Monday, April 28, 2014

The Kansas track rivalry heats up this week, a look at the MVC race, and it's windy in Wichita!

Track
We just had an odd weekend in the world of outdoor track and field – an off weekend.  Well sort of.

As we put our schedule together this year we knew the week following the Oregon Relays (which were right after the KT Woodman) would probably be a time our athletes would be tired so we decided to have an off weekend to give our kids a chance to rest and recover as we prepare for the final regular season meets of the year.

We did have a meet, however, as we took some of the athletes who didn’t go to Oregon up to Emporia State on Wednesday night for the ESU Midweek Open.  We got some nice, warm weather and those who competed did a great job putting up several personal records.  Not making the trip to Oregon was tough to take for many of those athletes but they responded beautifully with terrific results at Emporia.

I decided to give the group Thursday off from practice and we had a spirited final day of the week for Friday’s practice.  Now that the weekend is behind us, the team looks refreshed and ready for our meet at Kansas State Saturday.  We have a great meet planned this weekend as we’ll compete against Kansas State, Kansas, and the Air Force Academy in a scored competition.  The weather forecast looks good and we should be ready to put up some big results.


 


We’ve always wanted to have scored meets against our in-state Division I rivals but haven’t been able to do so until this year.  I am happy to announce that beginning next year we will start our indoor season with a scored triangular meet with Kansas-Kansas State-Wichita State.  The meet will rotate between the three schools for 2015, 2016, and 2017.  It will be a great way to showcase track and field in Kansas and another chance for us to compete against these Big 12 schools, including the defending national champion Jayhawks.

I haven’t mentioned much about the MVC race in the previous weeks but it is starting to become a little clearer now.  Just like always, the MVC Outdoor Championships should be a close battle between several teams.  I always score the meet straight off the performance lists every week to see how we stack up and at the moment the lists say we have a slight lead on the men’s side and are in second place on the women’s.  With the exception of the 10k, most athletes have competed in their main events so this gives us a pretty good look at where we stand.  Here is what the “off the list” scores are:

Men: Wichita St 149, Indiana St 135, Loyola 127, Northern Iowa 112, Southern Illinois 109, Illinois St 91, Drake 73, Bradley 19.

Women:  Indiana St 159, Wichita State 128, Missouri St 105, Southern Illinois 104, Loyola 90, Northern Iowa 87, Illinois St 67, Bradley 41, Drake 37.

As you can see we have a very balanced league and I would say any of the top five men’s teams should be considered for the title as well as the top four women’s teams.  If you remember the indoor championship our women significantly outperformed our projection and came from about 60 points down to lose by 13.  We’re gonna need another performance like that to defeat Indiana State while our men look to be on more equal footing with the Sycamores.  They are the defending champions and we know they will be ready to go.  We’ve been working hard though and our teams are hungry for a title!  It should be a great weekend of track and field in Carbondale, Illinois, in three weeks!

The one thing that has been a big disadvantage for us is that most of our meets have been so windy.  The NCAA and our conference doesn’t allow times when the wind is over 4.0 meters per second and in some cases we have athletes who haven’t had a single race under that standard.  I think we have some very good kids that should factor significantly when we’re all on the same track together and hopefully this will give us the boost we need.  The wind also significantly hinders the races around the track.  The weather this Saturday looks good so hopefully we get some legal times to put on the board.

With having an off weekend from competition I got busy in recruiting by getting out to a couple local high school meets.  There are always meets going on in the Wichita area and most Tuesday and Friday nights can be spent scouting out the local talent.  Most of our recruiting for the class of 2014 has been completed so much of the work is in seeing the class of 2015 kids for the first time.  And while “most” of the 2014 class of recruiting is done, it’s not totally done so being at a meet when a new senior pops up is always a good thing.

For the time being, I’m only going to be writing about track and field because, well, that’s about all that I have going on at this time of the year.  I’ll try to add in some new movie stuff when I actually start watching them again!  Go Shocks!

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

How to host a huge track meet and the Shockers go to TrackTown USA

As evidenced by not writing a blog in the past two weeks, it has been a busy, busy time for Shocker Track & Field.

Track
Last week we hosted the annual KT Woodman Classic (College)/Shocker Pre-State Challenge (High School).  It’s a huge meet with 65 high schools and over 40 colleges attending.  In total we had around 2300 athletes compete at Cessna Stadium from Wednesday-Saturday, April 9-12.

Our staff and team do a ton of work hosting a meet like this. It’s one of our main fundraisers and, this year, our only home competition.  There are many pro’s and con’s to hosting track meets (especially one this large).  Some of the pro’s are: Competing at home, having access to lots of terrific recruits where we can show off our great facilities and campus, not traveling, and raising some good funds to help with our budget.  The con’s are: it’s a ton of administrative work to get ready for a meet like this, it’s a ton of physical labor, finding dozens of volunteers, not being able to coach very well because you’re constantly dealing with hosting the meet, figuring our how to feed dozens of officials and volunteers and trying to communicate with all the non-track personnel that aren’t used to hosting a large competition like this.

And everything generally goes well, unless there is bad weather.  Luckily we dodged that bullet this year.

With plenty of help, my responsibilities are mostly with the administrative and organization of the meet.  Along with our Director of Operations Chandra Andrews, we cranked out a ton of work from our office last week.  The groundwork is laid several months ago with getting all of the pertinent meet information online for the coaches to see and trying to finalize the meet schedule.  This year we made a couple of adjustments to make the meet run more smoothly.  There are also meetings with non-track staff personnel like facilities, marketing, ticket office, event coordinators, alumni hospitality, media relations, police, training room staff … the list kind of goes on forever.  Also we have frequent email blasts to the high school coaches to help them stay ready for the entry process and details of the meet so once they arrive to Wichita State we won’t have so many questions to answer.  Once everyone is made aware of their duties then the main work happens, beginning on Monday of the meet.

We have our entries due on Tuesday morning for the high schools and Wednesday afternoon for the colleges.  We push it back as far as we can so there are fewer changes during the meet.  There are lots of meets where the entries are due two weeks prior and in my experience it only causes more headaches and for the meet to be run with more empty lanes and scratches.

Monday is not too busy of a day so I actually made it home by around 7pm.  I tried to get all of my recruiting calls done by this time because I know the rest of the week will be unavailable.  Tuesday is when things really get going.  With the high school entries due at 9am, we have a staff meeting at around 8am which is mostly dealing with our next meet and trying to figure out the travel roster for the Oregon Relays (which ticketing is due that day).  After that my office doors closes and we get to work on the entries for the high school meet.  We create elite sections as well as figuring out all the heats and flights for the events.  This takes until around 2pm and then I have to head to practice.  Once practice is over around 5pm we are back in the office continuing to work on the packets until late into the evening.  I think we got done around midnight on Tuesday and the college Decathlon starts at noon the next day.

We start the meet with a Decathlon/Heptathlon on Wednesday, which is a good way to ease into things.  But most of the morning is at the track making sure everything is physically ready.  There are always little fires to put out and things to deal with so the morning flies by and before you know it the meet is underway!  Practice for our kids is largely on their own so most of our time is at the meet trying to run it off until around 3pm, when the collegiate entries are due and we have to do all the stuff we did for the high schools over again for the colleges.  Once again it’s a very late night in the office and the next day is when things really start to get busy.

On Thursday, besides the second day of the college multi-events, a few years ago we decided to host a high school pentathlon.  Since we are so good in the multi-events at Wichita State it only makes sense to be the only place to host such as event for high schoolers.  It has become a very popular event and makes it four multi-event competitions going on simultaneously at once!  We also start our high school distance carnival and Javelin competitions Thursday evening so by then the stadium is filling up and we are really underway.

Thursday night’s events end around 11pm and then it’s back to the office to do a few things to get ready for the busiest day of the week – Friday.  That is when the high school meet gets kicked into full gear, beginning at 9am and ending around 11pm when the college distance carnival finishes.  We have a large team of athletes (around 125 total) and they all work about four hour shifts at the meet. Without our athletes it would be impossible to run off a meet like this and they always do a great job of being our “officials”.  I think they usually have a lot of fun too, remembering what it was like to be in high school and compete in a big meet like this.

I always feel a lot better around Friday evening when the college distance races begin because I know the  craziness of the high school meet is over and now our athletes are getting ready to compete.

This year we were celebrating the 20th anniversary of the 1994 MVC Championship team so we had alumni come in from all around the world – even as far as South Africa!  So on Friday night after the meet I got together with a few of them and hung out until late in the evening (and yes we had just ended a 16 hour workday).

I was running on fumes Saturday morning, so luckily the only thing going on in the morning was the Hammer Throw.  With the rest of the meet beginning around noon I was able to relax a bit before the colleges arrived in full force.  After three beautiful days of weather Saturday was hot but extremely windy.  I’m not going to complain though because I’ve seen snow at the KT Woodman Classic before.  The meet ran off smoothly from that point on, we had a lot of terrific performances, and before we knew it we were hosting our alumni for a social event at the conclusion of the meet.

I laid my head down on my pillow around 3am Saturday night/Sunday morning. I didn’t move until Monday.

Normally we would have some time to ease back into the next week but this year we had a quick turnaround to get ready for the Oregon Relays.  Some athletes and coaches headed out as early as Tuesday while most of the team left Wednesday and Thursday.

Getting to see a track meet at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon is a special treat for any track fan.  The town is officially named “Track Town, USA” and you see it all around the city.  They have hosted many national championships, Olympic Trials, Diamond League meets, and this summer will host the World Junior Championships.  They really do things right and for our kids to get to compete there is always a highlight of their careers.

Even though it was a little chilly and rainy during the meet, our kids performed well and Wichita State ended up with four victories.  I also took our kids to see "Pre's Rock" and I'm pretty sure most of them ate dinner at Track Town Pizza which was next to our hotel.  All in all it was a great experience for our team and our last long trip until the MVC Meet in 4 weeks.

The travel for this meet was a little crazy.  I know most people probably think we travel like kings in Division I but we had a couple of 3am wake-up calls as well as driving 3 hours to and from Kansas City so we could save money compared to flying out of Wichita.  On top of that Eugene, Oregon, isn’t the easiest city to fly into so on the other end we had a couple of 2 hour bus rides to and from Portland, Oregon.

Once I got back on Sunday evening I was busy hosting recruits and my world finally calmed down around 9pm on Monday evening.

Movies
Believe it or not I actually got out to a movie in the past two weeks.  I went and saw the new Kevin Costner movie Draft Day about a day in the life of a NFL general manager.  Overall I’d say I liked it.  I’m a sucker for a sports movie and this one was pretty solid.  Even though some of the material might have been a little over the top, it was an original movie and kept me entertained throughout.  I think they were trying to do a Moneyball type movie for football but it wasn’t quite as effective.  It also wasn’t as good as some of Costner’s other sports movies like Bull Durham or Tin Cup but those are hard to top!

Everything Else
There wasn’t time for anything else!!!  See you next week!


Sunday, April 6, 2014

The first two weeks of the outdoor season, Budapest has a Grand Hotel, and should athletes form a union?

Track
We’re right in one of our busiest times of the year so that’s why it’s been two weeks since I’ve done a blog.  Here is the latest with Shocker Track & Field.

Last week we opened up our outdoor season with a short trip to Emporia State.  Season opening meets are always tough.  After taking several weeks off competition to focus on training, it’s difficult to get back into the flow of high quality results right away.  I like the fact that we had a more low-key outdoor opener and I thought, overall, it went pretty well.  The kids always want to run fast in meets like this and much of the post-meet conversations include being a sports psychologist and explaining how long the outdoor season is.  Our goal is to run our best during the “championship” portion of our schedule – which begins in about 6 weeks.  There are lots of “teaching moments” during these early meets.

Teams have different philosophies when it comes to how they schedule and what we wanted to do this year was to keep our team together as much as possible.  There are meets like the Texas Relays and Stanford Invitational early in the outdoor season that only parts of your team can qualify for so we made a group decision to go to Emporia and then Stephen F Austin (this past weekend) with our full teams.

This was the second year in the row we went down to Nacogdoches, Texas (Stephen F Austin).  Over the past four years we’ve developed a friendly rivalry with the Lumberjacks.  They came up to Wichita during the indoor season and we returned the favor this weekend.  In a meet with 18 teams the scoring came down to Wichita State and Stephen F Austin with their women edging us by 5 points while our men beat them by 41.  The “trophy” for winning the meet was an axe handle – definitely the first time we’ve taken an axe handle home after a meet!

It’s about a 9 hour drive to Nacogdoches and we got home around 5am Sunday morning.  Most people think that being a Division I athlete or coach is all sunshine and roses but when you get off a bus or van when the sun is coming up after two long days at a meet you don’t feel like anything special!  I actually rode with Coach Rainbolt and Coach Hetzendorf home and we took turns driving.  Traveling on long trips has never really bothered me.  I’m a night owl so I was awake when it was my turn to drive the final leg of the journey home.  These trips at Wichita State are so much longer than the ones we took at Kent State because the major schools out here are more spread out.  At Kent, a 5 hour trip was one of the longest ones we’d take.  Here that is one of our shortest!

This week we will host our only outdoor meet of the year.  Usually we host two meets but it didn’t work out that way this year, however, this week’s meet should probably count as 3 meets!  On top of hosting the annual KT Woodman Classic that has about 30 collegiate teams, we host the Shocker Pre-State Challenge – a high school meet that will bring in around 60-70 high schools and a couple thousand athletes.  Not to mention we are also hosting both a college Decathlon/Heptathlon as well as a high school Pentathlon.  The meet runs Wednesday through Saturday so today (Sunday) will be the last chance to relax for a week.

In previous years I have been mostly responsible for running the meet off and all the administrative work that goes with it.  This year we created a new position on our staff called the Director of Operations and one of our former athletes Chandra Andrews is now taking on many of those duties as part of the job.  While I’m still very involved in the hosting of the meet it’s definitely nice to have some great help when thousands of athletes and hundreds of coaches head to Wichita this week.  Last year I received and replied to over 400 emails during “KT Woodman Week”, now Chandra is dealing with most of that and I can focus more on coaching.

Even though hosting a huge meet like this is very stressful, I really do enjoy having a home meet.  Having our team run at home is always special for them and for many it’s the same facility they ran on at the state high school championships.  As of now the weather looks good – hopefully it’ll stay that way and we’ll continue down the path of improving as a team!

This weekend will be also be gathering our track and field alumni and honoring the 1994 and 2004 MVC Championship teams.  We have a strong group of alumni that stays in touch and supports our team and it’s a lot of fun to get them together and socialize during and after the meet.

Our team is much better outdoor as compared to indoor (in terms of MVC Championships) because of one event – the Javelin.  We are fortunate to be in one of the few states that have the Javelin in high school as well as having a great throws coach – John Hetzendorf.  Between his throwers and our multi-event athletes, we should dominate that event this year at the MVC meet and give us a 20+ point bump compared to indoors.  We’re also strong in the 400m hurdles and the 4x100m relay, both events we don’t contest indoor.  It’s still too early to take a look at the conference meet but we assume the teams that were in the hunt indoor will be the same outdoor, Indiana State on the men and women and Southern Illinois on the women.  SIU will be hosting the meet this year so they should have an advantage by competing at home.

Recruiting is still going well.  Many of our signees are now beginning their senior track seasons so it’s always fun to get text messages from them with their results.  We’ll also get to see a lot of them at our meet this week.  As well as keeping track of kids who are already signed, we are still recruiting hard, trying to find a few more athletes that will help fill in the holes we have heading into the 2015 track season.  The other part of recruiting right now is getting out to high school meets.  Besides finding a “diamond in the rough” senior, we are starting to focus on the juniors that we can begin recruiting fully in July.

You have to stay organized and disciplined in order to not lose your mind during this time of the year!  The days fly by and before we know it we will be heading into the summer!

Movies
It’s been a while but I finally got out to a movie in the theater and it was a good one.  I saw the movie The Grand Budapest Hotel which had a large cast of well known actors and was directed by Wes Anderson.  He directed the surprising hit Moonrise Kingdom last year so I was excited to see his latest effort.  It’s been getting great reviews and I have to say this time the reviews are correct – it’s a very interesting and funny movie that was entertaining throughout.  Ralph Fiennes was the main character and he was very good.  I’ve always liked him since I saw him in In Bruges.  The Grand Budapest Hotel has been in limited release but now is starting to appear at most theaters around the country so get out and see it!  It’s odd and original and you’ve definitely never seen a movie like it before.

I’ve seen a few other movies during the last couple weeks.  Clint Eastwood’s Trouble With the Curve was on HBO at the hotel this weekend.  It’s the opposite side of Moneyball in regards to showing the movie from the perspective of the old baseball scout who is still better than the new age computer technology.  If I had to choose, I like Moneyball way better.  Trouble With the Curve is more about the relationships of the people involved and not as much about baseball.  It’s still a quality movie though.  I watched the documentary about former Oregon runner Steve Prefontaine called Fire on the Track.  It came before Hollywood made two movies about his life.  Great documentary, I've linked it below.  I also got sucked into watching most of Weekend at Bernie’s while on the road.  One of the most ludicrous ideas for a movie ever but for some reason I couldn’t stop watching.  I guess it goes back to my childhood where these cheesy 80’s movies were always fun to watch with buddies.  One other movie I had on while working at home was Boyz n the Hood, the remarkable 1991 drama about life in South Central Los Angeles.  This movie came out while I was in high school and, being from a small rural area in Southern Ohio, I became fascinated with the story.  It’s a very powerful movie that shows a side of American that many people want to ignore.  Great movie, I couldn’t have seen a more diverse group of movies these past two weeks!

DVD Choice of the Week (from my collection):  I’m going way back for this one but let’s go with the 1959 classic Ben-Hur.  Most young people who are reading this probably haven’t heard of this movie, and at 222 minutes in length I doubt most of you will be able to sit through it.  It won 11 Academy Awards including best picture and stars Charlton Heston as Judah Ben-Hur.  He is a Jewish prince that is betrayed and sent into slavery before regaining his freedom and coming back for revenge.  The best part of the movie is an epic chariot race that lasts for at least 10 minutes towards the end of the movie.  It’s one of the best action sequences I have ever seen and for it to have been filmed over 50 years ago is amazing.  I have linked a low quality version of the chariot race down below but it doesn’t do it justice.  It’s worth seeing on a big TV if you can!

Everything Else
I’ve been so busy with work the past couple weeks I haven’t paid much attention to anything else.  I did see that Oscar Pistorious is on trial (or was).  I don’t know if this sounds bad but I don’t have much interest in what is one of the biggest stories of track and field.  I guess I prefer to pay attention to the more positive aspects of what I do and keep a tunnel vision so to speak.

We had an interesting discussion in our athletic department coaches meeting last week about athlete unions.  If you’ve seen the news lately you might be aware of the Northwestern University football players trying to form a union to help with student-athlete rights.  We have a very diverse and intelligent group of coaches in our department and it was fascinating to hear everyone’s opinions.  While student athletes forming a union might sound like a good idea it would significantly hurt them in many ways.  The only people who would come out victorious would be the lawyers.

Website of the Week
Grantland.com
The Grantland website is linked off the main page of ESPN.com and was created by Bill Simmons, who was a common contributor to ESPN over the years.  It brings together many interesting and talented writers to write about sports, movies, and pop culture – basically things guys are interested in.  In this day and age of dwindling journalism, Grantland.com is the exception.  I can usually find something everyday on the website that is of interest and if you’ve read this blog with any regularity you’ve seen many links to stories in the final section most weeks.  I say bookmark as one of your favorites and it’ll keep you entertained on a daily basis.

Interesting articles and videos to waste time with
Every counties favorite baseball team - cool things with maps! 
29 funny family photos - #4 is my personal favorite 
A new movie about a running legend - looks pretty good! - (video 3:00) 

Monday, March 31, 2014

Be back next week!

It’s one of those super busy weeks so I’m not able to update this blog.  Hopefully I’ll be back next week!

Monday, March 24, 2014

Spring Break in Wichita, Abraham Lincoln, and the day the Shockers finally lost a basketball game

Track
This past week was our Spring Break at Wichita State so it was a little different from a normal week.  We let our kids off from official practice for a few days then had them report back on Wednesday and had four days of good, solid practice.  We were fortunate to have pretty good weather and even the worst of days was still around 50 degrees.  We ended our week with a spirited Saturday workout that included our 400m hurdlers having a time trial while the rest of the team cheered them on.

When our athletes don’t have class they are definitely more focused and ready each day.  I think some of the kids wish they could be like typical college kids and go on a crazy Spring Break trip during March but I remind them that every week as a college athlete is like Spring Break in terms of traveling and having fun with your buddies.  We are very lucky to be able to do what we do and the grass isn’t always greener on the other side!

We will make the short trip to Emporia, Kansas, on Saturday for our season opener this weekend.  It will be a low-key way to get things started for our team.  I’ve already talked to our group about our goals – which are to run at least three races for each person and basically get a high quality workout in.  I’m not too worried about how fast they run Saturday as much as giving a good effort and beginning our season with a positive attitude.  We have much bigger meets coming up soon and I’ll be more concerned with running fast when the time comes.

Our multi-event group had a successful meet last week at Rice University near Houston, Texas.  We had a freshman, Hunter Veith, who scored 7027 points in his first ever Decathlon!  It was a great performance for such a young athlete and, early in the season, is ranked second in the country.  This will be one young man to watch in the future for the Shockers – keep an eye out!

With half of our staff being gone for the past two weeks it’s been a little disjointed in our office lately.  That’s pretty typical as the outdoor season gets going because we all have different priorities with our groups and with recruiting.  I am planning on getting out to several high school meets in the coming weeks as well as bringing in kids on more official visits.  I have noticed I am having more and more contacts with juniors via email than ever in the past so hopefully that will yield better results next year.  Thank you to our basketball team for that!  I get emails from probably 10-15 kids every day that are interested in Wichita State and even though only a few of them are at the Division I level, it‘s great to have so many people interested in our school!

Movies
I didn’t do much movie watching this week as most of my television watching was limited to the NCAA Basketball Tournament.  I am hoping to get out and see the movie The Grand Budapest Hotel this week.  It was made by Wes Anderson who did the surprise hit Moonrise Kingdom last year and his new movie looks very funny.

I did catch the end of a movie this week on TV (don’t remember which one) and, like most times on TV, the credits scrolled by super fast after the movie was over.  I have always wondered why they even show the credits if they are going to scroll them faster than a speed reader could read them.  Is there a contract they have with the movies that they have to show these credits?  And if they have a contract then why are they allowed to show them at a rate that can only be seen in super slow motion?

I’m one of those people who sit in the theater until the credits are over.  If I’m with a friend I enjoy talking about the movie for a few minutes while it’s still fresh in our minds and with a lot of movies there is an extra bonus scene after the credits are over for those who have stayed.  It’s also always interesting to see how many people and how many different jobs there are that go into making a movie.  There’s usually some good music too!

DVD Choice of the Week (from my collection):  I recently purchased the movie Lincoln on DVD and gave it a viewing this week at home.  I saw it in the theater last year while it was doing very good business ($275 million worldwide) and thought it was a great movie.  It flew right by for me even though it was 150 minutes long, detailing the final months of Lincoln’s life and his battle within his own cabinet on the decision to emancipate the slaves.  Steven Speilberg did a great job directing this movie and Daniel Day-Lewis was an amazing Abraham Lincoln.  To think of all this man had to go through to accomplish his major goals and lead our country through the toughest of times is incredibly motivating.  Sometimes I can get cynical about trying to motivate people in my job but when I watch something like this it reminds me of how a true leader deals with difficulty.  If you haven’t seen this movie please do so immediately!  It’s entertaining and highly inspirational!

Everything Else
Well the great Shocker Basketball season of 2014 has ended.  Unfortunately for most of those around here it has ended too soon. After winning the second round NCAA game against Cal-Poly, the Shockers lost a heartbreaker to Kentucky 78-76 on Sunday.  The announcers said it was the best game Kentucky had played all year and they needed every bit of it to pull off the upset against Wichita State.  That sounds like a sentence out of a bizarro world but it is true.  The whole city was saddened by the loss but everyone is so proud of what these young guys have done.  To have a 35-1 record and ranked #2 in the country is something that will never be soon forgotten.  Our #1 assistant coach Chris Jans (a really nice guy by the way) has already been hired at Bowling Green and hopefully we can keep the rest of our staff together for next year.

I was talking to someone today about how it’s funny how things seem to even out.  Last year the Shockers went into the NCAA Tourney as a #9 seed and had multiple upsets all the way to the Final Four and this year went out early as a #1 seed.  It just goes to show you how unpredictable college athletics are and how extreme the highs and lows.  On the bright side our basketball team returns most of its players next year and will probably be ranked in the top-10 before the season starts.  Well done guys!

Other than that it was a pretty quiet week around here, which is always nice.  I was able to hang out with some good friends over the weekend and enjoy the last free weekend of the track season until …… July?  Here we go!

Website of the Week
Weather.com
I know it might seem funny to put Weather.com as the website of the week but it’s definitely one of the most visited places I go during the outdoor track season.  For the most part we practice outside during the outdoor season unless it’s just a terrible day of weather and I’m always looking for what the wind is doing on a daily basis.  If you don’t live in Wichita just let me tell you … it’s WINDY.  And you have to prepare for what direction it’s blowing because we generally always try to run with the wind at practice.  I visit Weather.com about three times every morning to check the hourly forecast before heading out to practice.  How did anyone ever figure out where to have practice and communicate with their team before the Internet?  Haha.

Interesting articles and videos to waste time with

Monday, March 17, 2014

NCAA Indoor Championships, Track on TV stinks, Let March Madness begin!

Track
This weekend was the NCAA Indoor Championships in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and we only had one athlete at the meet so I didn’t make the trip.  I’ve been to a lot of NCAA Championships over the years and if I don’t personally have an athlete there I don’t feel I should go.  I do some work with Austin Bahner, who made the meet in the Heptathlon, but we already had three coaches going.

Instead I went to Lincoln, Nebraska, to watch the Division III Championships.  My best friend, Kevin Lucas, is the head coach at Mount Union in Ohio and he had his team there competing.  I rarely get to see Kevin so the four hour drive north was no big deal.  We hung out for a couple days, did some socializing, and I got to see the meet end with Mount Union winning the 4x400m relay!  It was Kevin’s first NCAA title in that event and he was definitely fired up.

It was the first non-Division I national meet I’ve been to.  Coaching at the Division I level really distorts your perspective in terms of athletic quality and competition.  In reality, the Division I national meet is a meeting of the most athletic 18-23 year olds in the world.  It’s an amazing thing to see, and even harder to qualify for.  Most NCAA D1 champions end up turning professional after college and many of them represent their countries in the Olympic Games.

Watching the D3 meet was very cool though because these kids were in it for the love of the sport.  Now don’t get me wrong, there were some very fine athletes, but the enthusiasm and passion for track and field was on great display and I’m glad I got to watch it in person.

Thanks to ESPN3.com I was able to watch the Division I Championships on my phone.  If you weren’t able to see it you missed probably the most exciting finish in NCAA history.  On the women’s side, three teams had a chance to win the meet and it all came down to the 4x4.  Oregon outleaned Texas, winning by two hundredths of a second and grabbing the NCAA title by half a point!  Both teams also broke the NCAA record in the 4x4.  What a finish!

Speaking of watching track on TV, last week I happened to catch the SEC Indoor Championships on ESPNU, and was I disappointed in what I saw.  The SEC meet is always the most competitive conference meet in the country and I was excited to watch it, even on tape delay.  The meet was basically reduced to 90 minutes of uninteresting highlights, with very little attention paid to the field events or the drama of the team races.  Every year at our national coaches’ convention, the powers that be talk about how we need to make our sport more watchable so that it can be marketed and put on television.  The problem is when a meet is on television, the people who televise it don’t know what to do to make it interesting.

I was in Europe this summer and was lucky to watch several meets on TV while I was there.  They do a much better job and show ALL of the events, including the field events, which often have more drama than the running events.  The problem with US broadcasts of track is that they show some of the running events and only show the best jump or throw in the field events.  In my opinion a track meet should be shown like a golf match, try to show as many things as possible and let the story tell itself.  So often, in an entertaining golf tournament, the drama is built by bad shots just as much by great shots.  Track is the same way, someone who has some pull please tell ESPN and NBC this!

More and more, everything is going online so I do have hope that eventually our sport will learn how to show our sport more effectively.  I agree that we can do a better job of putting on a good show at the track meets, and the TV networks should do the same.

Movies
Once again I didn’t get out to any movies (kind of tough until the summer), but I did watch the Usain Bolt movie called The Fastest Man Alive on YouTube.  It is a 2012 documentary made about the sprinter, detailing his training, competition, and off the track life during the 2011 year.  I had heard about this movie but never felt like watching it because I feel like I’ve seen everything about him I could possibly see but once I started watching I got sucked in.  I really loved seeing the footage of him as a 14 and 15 year old, running 21 seconds and looking like a baby giraffe on the track.  I’ll link it down below, it’s an entertaining 85 minutes.  Thumbs up.






DVD Choice of the Week (from my collection):  I’m going with another Coen Brothers classic with the 2007 drama No Country for Old Men.  This movie is another reason why I love Coen Brothers’ movies so much.  They always try to do an original movie for an old concept.  In this one, Javier Bardem plays a hit man/serial killer who is chasing around Josh Brolin while Tommy Lee Jones plays a cop trying to catch them both.  It is tense from the opening scene until the end and one of the things you might notice is that there is hardly any music in the film.  I never saw it in the theater but wish I would’ve because I can imagine how intense it would have been to see it with a crowd.  It’s one of the highest rated movies on IMDB and deservedly so.

Everything Else
Shocker basketball heads into the NCAA Tournament as a #1 seed and to everyone’s surprise, they are in by far the most difficult region of the entire tourney.  Three of last year’s Final 4 are in their bracket along with teams like Kentucky, Duke, and Kansas State.  If they get past Kentucky/Kansas State in the second round they would likely rematch with last year’s national champion Louisville.  I think I saw the Chicago Bulls and the LA Clippers in the bracket as well!

As I’ve said before, the 34-0 season has been remarkable, and if they end up with a record of 35-1 it will still go down as one of the best seasons in college basketball history.  But now if they happen to run through this side of the bracket people will start talking about this being on of the best TEAMS in college basketball history.  I don’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but to even have that as a possibility for a team from Wichita State is special.  The madness starts this week!

While I was in Lincoln, Nebraska, for the D3 nationals, I went out with Kevin to socialize with the locals.  Once they found out I was a coach at Wichita State they pretty much gave me a hard time.  That’s normal when you are visiting a “major” university town.  Schools like Wichita State (or Kent State where I went to school) always get looked down upon even when their own basketball team (or any other athletic team) is far inferior.  I always laugh it off but can’t help to stand up for the little guys.  I went to a small high school and we always wanted to compete against the bigger city schools in Cincinnati, often beating them.  20 years later I am still in the same situation!

On my way home, I took a slight detour to check out the Belleville Speedway High Banks Museum in Belleville, Kansas.  The speedway is known as the “fastest half mile speedway in the world”.  I have seen this museum several times as I passed by on the highway over the years and decided to check it out.  I was given a personal tour by the 76 year old curator.  It was a fascinating look at midget car and dirt track racing at this famous speedway.  Winner’s circle pictures of guys like Jeff Gordon, AJ Foyt, and Kasey Kahne adorn the walls of this small building that is filled with memorabilia and race cars crammed into a space as big as a large family garage.  The tour guide was very friendly and mostly complained how young people don’t care about any of this stuff anymore.  I have a feeling I was the youngest visitor in quite some time.  I then went over to the track and took a walk around the famous facility.  It reminded me of growing up when I would go to Brown County Speedway with my dad every weekend.  I had so many fun times watching those dirt track races and it spurred on my first competitive love – racing.  I was very glad I stopped by Belleville and hopefully I can get up there to see a race this summer.

I was selected for jury duty today.  This was the first time I’ve ever been selected and fortunately it’s during our spring break so I didn’t have to miss practice.  I was interested in the process but all I ended up doing was sitting in the waiting room all day before being told I could go home.  I got paid $10 and mileage so I won’t be retiring anytime soon.

Website of the Week
Jayski.com
Keeping with the auto racing theme, I always enjoy checking out the Jayski website.  It was founded in 1996 by a grassroots organization to keep up with the daily news of NASCAR.  Eventually it partnered with ESPN but remained the same simple looking and informative website.  I don’t get to watch as many races as I’d like because of the track season so this is where I go for great info a few times a week.  It’s so much better than the official NASCAR website, which is too much into graphics and a bulky interface.  I hope this website continues to provide great coverage of auto racing long into the future!

Interesting articles and videos to waste time with

Sunday, March 9, 2014

What a verbal commitment means, European Soccer Hooligans, Shocker Basketball is 34-0, Brian Grant's battle with Parkinson's

Track
Being the week after the MVC Indoor Championships, it was very low key and relaxing.

Once we got back from Northern Iowa late Sunday night, we gave our athletes some time to relax, recuperate, and focus on their academics.  Each coach has their own schedule for what they do on weeks like this:  Coach Yost, Coach Wilson, and I gave our groups the whole week off except Thursday and Friday where we did some voluntary working out with those kids who wanted to get together.  Coach Hetzendorf was busy in the throws circles, as his group has been chomping at the bit to throw the Hammer, Discus, and Javelin.  Coach Rainbolt’s multi-event group was back at it by Wednesday because they will be heading to Rice University for a Decathlon/Heptathlon next week.  And Coach Hunter … well the distance kids never take any time off.

When I was a younger coach, I would’ve been much more structured on a week like this and dictated what each athlete needed to do but something I’ve learned over the years is sometimes taking a break, both physically and mentally, is the best thing an athlete could do.  I expect the group to be refreshed, feeling healthy, and ready to go at practice this week!

Except for the multi-event crew, the rest of the Shockers won’t compete until March 29 at Emporia State, so that gives us some time to get back to the basics and put in some hard work for the next month.  After running on indoor tracks for the past three months, it will be a much needed competition break to get accustomed to being back outdoor.  The weather looks great this week and for athletes in outdoor events like the 400m hurdles and 4x100m relay, it will be an important time to work on improvement.

We do have one athlete still competing this indoor season.  Heptathlete Austin Bahner will head to Albuquerque, New Mexico this week to compete in the NCAA Indoor Championships.  He is currently ranked 10th in the country and will be competing in his third national meet of his career. 

As for recruiting, things are starting to clear up a few weeks after the beginning of our signing period.  We had press releases on our website announcing 15 new recruits (we’ve signed one more since).  So far we’ve signed 10 women and 6 men.  As of today, our recruiting efforts for the men and women look very different.  We brought in 5 new men at January and that chewed up a significant portion of our scholarship money for next year so at this point we are almost done with recruiting on the men’s side.  We are hoping to sign a couple more guys but are basically at the end of our scholarship allotment.  This is the earliest we’ve ever been close to the end of recruiting at this time of the year.  We will continue to work on bringing in some walk-on type athletes but the focus will shift to looking at juniors for next year’s class.

It’s a different story on the women’s side.  Due to a variety of circumstances, we didn’t use all of our scholarship money this past year.  Basically we had some athletes who had committed to Wichita State but backed out or weren’t academically eligible.  So with the 10 girls we’ve signed so far, we still have some scholarship money left and will continue to sign about 5-6 more athletes.  It should be noted that the NCAA allows 18 scholarships for women as compared to 12.6 for men so usually the men’s scholarships go more quickly.

Personally my recruiting this year has been interesting to say the least.  I was able to sign three kids so far that I’m very excited about but had three other athletes commit verbally but back out at the last minute because they got more offers.  In this day of recruiting, athletes giving “commitments” and then changing their minds are very frequent.  You see it all the time in football where athletes who give a verbal commitment is basically the same as them saying that school is “in the lead” at the moment.  I really don’t like the term verbal commitment in this day and age because it isn’t an accurate statement for lots of these kids.  The definition of commitment in the dictionary is: a pledge or a promise, an obligation.  I don’t blame the kids for trying to find the best situation because it is a very important decision, but this generation of young people has significant problems with being committed in many areas of their lives.  We keep a list of our recruits on a big white board in my office and whenever an athlete gives a verbal commitment we list it in red until we get their signed paperwork as a reminder that they are not Shockers yet.  I generally enjoy the recruiting process very much but if you are the parent of a child that is getting recruited please do not let them “commit” to a school until they are 100% sure of their decision.  When we offer a scholarship to an athlete we are clear about what that means, and even if an athlete gets injured and has a season ending situation, we would stand by our word and keep that scholarship available to them.  Let’s help this generation of young people understand this – especially if I’m recruiting them! Haha!

Our biggest recruit of the signing period so far is a young man named Kord Ferguson, from Ottawa, Kansas.  Kord was the only recruitable athlete in the nation that was ranked in the top-10 in the nation in both the Shot Put and Discus.  Coach Hetzendorf did a great job in the recruiting process and Kord has been quoted as saying how much he enjoyed the team atmosphere and philosophy he encountered on his visit to WSU.  We’re very excited about Kord as well as all of our signees!

Movies
I didn’t get out to the theater this week but we did have a movie watching night at Coach Rainbolt’s house this weekend. In honor of the late Harold Ramis, we watched the classic comedy Stripes, starring Ramis and Bill Murray.  This 1981 comedy was about a couple of slackers who join the Army and then cause all sorts of trouble before finally saving the day.  It’s not the perfect movie but it’s very funny and we had a fun night of socializing during this movie.  Coach Rainbolt has an awesome movie watching basement that can seat around 20 people.  It was nice to have a relaxing weekend for once!

Other than that the only other film I watched was a documentary about European Soccer Hooligans.  There are several of these documentaries online to view as well as a reality TV show on the BBC.  I have no idea why I started watching this although we talk about it from time to time with our European athletes.  Soccer teams all across Europe have organized “hooligans” who fight other team’s hooligans outside of the soccer stadium.  I’m not sure how it all started or what point there is to it but it’s something that has gotten out of control in some areas and resulted in deaths.

In America, we have our own problems with violence – particularly with guns, but I will say that the sporting violence here is at a much lower level than most places around the world.  I was in Europe this summer for two weeks and was witness to some late night violence on the streets of Dublin.  Now before my parents read this and get worried, I want to explain how street violence in places like Dublin are very different than that in the USA.  The biggest difference is these countries don’t have access to guns like we do so the worst thing that usually happens is a pretty innocent fist fight that gets broken up fairly quickly.  It’s mostly just some immature shouting and guys blowing off steam (usually due to alcohol) at the end of the night.  This might be related to the Soccer hooligan stuff I talked about earlier.  Without getting political, if the USA had these hooligans it would turn tragic more often than not.
DVD choice of the week (from my collection):  Since the baseball season is well into Spring Training, let’s go with the 1988 comedy Bull Durham starring Kevin Costner and Susan Sarandon.  It’s a movie about a career minor-leaguer (Costner) and his struggle to stay in professional baseball that collides with a young hotshot, played by Tim Robbins, who is on his way to the major leagues.  It’s one of those movies with a ton of hilarious scenes but in the end it’s a very deep and meaningful movie.  There are many aspects of this movie I can relate to as an athlete who was pretty good but not quite good enough to be at the top of his profession.  The beauty of this movie is that Costner is not a perfect person and he doesn’t always make the best decisions, and we can all relate to that.  It was directed by Ron Shelton who played minor league baseball himself.  It’s hard to believe this movie is 25 years old because it’s still totally relevant.  I imagine it will be in 25 years from now as well!

Everything Else
I might as well just name this section “Shocker Basketball”.  The Shockers won the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament title this weekend, finishing the pre-NCAA Tournament portion of the schedule at 34-0.  Believe it or not, Wichita State had not won the MVC tourney since the 1980’s and they’ve never won it since it moved to St Louis a couple decades ago.  They now have a week off while the rest of the college basketball world plays their conference tournaments this week.  In one week they will find out what their NCAA bracket looks like and I assume they will be getting a #1 seed.  The whole city of Wichita has Shocker fever right now and I hope that continues for about another month.  Nothing is guaranteed, however, and even if they lose early in the tournament (which I don’t think they will) this season has been nothing short of remarkable.

Something happened in today’s game that shows what kind of kids are on this team and representing our university.  Near the end of the game a player named Jake Odum, who plays for Indiana State and has been a thorn in the side of WSU for the past four years, fouled out.  While he was walking off the court for the final time in his career, Ron Baker (sophomore for WSU) went over to him and grabbed his arm while motioning to the Wichita State crowd to give him a standing ovation.  I thought this showed tremendous maturity and class by a young person who could have easily been caught up in his own moment of being 34-0.  More and more things like this are what makes me realize how good college athletics are and how much of a positive influence it has on a young person’s life.  There is hope for our youth after all!  Haha!

I saw a video (that I've linked down below) about former NBA basketball player Brian Grant and his battle with Parkinson's disease.  I knew Grant a little because he was a senior when I was a freshman and played for our rival high school in Georgetown, Ohio.  I played a lot against his little brother Brandon and we were on the same AAU summer team in 1990.  He was definitely the hometown hero for people of Brown County and we all have been very proud of his accomplishments as a basketball player.  It's tough to see him struggling now with Parkinson's but to see him working hard alongside Michael J. Fox in raising money for the disease is motivating.  Kudos to Brian for his effort and positive attitude!

One other note, I often have the drinks named Naked smoothies and have liked every flavor I’ve ever tried.  This week I tried the “Kale” flavor.  No good, not even a little bit.

Website of the Week
The website RottenTomatoes.com was launched in 1998 as a place for critics and fans to review movies.  Gaining a rating of 60% determines a movie to be “fresh” while anything under that is considered “rotten”.  It got its name from the notion of people throwing a tomato at the screen of a movie they don’t feel is any good.  It‘s just another example of a website that started out with one man and his passion for movies, particularly Jackie Chan movies to be exact.  What started off as a website that got around 500 hits per day now is over a million visitors daily.  While I don’t usually see a movie based off a move critic’s opinion, it’s fun to see what certain movies are rated – and usually it’s a pretty good indicator on how good a movie is.

Interesting articles and videos to waste some time with
Putt-Putt Perfection - A Grantland Short (video 7:04) 
The Amazing Pace - for basketball stat junkies 
The Alan Webb Story - very good video about Webb's career and retirement (video 12:23)