Great hires in Indianapolis! Gregg Doyel joins Indy Star; Frank Vogel signs extension with Pacers

by Kent Sterling

If you live in central Indiana and aren't familiar with Gregg Doyel, you will be soon.

If you live in central Indiana and aren’t familiar with Gregg Doyel, you will be soon.

Not quite sure which I enjoy writing about more – bad hires made by the arrogant or great hires made by those passionate about making a positive difference.

Yesterday was a day with two of the latter as the Indianapolis Star announced that Gregg Doyel will fill the big shoes left behind by Bob Kravitz’s departure for WTHR.com, and the Pacers announcing that Frank Vogel agreed to an extension to coach beyond this season.

Doyel is a passionate writer who feels stories.  When you read his work, you not only get his perspective but the emotions they elicit in him.  He can be bring fury as he rails against injustice, eloquently express mourning as he deals with loss, and applaud subjects who show admirable selflessness.

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He is a real writer unafraid to expose his raw emotions.  Honesty will never be a problem with Doyel.  Making friends is not the name of the game for Doyel, as it is with many others in his business.  Whenever you read what he writes, you can be sure Doyel believes it – and passionately feels it.

Indianapolis is a city filled with real people who want the unvarnished truth, and that is exactly what they should expect from Doyel.

How does he compare with Kravitz?  While both are exceptionally smart and talented writers, I think the primary point of differentiation is that Bob writes with his brain and Doyel with his heart.  Bob is very deliberate and circumspect.  Doyel is more prone to express his emotions.

They are both great at their jobs, but attack from different flanks.

Can’t wait to begin reading Doyel’s work on October 20th.

As for Frank Vogel, this is the last year of his current contract, and either the Indiana Pacers were going to part with a coach whose career record is 167-100 as he comes off consecutive trips to the Eastern Conference Finals, or let him go and hope they could attract a better leader.

Not much of a choice.  The Pacers could have asked some costumed rube in Area 55 to make that call, and he or she would have come to the same conclusion.  Frank Vogel is a trusted leader for this group of Pacers, and sending him away would have been abject madness.

The great thing about evaluating a talent like leadership is that there is usually a practical measure that allows for different styles to be seen as successful.  If someone asks the question – as Larry Bird obviously did – “Is Frank Vogel an effective coach?”, the correct answer is “167-100 and two trips to the ECFs!”

Sure, he rarely yells, and is relentlessly supportive of his players.  That doesn’t equate to weakness.  Because of the Pacers success, his behavior has come to define effective leadership.

Vogel acts less like a coach than anyone I’ve ever met.  He is a “normal” guy, for lack of a better word.  There is nothing intimidating about him.

In college at Indiana University, I believed that Bob Knight embodied all that is necessary to be a great coach.  His presence was so intimidating that students avoided him on campus.  His erratic bearing was seen as a tactic rather than psychological disorder, and I’m still not convinced it wasn’t.  He bizarre actions equated to leadership because of 11 Big Ten Championships and three National Championship banners.

If he had lost, Knight would have been vilified as a psychotic, and if the Pacers had been 100-167 instead of 167-100 over the last three-plus years, Vogel would be viewed as weak and easily exploited by players.

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Solid leadership results in success, and success reveals solid leadership.  The Pacers have been successful, so Vogel is an effective leader.  Knight won championships, so he was an effective leader.  Never have two coaches been less similar.

The Pacers made the right call by extending Vogel, and the Star decided to bring a game-changer into town as their columnist.  Yesterday was a good day for justice in hiring.

4 thoughts on “Great hires in Indianapolis! Gregg Doyel joins Indy Star; Frank Vogel signs extension with Pacers

  1. JD

    On the Doyel hiring, I think the amount of Indy Sports Media talent has never been better (thought that before Doyel hiring and now even more so). Perhaps your perspective is different, but the choices we have in Indy, whether it be radio or written word (columnists or websites like Philip B Wilson’s) or talented pbp guy like Mark Boyle – I am pretty impressed with what we have here. I recall the early 2000s and before that in the 1990s – it felt like we just didn’t have this menu on a sports fan’s plate. Since you have spent time in Chicago and St. Louis – how do we compare?

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      I like having multiple voices for columns. Having Kravitz and Doyel will be an excellent enhancer for intelligent debate and dialogue. In Chicago, there are many columnists and radio host who talk about sports. The only two regularly featured intelligent voices offering opinion for five years have been Dan Dakich and Bob. I hope to add to it, and would love for Boyle to join them.

      Minus Bernie Miklasz, the opinions are limited in print. 101 ESPN has the sports talk radio world locked down.

      Reply
  2. philboyd studge

    Kent, you are quite right about Gregg Doyel. Frankly, I’m surprised he left CBS for a regional market, and disappointed not to have him weighing in on the broader college hoops scene. He was the first to predict the inevitable complete dominance of Kentucky under John Calipari. Read this column from 2009 — it has all come true:

    http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/story/11573816

    Honestly, he strikes me as too big for Indianapolis. Enjoy him for the brief time I suspect he’ll be there.

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      He’s really looking forward to living here and calling Indy home. He’s a unique guy, so I wouldn’t discount the possibility that he sticks around. Hopefully, he continues to be a voice of reason on national issues.

      Reply

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