The view a head coach actually needs.
Club directory, per-coach permissions, closed dates, join-request approvals, and moderation queues. Summit gives the person in charge the surface they're in charge of.
Club directory with geography.
Every club on Summit appears in a filtered, geography-aware directory: country, locality, club name, region. Indie players browse it to find a club to send a join request to. Future partnership-search workflows lean on the same directory. Head coaches see their own club's entry exactly as a prospective member would.
Per-coach permissions.
Coaches in a club aren't one homogeneous role. Some are running squads with autonomy. Some are assistant coaches who shouldn't be sending club-wide emails on day one. Summit lets the head coach control announcement permissions and direct-messaging permissions on a per-coach basis — coach by coach, audience by audience.
Club closed dates.
Closed-date ranges set in one place propagate everywhere. Half-term, Christmas, Easter, hall maintenance, a venue cancellation, a weather closure. Every session inside a closed range renders as closed across coach view, player view, parent view, and attendance. No one shows up at an empty venue because the message got lost.
Join-request approvals.
Indie players send join requests to your club from the directory. Head coaches see those requests in a queue, with the player's profile attached, and approve or reject with a single click. Approved players migrate into the club with their full prior data intact — calendar, self-assessments, results, the lot.
Reported messages, in one place.
Reported messages from the Communications Centre land in a club-level moderation queue. The original message snapshot is preserved — even if the sender has since deleted it — and the head coach (or club admin) can take action: dismiss, warn, suspend DM, suspend announcements, suspend all comms. Every action is recorded against the report.