Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Wisconsin Basketball meeting leaker – gutless wretch in need of higher education

Greg Gard is not smiling today, and he will be on guard for the rest of his career because of an act of reckless immaturity.

When college students believe they understand more about life than adults with real responsibilities, mistakes are made.  Learning from those mistakes is how children become adults.

So it was in Madison when someone privy to a February meeting between Wisconsin Basketball coach Greg Gard and the seniors from his team surreptitiously recorded the proceedings and leaked them to the Wisconsin State Journal.

The edited recording revealed an airing of grievances by the seniors and some responses from Gard, and all of it should have remained within the confines of the room where it was held.

It’s difficult to provide for your family based upon the ability to compel student-athletes to compete at the highest level.  Some players yearn for a father-figure, others covet a simple tactician, more yearn for NBA millions, and a larger-than-you-would-guess slice want to go to college for free in exchange for the least acceptable level of effort expended.

Wisconsin has won consistently over the past two decades because Gard, Bo Ryan, and Dick Bennett recruited young men who care enough about their game to fully develop it, and then play for each other and their coach at a level requiring a familial level of trust.

When the seniors spoke honestly about the concerns they had about Gard’s level of leadership and the way it affected their ability to compete, they had an expectation of trust.  When Gard agreed to the meeting, he had a similar expectation.  That trust was irrevocably broken when the meeting was recorded and then it was set ablaze when it was emailed to a reporter.

Not only was the trust within the Wisconsin program destroyed, the release of the recording will cast doubt within the locker room of every other program in the country.  Questions about whether meetings are being recorded will creep into the minds of every other coach in the country, if they hadn’t been there already.

Complete trust that what is said in a locker room (or conference room) will stay within that room are now gone.  That means that complete honesty is likely gone as well – at least for the prudent coaches who want to keep their jobs.

Every coach will now have to vet every utterance through the filter of those third parties who may hear him or her at some point after a disgruntled player opts to make them public.

I’m sure the leaker feels he did the right thing by sharing the edited version of the meeting – that somehow he served future Badgers by forcing Gard to adjust his message and leadership style.  What actually happened will change Gard, the Badger program, and the development of student-athletes as human beings for the worse – and forever.

No human being is perfect, and if we are all held to public account and ridicule as we try to solve problems as a collective, we are doomed.  Gard may have been less than gracious as a basketball coach, but his job is to win games and provide lessons leading to the maturity of his players.  Making that sausage is never going to be pretty to watch, but is appreciated as athletes glance back at their formative years in the decades to come – especially for those who become fathers and coaches.

There are lines that cannot be crossed and deserve publicity, but a meeting where thoughts and feelings are shared is not among them.  To break the trust between coach and player – and among teammates is a wretched act of a child unaware of the consequences.

Gard is imperfect, as are all leaders.  But he was not the perpetrator as Wisconsin Basketball took a giant step backwards yesterday.  He and the Wisconsin program are the victim of immaturity and pettiness.

Mike Woodson’s first three months – so far, so great!

IU Basketball coach Mike Woodson is still undefeated, and so all fans see right now are reasons for hope and glory!

Woodson has been on the job for almost three months, and we keep learning things about his style of leadership and ability to recruit.

With seven weeks left before the team plays a pair of exhibitions in the Bahamas, the roster has come together through a variety of moves:

  • Three former starters opted to leave Indiana to transfer elsewhere (Armaan Franklin, Joey Brunk, and Al Durham),
  • Seven scholarship players liked what they heard and saw from Woodson and decided to stay (Khristian Lander, Parker Stewart, Jordan Geronimo, Anthony Leal, Trey Galloway, Rob Phinisee, and Race Thompson),
  • Three transfer decided to use the portal to invest in whatever Woodson is building (Michael Durr, Xavier Johnson, and Miller Kopp).
  • Jerome Hunter was asked to leave the program due to a fit issue.
  • Top 30 recruit Tamar Bates decommitted from Texas, and pledged IU – joining Logan Duncomb as a two man freshman class.
  • Most impactful was the decision by Trayce Jackson-Davis, a potential conference player of the year, to forego early entry into the NBA Draft to allow Woodson to help build his readiness and resume.

But what do we know about Woodson as a coach?  Based upon interviews and insight from athletic/basketball staff, here are some assumptions that appear safe:

  • The days of Indiana employing sweaty clappers who choreograph movement rather than coach the game are over.
  • Woodson will teach basketball, allow players to execute, and hold accountable those who don’t measure up.
  • The new transfer rules might just make Woodson the perfect alternative to the typical college basketball coach who drives players crazy with endless demands and a lack of personal connection.  Wisconsin’s Greg Gard was outed in a leaked recording of a team meeting as lacking connectivity with his seniors.  Woodson will not have that problem, and transfers may see him as a refreshing change.
  • It seems Woodson is quite confident in who he is and what he can bring to his position.  There has been no hint of pretense in any of his media availabilities.  He swears without concern, and communicates what he is thinking simply and clearly.
  • Woodson came to Indiana to win – not build a career.  That is the bonus of hiring a 63-year-old.  He is a fully developed adult who is done trying to impress players, media, fans, and (most importantly) current and future bosses.  The resume’ is complete.

There is a long way to go before Indiana fans declare athletic director Scott Dolson a genius for digging into the deep past to hire Woodson, a coach without a single day of experience coaching college basketball prior to his arrival at IU.

The proof will be in the pudding soon enough, but so far it appears Woodson’s first three months are a perfect attitudinal antidote for what Hoosiers have endured for the past 15 years.

Whether Woodson’s arrival translates to wins and championships is left to be seen, but so far he is a breath of fresh air.  That gives fans a reason for hope, and that’s all that can be asked in the middle of June.

Colts fans should hate Tom Brady, but after “The Shop” I like him even more

It shouldn’t be hard for a Colts fan to hate Tom Brady. But it is.

Tom Brady should be an easy guy for fans of his opponents to hate, but I can’t.

For almost a decade Brady’s Patriots and Peyton Manning’s Indianapolis Colts/Denver Broncos dueled for superiority in the AFC.  Manning enjoyed a slight edge in the regular season, while Brady crushed it in the playoffs – and continues to at the ripe old age of (almost) 44.

I like the Colts, and have a real affinity for Manning.  Brady kept my guy from winning several more Super Bowls and being considered the best quarterback in NFL history.  That’s usually enough for a serious fan hatred to fester in me, but I can’t help overlooking several of Brady’s egregious flaws to land in a place I never expected to be – among Brady’s admirers.

Here is a short trip around six reasons to hate Brady:

  • Seven NFL championships.
  • Still rocking at an age many quarterbacks are spending early afternoons at a bar telling stories.
  • Married to model Giselle Bundchen – who is actually wealthier than he is!
  • Good-looking, even to men very confident in their masculinity.
  • Used to own a home surrounded by a moat.
  • He went to Michigan.

That’s a pretty good list spiced with the kind of appalling successes, overachievement, and genetic gifts that have driven generations of men wild with jealous rage.  But there are mitigating circumstances and events that earn my begrudging respect and applause.

The latest came during the current episode of HBO’s The Shop, when Brady explained his grievance with those teams that decided not to pursue him as a free agent, “One of the teams, they weren’t interested at the very end. I was thinking, ‘you’re sticking with that (12-letter expletive starting with m)?’”

That’s how people talk when they don’t care what people think about them, and that level of edgy indifference to a thin-skinned public arouses my appreciation.

By the way, we know he wasn’t talking about the Colts, because they had recently signed Philip Rivers, so they weren’t sticking with any “m************.”

There is also a video of a speech Brady gave at his alma mater that makes me want to drive to Ann Arbor and put on pads and a helmet.  Here it is:

Last but not least, Brady decided to settle the argument for all time as to whether Brady achieved because of Patriots coach Bill Belichick or Belichick achieved because of Brady by leaving New England for Tampa and promptly winning his seventh championship while the Patriots slid to an irrelevant 7-9 record.

Brady is perfect enough to be on a poster in a kid’s room, but imperfect enough to drink beer with.  That’s a tough line to walk, and it’s hard to think of another athlete who has done it this well.

 

Cubs shortstop Javy Baez has evolved into a player they can’t win with

El Mago worked in reverse last night as he added an out to the Cubs total.

Back in 2016, I couldn’t imagine the Cubs winning without Javier Baez.  He was my favorite Cub among many candidates.

Baez was magical as a second baseman and baserunner.  He won with his brain as well as his bat and lightning quick tag.  Since then, Baez has devolved into an absent-minded all-star.

On pace to strikeout 211 times, Baez is as unlikely to lay off sliders low and away as was Alfonso Soriano, and last night it got worse.  Much worse.

Baez was on first with one out in the bottom of the fourth when Anthony Rizzo flied out to left.  The Indians left fielder looked somewhat baffled as he returned the ball to the infielder, and for good reason.  Baez was about to round third, and was easily doubled off first.  Baez believed there were two outs.

The Cubs have failed to score more than three runs during any of their previous nine games for a total of 16.  This is not a team that scores easily, and they must maximize every opportunity.  Losing track of the number of outs while on base is not just unacceptable, it’s heresy.

Cubs manager David Ross pulled Baez from the game, and after the game said the issue was closed.  I hope that isn’t the case.

As the Cubs head toward an offseason when three core players (Baez, Anthony Rizzo, and Kris Bryant) scheduled to become free agents, team president Jed Hoyer has decisions to make.  Should any or all of that trio be dealt to re-stock the farm system, or should he pound his fist on owner Tom Ricketts $170,000 mahogany desk to demand the cash needed to negotiate extensions for these world champions?

If I can squeeze myself into Ricketts’ tailored suit for a moment – if Hoyer argued for retaining Baez, I would pound the desk right back at him, “You want $210-million of my family’s cash to re-sign a guy who can’t count to two?”  Sadly, I win the argument on merit, not because I am the owner.

Of the three, Baez revealed himself to be the most dispensable last night and that is a shame because he has been the Cubs most valuable and enjoyable player to watch since he came up in 2015.

But Hoyer’s decision should have been made last night.  Heartbreakingly, it’s time to make Baez a former Cub.

Ben Simmons can’t shoot, so the Sixers can’t win; he makes $35M per year, so he’ll remain the 76ers problem

Can’t see the ball in this photo, but I’ll wager it never touched the twine.

“If you can’t shoot, you can’t play,” said every basketball coach in the history of the game.

After making only 25 of 73 free throws during the playoffs, it’s clear Philadelphia 76ers guard Ben Simmons can’t shoot.  For those willing to give Simmons a pass, it’s also worth noting that in four NBA seasons, he has taken only 34 three pointers and made five.

76ers coach Doc Rivers said yesterday that Simmons will enjoy an offseason of intensive skills development, which translate to a whole lot of shooting.  Some analysts are even speculating that lefty Simmons will switch hands to shoot with his right hand.

Two damning stats beyond his shooting percentage to keep in mind – first, Simmons will turn 25 in less than one month.  Basketball players rarely learn to shoot after they turn 25.  Second, Simmons is guaranteed $140,400,000 over the next four years regardless of how many free throws he misses.

The toughest part of buying a scenario where a 25-year-old suddenly becomes a competent shooter is that Simmons hasn’t been trying to avoid shooting well for years.  He works at it already, so why is this go-round going to be any different?

Experts speculate the 76ers will trade Simmons because they feel winning a championship is impossible with a point guard who can’t shoot.  That begs the question, why would another team trade value back to the 76ers for a $35.1M per year point guard who just hit 34% from the line over the course of two playoff series?  Good question.

Unless the 76ers find a moron among the other 29 guys running NBA franchises, they are stuck with an expensive non-shooter who tantalizes with what he does as well as anyone (defend and pass).

The most likely result of this gambit to teach or trade Simmons is a rinse and repeat of what we saw this postseason.  The 76ers are stuck because they overpaid for a guy who can’t do the one thing great basketball players absolutely must be able to do.