Give Coaches
A Break
The University Leader - Official Student
Publication Of Fort Hayes State University.
By Klint Spiller
Thursday,
December 2, 2010. In this century, humans
expect instant success. If the answer to a
problem isn’t found in the first two pages
of a Google search, people typically give
up.
It is the same
in sports. If you don’t win and don’t win
soon, you are gone.
It seems like
any time I open up a newspaper to the sports
section, a coach’s contract is being bought
out and the search to pay a new coach
begins.
Whatever
happened to patience and loyalty?
In the NFL,
Wade Phillips and Brad Childress, two
coaches who led their teams to Division
championships in the previous season, were
fired mid-season. Phillips was gone after
the Dallas Cowboys started 1-7, and
Childress was axed after a 3-7 start with
the Minnesota Vikings.
Losing is not
acceptable in this day and age — well,
unless you are the Kansas City Royals or a
team in Detroit or Cleveland. As former New
York Jets head coach Herm Edwards said in an
infamous post-game press conference rant,
“You play to win the game.”
However, is
this society of instant gratification really
giving coaches a fair shake?
Bad seasons
happen. Injuries happen. Players give up. To
a degree, it is the coach’s responsibility
to ensure that it doesn’t happen, but some
fault must land with the players.
But when a team
takes a nosedive into the losing column, it
isn’t the players who are blamed and
released. It is the coach.
Sometimes this
is necessary. For example, Childress had
developed an acidic relationship with his
players and that reflected on his team’s
play. The inner workings of the locker room
seemed more like what you would expect out
of a soap opera than a professional football
team.
I’m not saying
a line shouldn’t be drawn, but in many
cases, franchises and schools draw that line
too quickly and give up on coaches far too
soon.
A coach might
spend three years developing his/her system
and bringing in players. If the fourth
season doesn’t go well, that coach is
typically axed, which leads to the process
starting over again with a new coach.
This cycle of
losing can take eight to 10 years before a
coach turns a team around, and this can be
devastating for a fan base.
Sometimes it
seems people cut the fishing line too soon.
For example,
many people wished for University of
Missouri football coach Gary Pinkel to be
canned in 2004.
Pinkel was in
his fourth season. He had Brad Smith, who
was once considered to be a Heisman
candidate, at quarterback and had a weak
schedule. Missouri finished 5-6 and went 1-5
in the final six games.
People were
calling for his head.
Joe Posnanski
of the Kansas City Star wrote Pinkel “lost
the team,” and John Henderson of the Denver
Post asked, “Was there a worse coaching job
in the country than by Missouri’s Gary
Pinkel?”
Missouri
decided to stick with Pinkel. He delivered
winning seasons the next two years and
finished 12-2 and No. 5 in the nation in
2007. His team would have played in the
national title game if it hadn’t had the
misfortune of having to play the University
of Oklahoma twice.
In the last
four seasons, Missouri has tied for the Big
12 North division championship three times
and finished second once.
Would any of
that have happened had Pinkel been let go
following the 2004 season? Maybe, but I
highly doubt it.
It takes time
to build championships.
Former UCLA
coach John Wooden, arguably the greatest
coach in collegiate basketball history, was
the epitome of that.
Wooden’s Bruins
only made the postseason five times in his
first 15 seasons and never finished better
than fourth in the NCAA.
Over the next
12 years, Wooden’s teams won 10 NCAA
national championships — more than any other
coach in the history of the game.
Wooden passed
away on June 4 and the expectations of
coaches have changed since when he coached
from the 1940s to the 1970s.
Now there are
rumors circulating of the impending doom of
Denver Broncos coach Josh McDaniels and
Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra.
McDaniels’
Broncos have struggled in his first two
seasons.
It didn’t help
his job security that his film crew was
caught taping a San Francisco 49ers practice
and the Broncos traded away several
promising players who have blossomed with
other teams, but it is still early to talk
about firing a coach.
In the case of
Spoelstra, the Summer of LeBron was supposed
to help the Heat contend for an instant NBA
championship, and no team was supposed to be
able to stop the trio of LeBron James,
Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh.
However, at the
beginning of December, the Heat are only
11-8 and have proven to be completely
stoppable.
After calling a
timeout during a game against the Dallas
Mavericks, Spoelstra and James bumped into
each other as Spoelstra was walking onto the
court and as James was headed to the bench.
This quickly
became a viral video on YouTube, and people
began to speculate that Spoelstra and James
did not get along.
Soon, the media
began to talk about Heat president Pat Riley
assuming the role of head coach again to
replace Spoelstra.
This was only
after the 17th game of an 82-game season.
People need to
develop patience. I blame the media for
this, but I also blame the fans.
The media love
to make a big deal about coaches on the hot
seat, because it increases ratings and gives
them something to talk about.
However, fans
are also fickle. When their team isn’t
winning, they call for heads.
People need to
learn to resist these feelings and have more
trust in the coaches, because finding a
replacement can sometimes lead to extended
grief.
If you don’t
believe me, go ask an Oakland Raiders fan.
The Raiders have had six coaches in 10 years
and have had a combined record of 55-100
over that time period.
Wooden was
renowned for developing a “Pyramid of
Success.” It basically showed the building
blocks needed to succeed in sports and in
life.
On the top of
the pyramid was the desired goal —
competitive greatness.
Beneath it were
the blocks needed to reach that goal,
beginning with traits such as
industriousness. Near the top of the pyramid
were blocks such as poise and confidence.
And what was
the block in the center of the foundation of
the pyramid?
Loyalty.
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