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A clubhouse manager handles the operations of a sports team clubhouse. In this career, your job duties include distributing uniforms to players, ensuring that the clubhouse stays clean, keeping an accurate inventory of team equipment, and supporting the team manager with game day activities.
Before tips, clubhouse attendants make $15,000 to $20,000; batboys just $5,000 to $8,000. But they're offered a variety of secondary markets -- for memorabilia and tickets, for example -- and someone willing to hustle can easily pad his paltry pay.
The clubhouse manager oversees the clubhouse and includes duties such as taking inventory for uniforms and equipments, cleaning and maintaining clubhouses and meeting with bat boys. Clubhouse managers are common in professional baseball.
DESCRIPTION: Under the direction of the Recreation Supervisor, the Clubhouse Attendant is responsible for supervising children, interacting with and attending to the children's needs, greeting members and checking and cleaning equipment for functionality and cleanliness.
Major League Baseball, or MLB, clubhouse attendants see the game up close and get to know the players as regular people who need their help. Attendants field every request under the sun in a valiant attempt to keep players in good mental and physical condition and ready to play.