Hiring Dan Dakich on 1070 the Fan Still Makes Me Look Smart to the In-Laws

by Kent Sterling

imagesMy wife’s family lives in northwest Indiana, and they saw my name in a piece in the Gary Post-Tribune about 1070 the Fan radio host Dan Dakich.  It’s nice when the in-laws are provided evidence of something positive being done by the husband of the youngest of eight Purcell kids.

The Q&A with Dan dealt in part with how he got into radio, and while it’s true that I hired him, the credit for him being the guy trusted to host the 10a-1p slot on the fledgling station belongs to him.

No one in their right mind would have passed on a talent with the attributes Dan brings to media.  I tried to hire him to do a game day call to WIBC in 1994 based on his behavior over a couple of beers at Nick’s in Bloomington or during a visit or two to Chicago, where I lived until 1993.

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From that point forward, I would have hired Dan – or found a way to get the program director to hire him before I had the authority to do it myself.  He happened to leave Indiana University in 2008 at the exact moment I was looking for someone to fill the 10a-1p slot.  Serendipity was sweet for both of us.

Dan has four abilities that made him a can’t miss talent.

  • He’s honest – always and relentlessly.  If Dan lied, his head would explode.  He is completely unafraid that his opinions will upset people.  It’s not that he’s callous – he isn’t.  It’s just that the truth is important.
  • He’s transparent.  If Dan is thinking it, he says it.  The first time I met Dan, I felt like I knew him.  Radio is a medium that does not tolerate those who hide their feelings.  You won’t always agree with Dan, but how boring would it be if you did?  Life is too short to require political correctness from our friends, and on the radio Dan becomes a friend.
  • Dan gets bored easily.  The best of the best hosts know when a segment is becoming tedious.  Dan moves through calls quickly and bluntly.  That saves listeners the unpleasantness of realizing the callers have nothing to say.  Dan figures that out early on.
  • He knows what the hell he’s talking about.  Dan Dakich knows sports.  He studies, and understands the behavior of those who play.  That means he will not only tell you what happened, but why it happened.  That’s infinitely more interesting than the typical agate copy.

Dan did a really smart thing that I’ve talked about before during his “Falcon Basketball with Dan Dakich” show.  When Dan got bored, he did something else.  Most coaches just sit and answer questions without any regard for the audience or for his own desire to entertain or be entertained.  It’s drudgery for the coaches and the audience.

One weekend, Dan introduced a segment called “Dan Asks Dan,” which was more illuminating and fun than what had been elicited in the past by the host of the show.  Dan explained that he felt the answers to the questions he asked himself in the car on the way to the studio were often better than those in response to the host, so Dan decided to interview himself.

“Dan Asks Dan” was funny and informational, but more than that, it showed a need to be interesting and a revulsion to tedium that is at the core of every great radio show.  Great hosts cannot tolerate being bored.  Brandmeier, Limbaugh, Mancow, Stern, and others would rather be hit by a beer truck rather than be bored, and they trust that if they’re not bored, listeners won’t be either.

Dan continues to entertain and inform every weekday from 12p-3p, and as long as he does, Indianapolis will have a place where they can hear original thoughts on sports and entertainment presented in a compelling way.

For those of you who want to be hosts, learn these two lessons from Dan – always know what you are talking about and never be boring.

Hiring Dan was one of the half dozen really easy decisions I’ve made in hiring, and if it makes me look like a smart guy to my in-laws, all the better, but I hope one day he returns to coaching.  There are a lot of self-interested coaches being trusted to lead teens into adulthood, and he’s not one of those guys.  Kids deserve a mentor like Dan who commits not only to teaching young men about basketball, but helping them become productive adults.

Or maybe the radio show gives him a broader medium to allow him to teach masses what it means to be who you are and tell the truth.

9 thoughts on “Hiring Dan Dakich on 1070 the Fan Still Makes Me Look Smart to the In-Laws

  1. Jeff Gregory

    I met Dan when I was in the IU coaching program. He was always willing to spend some extra time with students. I spent a lot of afternoons picking his brain in the varsity office. He spent extra time showing me how to scout games (which wasn’t included in the regular agenda). The best thing he did for me was to help me understand Coach Knight.

    Recently, I sent him an email wanting him to comment on the offenses that teams run now centering on the ball screen (Coach Knight hated the ball screen). The only thing I learned is that Dan is not quite as accessible to me as he used to be. 😉

    Reply
      1. Jeff Gregory

        I hate them, too. I bet Dakich hates them, but I haven’t heard him say so when he covers the games on ESPN. Teams just run dumbed down offenses anymore and practically all of them run the same thing.

        Of course I wanted your opinion, Kent. I was just waiting for your ball screen post.

        Reply
        1. kentsterling Post author

          I know I’m in the minority, but there is nothing like a screen away motion to make me smile.

          Reply
          1. Jeff Gregory

            I agree. However, since it is a key element of the motion offense, it is somehow mysteriously outdated. No one can tell me why it can no longer be effective. My theory is that it takes too much brainwork to read the defenses and manipulate them with the right cut decisions. Kids today just do not have the patience; or coaches do not give them enough credit. Take your pick.

          2. kentsterling Post author

            No doubt that coaches have micromanaged the game to the point where kids don’t know why they do what they do.

            My son was very fortunate to play summer ball with kids who loved and understood the game – and for coaches who taught the game and allowed them to make mistakes.

            As a result, at least half the kids from that team are now in coaching themselves. Hopefully, they do the same.

  2. Scott

    Dakich’s ego has gotten out of control. He has TOTALLY pissed off pretty much the entire IU fanbase with his antics. He is nothing more than a meglomaniac jerk on the radio to anyone and everyone.

    He won’t be around much longer with the way things are going.

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      Not sure what prompts that reaction to Dan. He hosts a radio show, and does a great job of entertaining and enlightening. That doesn’t always include patting people on the back and telling them how great they are. That some are angry with him speaks to his honesty and transparency.

      Reply

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