About

Glovework was built out of being unprepared.

I grew up in Denver, Colorado — in a football environment that didn’t always have the same resources, position development, or technical refinement you see in powerhouse states. I loved the game, but I didn’t have access to high-level wide receiver coaching. I didn’t have someone teaching me the true nuances of the position — the details that separate a high school player from a Division 1 athlete.

So I worked.

I fell in love with the work done behind closed doors — the extra hours, the technical repetition, the refinement no one sees. My senior year reflected that work. But when I stepped into a Division 1 wide receiver room at Colorado State, I was exposed.

The detail.

The expectations.

The precision.

The technique.

I realized I didn’t just need to get better — I needed to relearn the position entirely.

Under Coach Alvis Whitted, I saw what real development looked like. I saw what it meant to coach receivers at an NFL standard. The film study, the route mechanics, the releases, the top-of-route discipline, the body positioning — it was a different game.

And I wasn’t ready for it.

That experience humbled me. It frustrated me. It embarrassed me. But it also lit something in me.

I realized there was a gap — a massive gap — between high school football and Division 1 football. And most athletes don’t even know that gap exists until it’s too late.

Glovework was built to close that gap.

We don’t chase flash.

We don’t build Instagram routes.

We don’t train for cones.

We build receivers from the foundation up — stance, release mechanics, route integrity, tempo variation, leverage understanding, spatial awareness, and professional standard detail.

The goal is simple:

When a Glovework athlete walks into a college receiver room, he is not overwhelmed.

He is not embarrassed.

He is not behind.

He is prepared.

This is about building technically sound, disciplined, confident wide receivers who understand the “why” behind every movement. Players who can adapt, think, and execute at a high level.

Because real development isn’t loud.

It’s layered.

It’s detailed.

It’s earned.

Glovework exists so the next generation never feels the way I did walking into that first Division 1 practice.

We build receivers the right way — so they’re ready when their moment comes.