaching if he wasn’t leading the way at Red Hill.

Round 20

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“I’d be teaching in some capacity. That’s my vocation, I feel that’s what I’m good at,” Seibold said on The Fan.

“I did a little bit of teaching when I finished footy and I lectured at university so I think I’d either be a lecturer at university – which I really enjoyed, I did that for 14 months – or teaching.”

Storm supercoach Craig Bellamy tried his hand as an electrician but would prefer to be a part of the road crew for a band if he wasn’t guiding the Storm to numerous premierships.

“I did an apprenticeship as an electrician where I came from,” Bellamy said.

“I don’t think that was for me to be quite honest. I was a very poor electrician.

“I’ve got a bit of a love for music.

“I can’t sing and I can’t play an instrument, my dad used to play guitar and he always wanted to teach me, but I always wanted to go over to footy training and kick a ball … perhaps a roadie, a roadie for a band.”

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Gold Coast’s new coach Justin Holbrook has an impressive background in sales and could see himself getting back into that – but says he prefers coaching more.

“When I started coaching I was working in the corporate world for six, seven years with Schweppes soft drinks, a couple of years at Coca Cola and I enjoyed that,” Holbrook said.

“I enjoyed working in the sales side of things but I love coaching more.”

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Warriors coach Stephen Kearney was keen on the idea of becoming a chef when he was younger and Bulldogs’ Dean Pay would love to be a horse trainer, while Parramatta’s Brad Arthur would be a labourer or something more hands on.

Panthers coach Ivan Cleary has a university degree. He says he would have ended up using it if he didn’t get into coaching but now that he has, it’s not something he can see himself going back to.

“I was raised in a conservative family so I was encouraged to go to university, which I did,” Cleary said.

“I got a degree in land economics. My dad was in that kind of field, I’d probably get into that if I wasn’t in coaching.

“But now that I’ve done coaching I wouldn’t do that, I’d probably find my way into some sort of leadership role.”

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And as for back-to-back premiership-winning coach Trent Robinson, he truly has no idea what he would be doing.

“I’m not much for wanting to be somewhere else or thinking about being somewhere else so I don’t know,” Robinson said.

“I didn’t think I was going to be a rugby league coach. I didn’t project much, I just knew if I worked hard at something I’d head towards it.

“I’ve got no idea what I’d be doing if I wasn’t coaching.”