Friday, May 13, 2011

Gary Williams Walks Away a Winner

Great article on Jay Bilas' Blog on Gary Williams and his shocking step away from the game. I appreciate and admire Williams not because of the huge amount of wins, it was because he did it the right way. He coached with integrity, and he did it his way. He may have missed out on what consider some great local talent- Carmelo Anthony and Kevin Durant to name a couple. However, he recruited kids that fit his style and developed them into better players and people. He was a fierce competitor and winner. 


Since you need an ESPN account to read the article on their site, I have gone ahead and copied it for you:



It is difficult to quarrel with the Naismith Hall of Fame on its incredible collection of basketball icons. It has, however, made one glaring omission: Maryland's Gary Williams.


By any reasonable measure, Williams is a Hall of Famer, and most knowledgeable basketball observers agree it is just a matter of time before he is inducted. The truth is, he should already be in there.


Hopefully, Thursday's surprising news that Williams is retiring will prompt such an action. I can think of few active coaches as deserving of that honor and none more deserving.


Williams is a basketball lifer who got into coaching for all the right reasons. A New Jersey kid who played for Bud Millikan at Maryland, Williams started as a high school coach and teacher, and never sought out coaching for the money. He was a competitor first and came up through the coaching ranks the hard way. Heck, he started out coaching both basketball and soccer, just to make ends meet. My guess is he was just as competitive a soccer coach as he was a basketball coach.


I first knew Williams as a competitor when I played against his Boston College team in the 1985 NCAA tournament. He had a team of smaller, scrappy fighters, and Williams was as intense a coach as we had played against on the sidelines. But, after the game, he went from crazy-eyed competitor back to being his normal self. Williams burned to win but was always gracious in both victory and defeat.


At Boston College, Ohio State and Maryland, Williams was nothing but a winner, and he was a fine teacher as well. On the floor and in the locker room, Williams could X and O with the very best of them, and his teams took on his personality in their play. They would fight you and would not give in. They didn't lose very often; you had to beat them.


During his 22 years at Maryland, no other team in the ACC had a better record against Duke and North Carolina than Williams' Terrapins. Nobody. Williams retires with only Dean Smith and Mike Krzyzewski ahead of him in ACC wins. He has been an ACC champion in a league of entrenched power, and he has twice been to the Final Four and won the 2002 national championship. His record is remarkable, and he did it without ever once cheating.


I often would hear people complain about Williams and how he would act on the sidelines. When a player made a mistake on the floor, he would turn and get into an assistant coach or a bench player, and that didn't make sense to some people. "You have to know Gary and see him with his team in practice to truly understand it," I would say. Williams' players understood where he was coming from, and they respected what he was saying, despite how it might have looked to an outsider. And the officials respected Williams, despite how things might have looked from afar. Williams did not get many technical fouls precisely because he gave the officials a fair shake.


Once, after a questionable call during an NIT game, Williams told an official that his team was playing in the NIT because it wasn't very good. He then proceeded to tell the ref that he was officiating this game for precisely the same reason. No technical was awarded, and both had a good laugh over the jab. That is Gary Williams.


Unless you know him, you might not appreciate the quality of the person. Once you do know him, you cannot miss it. I went to the Middle East with Williams to coach U.S. Army teams in a tournament called Operation Hardwood. Williams coached a group of soldiers from Wisconsin, and in a short week of coaching these soldiers, he won supporters for life. In talking with the soldiers on Williams' team one day, I could tell they revered him. One went so far as to say, "I'd take a bullet for him." It was a remarkable statement from that Wisconsin soldier, and it was a remarkable statement about Gary Williams.


I didn't see Williams' retirement coming, at least not now. I thought he might retire after last year's crushing overtime loss to eventual Final Four participant Michigan State, but after the end of this season, I thought he would keep going in College Park. Perhaps it makes sense with Jordan Williams leaving early when most feel it was in his best interests to return. Perhaps Gary Williams felt it was just time.


Whatever the reasoning, it isn't important. What is important is that college basketball and the ACC are losing one of the all-time great coaches and one of the all-time great guys in Gary Williams. That makes this a sad day, indeed.


But I believe that we will still see Gary Williams remain close to the game. After all, he's a basketball lifer.


And a Hall of Famer.


http://insider.espn.go.com/ncb/insider/news/story?id=6488074

Phil's Finale

Phil Jackson's body and soul are done.


Wonderful article this morning on Phil Jackson by Bill Simmons of ESPN.


Simmons sat down with Phil in late March and discussed a variety of topics- the Lakers, Kobe, the Knicks, Jordan, and his future. As does Simmons, I think this is the last we will see of Phil Jackson. I feel very fortunate to have been able to watch Phil Jackson make great runs with the Bulls and Lakers. He is a great inspiration to me and a role model. I felt he always stood for the right things when it came to basketball, people, and life. I am not sure Simmons could have summed it up any better:


"The good news: Nobody will remember that Dallas sweep in eleven years, just the eleven rings and every relationship he fostered along the way. Steve Kerr told me once that what made Jackson special -- and Popovich too -- was that he cared about his twelfth guy as much as his best guy. He spent time with his players, bought them gifts, thought about what made them tick. He connected with them, sold them on the concept of a team, stuck up for them when they needed him. His actual coaching -- calling plays, working refs, figuring out lineups and everything else that we see -- was a smaller piece of a much bigger picture. His players competed for him for many reasons, but mainly because they truly believed Jackson cared about them. Which he definitely did."




This is what I would like to become- more than just a basketball coach. I want to become a mentor- someone who helps shape people and made them realize that they were part of something bigger than themselves. I hope Phil finds happiness and peace wherever he takes his life to from here. Although he may never again be on a basketball sideline, I don't think he is done imparting his wisdom on us. 


http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/110513&sportCat=nba

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Alabama Baseball Team Presses On




I came across this article by
Rick Reilly a week or so ago and had not had a chance to post it.

On April 27, a tornado ripped through Alabama killing hundreds of people and leaving thousands without homes. Many are left with nothing and have no idea where to go or what to do. Where do the victims of this horrible natural disaster begin to rebuild their lives? How do they get back on track and "escape" their current situation?

If you're the baseball team team at Hueytown (AL) High School, you keep on playing is what you do.

This is a great story about how a team and community deal with disaster and use sports to move forward with their lives.

Homeless Man Helps Down On Her Luck Woman


This is powerful shit! When I saw this, I took a look at myself in the mirror and asked myself if I would be able to do what this man is doing? He has nothing, yet he is out trying to help her get her life back on track. There is a level of selflessness that I think we all strive for, but few of us ever reach that level. It is a great story and I encourage you to share this with your friends, family, players, etc. My hope would be that we strive harder to become like this man- maybe it would be a little bit better world to live in.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Where Amazing Happens



Chris Paul is doing something incredible and it has nothing to do with the NBA.

On the moonless night of Nov. 15, 2002, five young boys ran across a park, jumped a 61-year-old man, bound his wrists, duct-taped his mouth, and beat him with pipes until his heart stopped.

All for his wallet.

That man was Nathaniel Jones, the grandfather of future NBA star Chris Paul.

In this article, Rick Reilly shows us how Chris Paul may amaze us on the court, however the most amazing thing about Chris Paul is his compassion and ability to forgive the five boys who took the life of his grandfather, his best friend.


"Even though I miss my granddad," Paul told me, "I understand that he's not coming back. At the time, it made me feel good when I heard they went away for life. But now that I'm older, when I think of all the things I've seen in my life? No, I don't want it. I don't want it."


This is a great article that reaches beyond the lines of a basketball court and teaches us all more about life. If Chris Paul, one of the greatest basketball players on the planet can find the strength in him to forgive, then so can we. It shows us that there are bigger things in life than just a round ball and a basket. I already loved watching Chris play and respected the many things he could on the floor...but now, I respect him more off the floor as a human being. It will make me strive to be a better person and learn to find the strength to become a servant leader, just like Chris Paul.


http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=6436820


Sunday, May 1, 2011

One Shot: The memory of a lifetime


Kieran Darcy recalls living his dream. After playing four years on the Penn JV team, he was suiting up for the varsity. He had never felt so proud, happy, and nervous in his life. And with 1:30 minute remaining left in the game, Coach Fran Dunphy called his name, and he lived his dream.

This is a great story about one man living his dream- playing for Penn. As a young college student, he was a member of the JV team...then on one special night as a senior- played with the varsity team and got in the game. Despite having no fanfare, no big shoe contracts, and the NCAA not even keeping track of the games...the members of the JV team couldn't be happier or more excited to be playing college basketball.

"I'm not so sure there could be a more pure form of college athletics," says Dunphy, who replaced John Chaney at Temple in 2006. "They just played because they wanted to play basketball. There was very little, if any, reward in it, other than the personal satisfaction of playing the game. I appreciated that about those guys. And the guys who stuck through it for four years at the JV level, well, I can't say I admire anyone more than those guys."

Dunphy's respect for those who played on the JV team was so great that he tried to give every JV team member that was a senior and opportunity to suit up for one home game with the varsity team.

"I think life is made of memories," Dunphy says. "As you get a little bit older, life's even more about memories than current experiences. My philosophy was, you should honor these guys that do what they do every day, that put the time in and get no recognition. Let's give them a little bit of an honor and dress them for a game. Maybe their parents can see it. Maybe they'll have some friends going nuts in the stands for them...If we can provide that, it's an easy choice to make.



http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/storypage=darcy/071203&lpos=spotlight&lid=tab3pos1

Coaches prove you didn't have to play to win

This article hits home to me as I passed up an opportunity to play small college basketball to go and learn from Mark Few and his staff at Gonzaga. As a competitor and having a love of basketball, I sometimes regret not going and playing. However, I don't think I could have learned as much as I did and it drove me to study and learn harder. Although I may be at a disadvantage at times not being an ex-player, I feel as though I have prepared myself better and may be more ready than others.

COACHES PROVE YOU DIDN'T HAVE TO PLAY TO WIN by Andy Katz

Everyone knows about the coaches who have the playing pedigree to match their coaching success. But there are a handful of college coaches who didn't play that are having alot of success. "I don't think you have to have been a great player...You just have to understand the game, and how to teach the game."

Just a few of the names:

Bill Grier- San Diego
Mark Few- Gonzaga
Joe Pasternack- New Orleans
Bruce Weber- Illinois
Tom Crean- Indiana
Bruce Pearl- Tennessee

and many others that did not play or played small college basketball that are having huge success at the Division I level.