Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Coaching youth baseball demands you prioritize fun for players

Given a choice between having my kid coached by Walter Matthau and Vic Morrow in “Bad News Bears”, I’ll take Matthau.

When I asked my old boss how I should grade myself as a youth baseball coach, he said, “That’s easy.  How many kid play next year?  If they all play, you were great.  If none play, you were terrible.”

Best answer ever.

The way to get kids to play the following season is to make baseball fun.

I watched a travel baseball game last night and was not pleased with the coaches for either team.  Both sets of coaches for these 13 year-olds micromanaged play.  As a result, the kids wandered passionless through the game.  One set of coaches were demonstrably negative and critical immediately after plays – as though the kids don’t understand when they screw up.

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The losing coaches hosted a 15-minute postgame meeting to explain to their players what led to the defeat.  Good grief.  Nothing like being harangued by a coach as a cherry on top of a loss to make baseball a lot more enjoyable, right?

So how can coaches make the game fun, and how can parents evaluate coaches?

Here are some very easy guidelines to help coaches improve:

  • Being aggressive is fun.  Empowered kids have fun.  Encourage aggression.  Empower playmaking.
  • Praise the intent of the play rather than critiquing the result.
  • The strike zone is irrelevant.  The point of batting is to hit the ball HARD.  If a kid feels he or she can hit a pitch hard, swing!  If not, take.  There is nothing sadder in youth baseball than a kid working a walk.  Making contact is not fun.  Making HARD contact is a blast.  Walking might help a team win, but it will not make a hitter better – or happier.
  • Unless you really know hitting, let your kids grip it and rip it.  See the ball – hit the ball is pretty damn good hitting instruction.
  • The goal of pitching should always be “hit the mitt.”  A kid hitting a pitch is not a failure for the pitcher – it’s baseball.
  • The game itself is a better teacher than coaches are.  Youth baseball coaches should encourage mistakes.  That’s how kids learn.  Baseball is a creative game, and creation comes from taking chances – some of which fail.  That failure is a key part of the process of learning the game.
  • If you don’t know what the hell you are talking about, stop talking.
  • Telling kids, “Stop throwing the ball around” discourages learning.  Let them learn how to create outs by making the extra throw.  If it gets away and runners advance, there is no better way to learn when to throw and when not to throw.
  • After the game, tell kids when the next event is and dismiss them.  Postgame meetings are for self-important coaches.  And parents shouldn’t re-hash every moment in the car on the way home.  Buy the kid a sandwich or popsicle and decompress a little.
  • Practice is for teaching.  Games are for the kids to enjoy.
  • The result of the game should be meaningless to you.  If you are in it for trophies, resign immediately and let another coach take over.
  • Umpires do their best.  Get off their backs.  Bitching about calls shows a coach’s prioritizes are totally out of sync with what is truly important.
  • Allow the players to position themselves.  Explain during practice what drives a positioning decision and then let the kids put those lessons to work during games.

If you’re a coach, those principles will bring smiles.  If you’re a parent and your kid is smiling before during and after games, thank your coach.

If your kid needs a role model in Major League Baseball, there is none better than Javy Baez of the Chicago Cubs.  His sense of fun is one of the big reasons the Cubs have been so successful since 2015.  Baez’s aggression not only creates runs and outs, it’s also contagious for teammates.

Baseball is supposed to be fun.  Help your players and kids enjoy it.

Michigan needs to stay the course and reject biased and dopey advice from Jalen Rose and Jay Williams

John Beilein’s results demand a seamless transition – not a re-plating of the Michigan Basketball culture.

Michigan Basketball is broken, and only Juwan Howard can fix it.

Forget the two trips to the NCAA National Championship Game, Big 10 Championships, and Big Ten Tournament titles.  John Beilein’s 12 seasons as the head coach at Michigan were clearly a disappointment.

The time has come to reclaim the brand value of the Fab Five – a group who came to Michigan to win championships, but left with none in two seasons.  Those Wolverines failed to win a Big Ten title, and two runs to the NCAA Finals were vacated because of rules violations.

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By the way, the Fab Five last played in Ann Arbor more than a quarter century ago.  Today’s college players were years from being born when their long shorts (or short longs) dominated the game’s fashion in a way their play couldn’t on the floor.

ESPN’s Jay Williams and Jalen Rose spent a good deal of time on ESPN this morning talking about how Juwan Howard is the only legitimate choice to bring greatness back to Ann Arbor as the replacement for John Beilein.  I get it from Rose – a friend of Howard’s going back to summer basketball when both were in high school – but from Williams the arguments sound ridiculous.

Howard might be a wonderful coach.  He’s making his bones on the Miami Heat staff, and by all accounts he’s a great guy, but does that justify unraveling what Beilein built over the last 12 years?

If being an NBA player, alum, and great person were the qualities a coach needed to run a program – Chris Mullin, Sidney Lowe, Patrick Ewing, Clyde Drexler, and many others would be wearing championship rings.  They aren’t.  In fact, all of the above but Ewing were fired within five years.

For a program that achieved at a very high level while being clean under Beilein, Michigan appears to be on the precipice of solving a problem that doesn’t exist.

Rose needs to take a step back and allow the AD to make the right choice.  Let him go get someone who can build on what Beilein has already created without being pushed into a corner by logrolling for Howard.  Williams can just keep yammering about things he knows nothing about because only fools listen.

[Another example of Williams blather came this morning as he said “the NCAA should be put on probation.”  He was trying to be funny, but every time Williams blames the NCAA for college basketball’s woes, he reveals himself as ignorant to the sources of both causes and solutions for those problems.]

Beilein was hired by an AD who made the right choice instead of the popular one.  There is nothing sexy about Beilein, but the guy can coach.  Recruits weren’t awed by Beilein walking into their home, but were impressed by what he might help them achieve at Michigan.  Beilein has never set a fashion trend – or has a program placed on probation.  His two trips to the National Final weren’t vacated.

Michigan needs to repeat the process that brought Beilein to Ann Arbor.

Until Michigan does the right thing, let us marvel at the tweet of a guy who is paid a lot of money to share ridiculous and uninformed opinions:

Romeo Langford’s expressionless face would look great in a Pacers uniform

Was this pic of Romeo Langford taken when IU was winning or losing? Given that the Hoosiers finished 19-16, it’s a coin flip.

Romeo Langford finished his only year at Indiana University as the third leading freshman scorer in program history.  He’s a solid 6’5″ with a 6’11” wingspan, and a unique ability to get to the rim and finish.

His freshman year was seen by Indiana fans who believed IU was poised for a bounce back season as a disappointment.  Romeo didn’t shoot it great from deep (27.2%) as he suffered with a right thumb injury that required postseason surgery.

I’m not saying the errant shooting was due solely to the damaged thumb.  There are other issues with his shot, but there is a good chance they can be fixed.

Not one to wear his emotions on his sleeve, pant leg, socks, or face, Romeo and Indiana fans never connected.  They saw Romeo as being indifferent to competing for Indiana – as though he was in a holding pattern until he became eligible for the NBA Draft.

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People who know Romeo well will tell you he is not indifferent to basketball.  He’s a stoic.  There is a difference.  If you played poker with Romeo and he was dealt a royal flush, you might believe he was holding king high.

Romeo cares.  He just doesn’t show it.  That used to be a characteristic people respected.  Today, as we evaluate people based upon how they behave during Sportscenter highlights, Romeo is seen as a noncommittal athlete – someone who plays for a reason other than a love for the game.

I spent a little time with Romeo during his senior year at New Albany High School.  As a fellow New Albany graduate as well as radio student there, I wanted to help Romeo see the media through the correct light.

A lot of athletes view the media as a pain in the ass – a bunch of unkempt mopes with microphones who ask dopey questions.  That stereotype isn’t entirely spurious, but the important thing to remember about those microphones is that they are the connect point to millions of potential fans.  I wanted Romeo to see opportunity where others saw tedium.

As I told Romeo about the rare ability he would have to communicate and affect people, he stared at me for a full hour without expressing joy, boredom, interest, or humor.  I asked Romeo a couple of specific questions at the end of my little presentation to make sure he hadn’t fallen asleep with his eyes open.  His answers told me he was listening.  He just never showed it.

Romeo is not a self-important branding machine.  He loves basketball, and has always been most comfortable among his teammates – not with the media despite my pleas.  As the Pacers build their culture as one that accommodates and encourages a family atmosphere, Romeo is exactly the kind of young man they should be searching for.  Add the measurables and potential, and Romeo would be a perfect choice at #18.

No need for NCAA working group – cash for student-athlete brands is fair

Zion Williamson made a lot of money for CBS, ESPN, Nike, and Duke. For that, he received the privilege of a free year of education at Duke. That is absurd.

The NCAA announced yesterday it is forming a working group to discuss how college athletes might be able to control and monetize their likeness.

I can save them some time and effort.  Just say yes.  The answer is self-evident in the utterly corrupt and morally bankrupt answer to the question at the center of the debate:  Why has the NCAA prohibited football and men’s basketball players from profiting from their likeness?

Because it means more money for the schools.  It’s a matter of greed.

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Greed is at the center of all debates regarding athletes earning money – either from their likeness or as university employees.  Money for players comes from a fixed pool of resources that are currently allocated to coaches, administrators, and other departments.  More resources for athletes = less resources for everyone else.

That’s simple math.

The argument against allowing athletes to monetize images and likenesses is slightly more nuanced than straight up basic math because it would allow boosters the opportunity to pay athletes on top of the table rather than under it.  More boosters would equate to a greater opportunity to earn, and as a result the chasm between huge programs and those at small universities would grow.

There would also be a potential for rifts between players on the same roster.  Big name guys would get paid while those at the end of the bench would struggle.  A class system would develop, and that’s yet another pain in the ass for coaches to manage.

Plenty of reasons exist for not changing the system, and only one in favor of allowing the market to prevail – because it is fair.

Americans have a equal opportunity to create wealth – or at least there is not a legal prohibition against it – except in college football and men’s basketball.

Allowing student-athletes to monetize their brands is reasonable even if some of the consequences of that policy change will cause chaos within the collegiate athletics business model.

The answer to almost all of life’s questions can be found somewhere in The Godfather trilogy, and for the answer to whether student-athletes should be allowed to profit from their brand, I turn to Don Barzini who in a meeting of the heads of the five families in The Godfather famously said, ”

He must let us draw the water from the well. Certainly he can – present a bill for such services. After all – we are not Communists.

Replace “he” with “the NCAA”, and we arrive at the nut of the issue.

College athletes should not be immune to our capitalist economic principles just because they are athletes, and just because it benefits coaches and administrators.

John Beilein leaves Michigan – takes Cavs job; he will be missed

Hate to see John Beilein leave Michigan.

Indiana and Purdue fans should be happy John Beilein is leaving Michigan to become the next coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers, but I’m not.

Beilein coached the Wolverines for 12 seasons, won four Big 10 titles, and qualified for two Final Fours.  He’s unquestionably one of the five best coaches in college basketball, and had earned an extension last year that renewed each year to give him a five-year cushion.

At 66, I guess it was time for Beilein to accept this challenge, if coaching in the NBA was a bucket list item.  I wish him luck, but I loved him in the Big 10.

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The Big 10 has long been the best coached conference in college basketball, and I’m sure Michigan will hire someone deserving of the job, but Beilein seemed to belong there.  He made Big 10 Basketball better for his presence, and he made Michigan more fun to play against.

Michigan played a unique style that allowed Beilein to succeed without recruiting the kind of talent targeted by Duke and Kentucky, but still sent many players to the NBA.  It always seemed like Beilein was a step ahead – even when his roster seemed bereft of championship level talent.

Hopefully, Michigan can hire a coach equal to Beilein’s quality so beating them remains fun.

LeBron James coming to Pacers? Here are four reasons it shouldn’t happen – four more it should

The decision to deal for LeBron James is easy – he’s good for cash flow and bad for basketball.

Rumors are swirling that the Lakers are looking to deal LeBron James only one year after he signed a four-year deal as the foundational rebuilding piece for the formerly proud franchise.

One of the teams being discussed as a destination for James is the Indiana Pacers because the Pacers have $45 million in cap space.  That rare cap friendly number will compel media trolls to advance the Pacers as a potential trade partner throughout the NBA’s silly season.

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Here are four reasons the Pacers will not be among the suitors for James:

4 – James repels free agents and coaches.  More players and coaches would choose not to play with or coach James than he would attract.  When James presence meant an automatic punched ticket to the NBA Finals, putting up with his self-indulgent circus was worth it.  The Lakers have been turned down by an ever growing list of coaches they courted.  They are interviewing former Pacers coach Frank Vogel – that’s how non-coveted this gig is.  I love Frank, but he’s not exactly seen as a successor to Gregg Popovich as the best coach in the league.

3 – The Lakers won 38 games with James.  Not only does James’ presence not guarantee a trip to the NBA Finals anymore, it doesn’t even guarantee a winning season.

2 – The tariff will be immense.  The Lakers are not simply going to give away James.  A deal with the Pacers would likely have to include several current players and multiple first round picks to get the fading superstar.  The Pacers currently have Victor Oladipo, Domas Sabonis, Myles Turner, Aaron Holiday, TJ Leaf, Edmund Sumner, Doug McDermott, and Davon Reed under contract.  Go ahead and try to put together a deal for James the Lakers could stomach without gutting what currently exists on the roster.

1 – James will be 35-years-old in December.   James has entered the declining years of his career.  With the Lakers in 2018-2019, James played fewer games and scored fewer points than during any season in his career.  He may have a great year left, but he’s in the 4th quarter of his great career.

Here are four reasons the Pacers should trade for James:

4 – Media exposure.  ESPN and other national networks talk about the Pacers just about as often as they do the Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets, and Orlando Magic – which is to say never.  With James, the Pacers would have their own ESPN correspondent.  James would bring a temporarily bright spotlight to the franchise.

3 – Tickets.  As much as Indy loves Vic, they would play a hell of a lot more to watch one of the best players in history – even in his twilight. Sellouts would be routine at Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

2 – Merch!  All of a sudden, those dopes running around in James Cavs, Heat, and Lakers jerseys would dig into their wallets to buy Pacers swag.  James has sold tens of thousands of Lakers jerseys, and while Pacers gear does not have the international cache of the Lakers, James would make it cool immediately.

1 – Great way to hit rock bottom in two years.  If the Pacers dealt for James, they would likely deal him after two years of residence in Indiana.  With the assets needed to acquire him gone, and James gone as well, the Pacers would crater.  They could have several opportunities to draft in the upper levels of the lottery – plus a virtually bottomless pit of cap space.  If the Pacers want to sink fast, this gets it done while simultaneously building brand value.

There is no chance the Pacers make any deal for James because under Simon Family ownership have always operated with an eye toward being the best team they can be each season.  Trading for James is for franchises interested in a cash grab.

The Pacers are way too responsible to wade into the murky waters where James can be caught.

Here’s one more great reason the Pacers won’t trade for James: they aren’t idiots.

Addison Russell’s return to Wrigley Field means I won’t be back

Addison Russell was booed yesterday in his return to Wrigley Field. I wouldn’t boo – I wouldn’t be there.

I love Wrigley Field and the Chicago Cubs, but not as much as I loathe domestic violence.  I have no time nor money for those who torment women physically and psychologically.  None.  Period.

Cross that line, and I am done with you.

I don’t know what else to do with my dissatisfaction for domestic violence perpetrators.  They are a pox on our society, and I will never allow them a place in my life.

When Addison Russell was recalled by the Cubs yesterday, my wallet went back into my pocket, and there it will stay until Russell is gone.  I won’t go to Wrigley Field, buy Cubs swag, or make even a tiny investment in Cubs related merch.  Done.  Adios.  Goodbye.

For those unaware of the issues that led to Russell’s suspension, click here to read about the emotional and physical abuse he inflicted upon his ex-wife.

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The Cubs choice to continue to employ Russell is either a good-hearted effort to aid him in his recovery, or a refusal to part with a valuable asset who started at shortstop during their World Series run in 2016.  It’s likely a bit of both.

That decision benefits Russell at the expense of the organization and its fans, and opens the Cubs to criticism by those who see them as tolerant of an abuser, but I’m not here to judge the Cubs as an organization.

I’m simply announcing my refusal to financially support a team featuring a guy who tormented his then wife and at least one other woman, according to their own disturbing accounts.

And I’m not a fan of those who boo Russell every time he comes to the plate either.  Russell didn’t decide to employ himself.  If you loathe Russell’s actions, boo the Cubs as an organization for continuing to condone his behavior through his remaining in a Cubs uniform.  The best way to boo callous owners is by refusing to share your wealth with them.

People have to draw a line somewhere.  I’m drawing it with my wallet.

The Cubs did draw a line with a fan who flashed a racist gesture from a seat at Wrigley during a Doug Glanville segment on NBC Sports Chicago.  He has been permanently banned, and will be charged with criminal trespassing if he returns.  I love that.  I hate racism as much as violence against women.  Why the Cubs don’t ban Russell as they did the racist, I can’t explain.

Cubs fans deserve better – unless you are indifferent about domestic violence victims.  Then you are getting exactly what you deserve.

Colts rookie primer – if Colts rookie class plays like they talk, get ready to hang banners

Clockwise from top/left, the first four Colts drafted one week ago tonight – Rock Ya-Sin, Ben Banogu, Parris Campbell, and Bobby Okereke.

I don’t know whether verbal acuity can win a Super Bowl, but if it does, the Indianapolis Colts will be prohibitive favorites in 2019.

The first four picks of the Colts met the media today, and each was outstanding in expressing their feelings about joining the Colts and the challenges ahead of them.

As quick as wide receiver Parris Campbell was in running a 4.31 40-yard dash at the NFL Draft Combine, he’s even better at explaining his feelings about joining the Colts and playing with Andrew Luck.  One more thing about Campbell – he’s listed at 6’0″, but he’s definitely taller.  It’s rare we run into athletes who shave inches off their bio, but Campbell (unless he was wearing lifts) is 6’1″ or 6’1 1/2″.

Campbell spoke today about what he needs to work on, “I think the question kind of coming out was, ‘Can he run routes?’ Since I had never done it, everyone just kind of put a no on it. But I mean I’m not going to lie to you, it is something that I needed to work on just because I didn’t have experience. So that was kind of my main focus throughout that whole process. Then having a guy like Coach (Brian) Hartline at Ohio State, who is a technician, was great for me and great for my teammates. So just going in that was kind of my main focus.”

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Bobby Okereke is an Eagle Scout – literally an Eagle Scout.  The linebacker out of Stanford once interned for former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.  Can he play?  Who knows, but he can sure as hell talk.  The NFL doesn’t decide champions with a mock UN event, but I don’t think Okereke will have any difficulty quickly processing new defensive schemes.

Okereke on what he’s doing now that he’s here, “I mean obviously you go through the whole draft process to get to now so it’s fun to get the playbook in your hands and start studying and get on the field. Coach Flus (Matt Eberflus) is a great coach, intense and I am just excited to get better.”

Rock Ya-Sin is a cornerback who wrestled through high school at a level high enough to earn offers to continue at Virginia, Virginia State, and other schools.  He decided to play football at Presbyterian, where the program was shuttered prior to his senior year.  Coaches recommended he transfer to Temple, and one year later, here he is in Indianapolis.  That’s a guy who is no stranger to hard work and adversity.

Ya-Sin spoke about whether someone might have provided an example for how he can excel as a rookie, “I feel like Darius Leonard is somebody I look up to as far as his play style and knowing about him before this process. And just understanding that he came in kind of under recruited in high school and going to South Carolina State. Then getting drafted and coming in here and making a name for himself. I really respect what he did and that is what I am trying to do.”

Ben Banogu is a physical beast out of TCU, whose NFL Combine athletic measurables compare nicely with Justin Houston when he came out of Georgia in 2011.  He’s not as strong as Houston was, but his versatility should be an asset.  Like his other rookie classmates, he is quite capable of describing what he’ll face as a former Saturday stud launching a career as a Sunday warrior.

Here’s Banogu on whether he views himself as an edge rusher or linebacker, “Well, I mean I see myself as both. They draw stuff up on the board and I was dropping back in coverage and I looked fluid doing it. Over the span of post-TCU to getting here now, I’ve done a ton of drops and I’ve worked on my coverage game – obviously like setting the edge, rushing and stuff that I have always been doing. I’ve been starting to feel comfortable in it. I feel really good in it. Now it’s just kind of going out there and showing the coaches that I can do it at a high level.”

Colts need to thin the Ring of Honor herd – I start with Jim Harbaugh

Harbaugh’s 1995 season was worthy of a cover on a weekly magazine not a place of eternal honor.

Owner Jim Irsay announced last night that Dwight Freeney would be the next former Colt honored with membership in the team’s Ring of Honor.

No doubt Freeney is worthy.  A great sack artist during the 2000s, Freeney was the straw that stirred the Colts defensive drink during two Super Bowl runs.  He posted double-digit sack totals in seven of his 10 seasons with the Colts, and totaled 125 1/2 sacks during his career – 107 1/2 with the Colts.

Freeney was a three-time first team All-Pro and was named to seven Pro Bowls.  THAT is a Ring of Honor resume’!

Freeney will be the 16th honoree in the Ring of Honor, joining Robert Irsay (1996), WR-Bill Brooks (1998), Head Coach Ted Marchibroda (2000), OL-Chris Hinton (2001), QB-Jim Harbaugh (2005), “Colts Nation” (2007), Head Coach Tony Dungy (2010), WR-Marvin Harrison (2011), RB-Edgerrin James (2012), RB-Eric Dickerson and RB-Marshall Faulk (2013), C-Jeff Saturday (2015), General Manager Bill Polian (2016), QB-Peyton Manning (2017) and WR-Reggie Wayne (2018).

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That’s quite a group.  Actually, it’s two groups – those prior to Tony Dungy, and those after.  The Colts were a dominant team in the 2000s filled with a bunch of likable and excellent players.  All of those beginning with Dungy are or should be Pro Football Hall of Famers.  Those before are just a little bit different.

Some belong, and others – like Al Czervik in Caddyshack – don’t.

The time has come to thin the herd.  I would immediately dispatch “Colts Nation”.  That’s pandering to fans at a level that should humiliate everyone involved – even the fans it’s meant to honor.

Ted Marchibroda is never going to be mentioned among all-time great NFL coaches.  He had a brilliant offensive mind, but when experts are asked to name the top 10 coaches in NFL history, Marchibroda would never be considered.  But he led the Irsay-owned Colts to their two best runs (1975-1977 and 1993-1995, although 1993 and 1994 were not great).

Hinton and Brooks are OK.  Neither played their entire careers in Indianapolis, but the Colts needed to put somebody up there, and if not Hinton and Brooks, who?

That leaves Harbaugh, and he is clearly the least of the players in the Ring of Honor.  if we are going to start evicting occupants in order to welcome others, Harbaugh should be the first player to go.

His career in Indianapolis spanned four seasons (1994-1997), only 46 starts, and a completely mediocre 20-26 record.  The Colts improbable march to a thrilling AFC Championship Game after the 1995 season was important in the evolution of the city’s love of football and the Colts, but one shining season doesn’t warrant a position for Harbaugh alongside Peyton Manning, Marvin Harrison, and the rest.

The Colts Ring of Honor no longer needs to celebrate mediocrity, so it shouldn’t.