Press release
From Track Scholarship to Adaptive Gym: Marcel Lucchese, M.S., on Why the Career Nobody Plans Is Often the Most Consequential
How a track and field scholarship, a season-ending injury at Florida State, and sixteen years coaching cross-country shaped a physical educator building two careers simultaneously in Kingston, New York.KINGSTON, New York, Jul 11, 2026, ZEX PR WIRE - In physical education, the most recognized careers tend to follow a familiar line: a student-athlete who coaches, a coach who teaches, a teacher who retires. What receives far less attention is the educator who takes a different path at every turn and arrives, decades later, with a body of work that no single label fully covers. These are careers that accumulate rather than climb, and the people who build them tend to have a clearer sense of what they are doing and why than those who followed the conventional map.
Marcel Lucchese, M.S., is an elementary adaptive physical education teacher with the Kingston City School District in Kingston, New York, a licensed real estate agent in the state of New York, and a former coach who spent sixteen consecutive years leading cross-country, indoor track, and outdoor track programs in the same city where he was born and raised. The career Lucchese has assembled over the past two-plus decades is not the one he planned when he left Kingston on a track and field scholarship for Florida State University. He says that is precisely the point.
"Getting hurt at Florida State before I ran a single race wasn't the story I expected," Lucchese says. "But the degree I walked out with and the way I had to think about what I was doing there on other terms -- that shaped everything that followed."
A Built-from-the-Ground-Up Path
Lucchese was born and raised in Kingston, New York, a mid-sized city in Ulster County in the Hudson Valley. He left for Florida State University in Tallahassee on a track and field scholarship, intending to compete at the collegiate level. An injury ended his athletic career before his first collegiate season. Rather than transfer or leave the program, Lucchese remained at Florida State and completed a bachelor's degree in health education. The redirect, as he now describes it, was not an obstacle to the career that followed. It was the foundation of it.
After finishing at Florida State, Lucchese moved to New York City to pursue a master's degree in physical education and exercise science at Brooklyn College. He was offered a position in Kingston to coach track and cross-country before he had finished the graduate program. That hire, made on the basis of his athletic background and his deep roots in the community, set the direction of the next two decades of work in Kingston, New York.
What followed was sixteen consecutive years coaching cross-country, indoor track, and outdoor track at the high school level. During that span, Lucchese developed a program that earned division championships and sent hundreds of athletes on to college on scholarship. And in 1993, while coaching, he won the Section 9 and OCIAA league championship in cross-country as an individual athlete -- a result that, in a city where people had known him since childhood, carried a weight distinct from anything a team result could produce.
A Philosophy Centered on the Work Before the Result
Lucchese describes his coaching orientation in terms that apply equally to every field he has since entered. Training cycles are long. Decisions made in one season do not resolve until the next. The educator or coach who cannot tolerate that gap between investment and return will not stay in the work long enough to see it compound.
"You design a training block in October and you don't find out if it was right until the following spring," Lucchese says. "That lag between decision and result teaches you to think differently about cause and effect. I still use that."
This orientation -- patient, systematic, attentive to process rather than outcome -- appears consistently across the career Lucchese has built in Kingston, New York. It is present in the coaching record. It is present in the adaptive physical education work he has been doing for the past decade. And it is present in the real estate background he has been developing alongside his teaching responsibilities throughout his time in the Kingston City School District. The career you build from what didn't work is usually more interesting than the one you planned. Lucchese does not offer this as consolation. He offers it as a description of what actually happened.
Bridging Athletic Training and Adaptive Education
After sixteen years on the track and cross-country sideline, Lucchese stepped away from coaching and turned his full professional attention to classroom instruction within the Kingston City School District. He has now taught physical education in the district for twenty-five years. For the past decade, that work has been concentrated in elementary adaptive physical education -- a specialized assignment that requires him to travel between schools to work with children whose disabilities prevent participation in standard physical education classes.
The work is different from coaching in nearly every respect except one: it requires consistent, expert presence over time. Adaptive PE, Lucchese explains, is not an accommodation tacked onto a standard program. It is a separate discipline that demands both formal training and sustained attention to each student's individual physical profile.
"The students in adaptive PE are the ones who most need someone showing up consistently with an actual program built around what they can do," Lucchese says. "For a lot of these kids, that's a rare thing."
The exercise science background Lucchese built at Brooklyn College informs the way he reads a student's movement patterns and designs progressive physical challenges. The coaching experience -- sixteen years of building individualized training plans for competitive athletes -- informs how he thinks about incremental development over a full school year. Twenty-five years of history within the Kingston City School District inform his understanding of individual students and their circumstances in ways that no amount of formal preparation can replicate.
Consistency and Long-Term Outcomes
Lucchese holds a certification as a personal trainer in addition to his master's degree in physical education and exercise science from Brooklyn College. These credentials, combined with his twenty-five years in the Kingston City School District, position him as an educator whose standing in adaptive programming derives not from a single qualification but from accumulated, tested experience across multiple settings and populations.
The population he currently serves in Kingston, New York -- children with disabilities who require individualized physical programs -- benefits, in his view, from consistency above every other variable. A student who sees the same educator arrive with the same standards and expectations across a full school year has something that a rotating coverage model cannot provide. Lucchese has now had the opportunity to work with some students across multiple school years. The compounding effect of that continuity, he says, is visible.
"Staying in one place long enough to matter changes what you can offer," Lucchese says. "That's true in teaching. It's true in coaching. It's true in real estate. The principle is the same across all of it."
Outside the Classroom: Discipline as Character
Away from the Kingston City School District, Lucchese maintains a range of physical pursuits that mirror the values evident in his professional record. He skis, golfs, bikes, runs, and hikes. He surfs when the opportunity arises. Each of these activities requires sustained practice to perform at any meaningful level, and none of them yields quick returns. Lucchese's recreational choices, taken together, reflect the same orientation that runs through his coaching record and teaching career: willingness to invest in something well before it pays.
He also builds. Alongside his teaching responsibilities, Lucchese has spent years working on residential properties in and around Kingston, New York, including house flipping, home construction, and land development. This is not a side project or a hobby. It is an active parallel career, built incrementally over years, that he plans to convert into his primary occupation when he leaves the Kingston City School District.
Looking Ahead: A Second Career Already in Progress
Lucchese holds a New York real estate license and plans to relocate to Southern California after retiring from teaching, where he intends to pursue real estate as his primary professional focus. The move is not an experiment in a new direction. It is the next stage in a trajectory that has always built toward something rather than simply away from what came before.
"I came back to this town because there was work here that needed doing," Lucchese says. "I've stayed because the work kept getting more interesting. That's not how most people plan a career. But it's how mine worked."
The real estate foundation Lucchese has been developing in Kingston, New York alongside his teaching responsibilities is, in his telling, not something he will begin at retirement. It is something he will convert.
"The real estate background isn't something I'm picking up in retirement," Lucchese says. "I've been building it for years alongside teaching. By the time I make the move to Southern California, it won't be new. It'll be established."
Lucchese has five years remaining before he reaches retirement eligibility from the Kingston City School District. He describes those five years in the same terms he has always described preparation: as time to be used purposefully, not waited through.
The Career Nobody Plans
Physical education careers in public school systems are typically measured by tenure, by championship records, by the number of students who went on to compete at the next level. Marcel Lucchese's career in Kingston, New York includes all of those things. But the thread that runs through it is something less easily quantified and more durable. It is a consistent willingness to stay with something past the point where most people move on, and to build what comes next while still committed to what is current.
"I don't think the injury at Florida State was a setback," Lucchese says. "I think it was a redirect. The career I actually built is more interesting than the one I expected at eighteen."
That redirect moved through Florida State University, through Brooklyn College, through sixteen years of competitive coaching on the Kingston sideline, through a quarter century in the Kingston City School District, and now toward Southern California and the next phase of a career that has never once looked the way it was supposed to.
The career you build from what didn't work is usually more interesting than the one you planned. For Marcel Lucchese, M.S., that is not a philosophical position. It is a personal record.
About Marcel Lucchese, M.S.
Marcel Lucchese, M.S., is an elementary adaptive physical education teacher with the Kingston City School District in Kingston, New York, where he has taught for twenty-five years. He holds a bachelor's degree in health education from Florida State University and a master's degree in physical education and exercise science from Brooklyn College. He is a certified personal trainer.
Lucchese coached cross-country, indoor track, and outdoor track at the high school level in Kingston, New York for sixteen consecutive years, earning division championships and sending hundreds of student athletes on to college on scholarship. In 1993, he won the Section 9 and OCIAA league championship in cross-country as an individual athlete.
He holds a New York real estate license and has spent his teaching career developing a background in residential property through house flipping, home construction, and land development in and around Kingston, New York. He plans to pursue real estate as his primary career in Southern California following retirement from teaching.
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