LO AND BEHOLD

Until now the blog offered 500 plus articles , access to my books, and updates and new edits.

Recently I posted MILESTONES. It features new articles since 2015. UNCLE BUNKY features an INDEX of MILESTONES. A major segment within MILESTONES, entitled THE REST of the STORY, concentrates on College athletics changes ( i.e. Portals and amateurism etc ) in general — and college tennis in particular. And, how technology changes the game.

ALSO : In cooperation with Barton College THE BARTON PROJECT is now available through the college website and Facebook/Barton College. This is a personal recounting of the college, the town of Wilson, NC. and eastern North Carolina from 1960-1985.

SEVEN MINUTES

Seven Minutes

The Intercollegiate Tennis Association ( ITA ) has just released a video on the history of American college tennis.  It can be seen on YouTube.   Seven minutes of the production deal with the complex issue of International players ( beginning at minute 53 to minute 60 ).  David Benjamin gives an accurate and fair summary of this conundrum.   

Personally I am grateful for the concern I have expressed starting in 1972 is history.

I have concluded that some amount of tennis scholarship  money should go first to  Americans.  How much ? 50% ?  As the film suggests–”…that is the question”!

In 1982,  having been voted down by the NAIA , I exited the meeting only to hear the NAIA CEO (Dr. Charles Morris )  whisper to me “….you are right, don’t quit “!

Once I questioned  my own persistence to a respected professional.  His adamant response was “… worth the effort? You’re damn right it is worth it.   It’s our children.  Child advocacy !”

The one point I take issue with is the suggestion only parents  were concerned and disappointed.   Young Americans are eliminated .  300 schools have dropped men’s teams for reasons Coach Benjamin cites.  Many  Coaches throughout the nation had nice local programs rendered unacceptable.  Fans and students say who cares?

Still American Parents and citizens write the checks.  

To have Parents and youngsters dismissed to go hunting for a fifth option for their higher education is not acceptable .

As mentioned the video can be accessed on YouTube. Or you can show it from the ITA website below:

I have included a letter to the ITA on this issue and others related

THE HISTORY OF COLLEGE TENNIS

The  History Of College Tennis and the ITA

I viewed with pride and appreciation the new video.  Everyone in College tennis in general, and small divisions in particular,  owes gratitude to David Benjamin.  

The NAIA, Division II, and JUCOS were where the influx of international tennis players began.  From 1970 to 1980 was our boom.  

Early on many of us wondered if this was the best thing for our schools and students and their families.  Many of us still do. 

We lost the argument even though a majority of ITCA coaches supported limitations.  Fear of a lawsuit frightened  some.  The diversity issue merited influence. 

I do take issue with the video on several points.  

The suggestion that there are many opportunities for American youngsters at high quality Universities and colleges ( with a sizable scholarship) is flawed.  Division I schools number in the hundreds before most of those have Americans with large grants for tennis.  Division II is almost totally international among its elite institutions.  Ditto for JUCOS.  Women too.  Don’t mention DIII with no grants, just price tags that create family debt for even wealthy families and students.  The ITA website now makes data available  that refutes  earlier USTA numbers.  

Paying the players will attract more and better internationals.   They will bump more good  American kids and lesser internationals.  Will the same happen with basketball with losers being mostly Black kids?  Really all “Global Sports” ( Golf, Soccer, Volleyball, Track. Etc.)?

Don’t we have a right to take care of our own?

Links below are lengthy articles I wrote on scholarships, portal and payments, Artificial Intelligence and college tennis , colleges to pros. 

Please relay my sincere regards to David Benjamin.  Tom Parham.

http://www.tompqrham.wordpress.com

A NEW BOOK?

New Book by Tom Parham?

No but–It is as long as a book.  MILESTONES is an index to writings, projects, collections, since the last revision of THE LITTLE GREEN BOOK of TENNIS (2015 ). 

Along with free access to all  seven previous books and 500 plus blog articles, there are twenty new instruction articles on the changing world of tennis. Plus 10 of the most visited coaching parts of the revised THE LITTLE GREEN BOOK of TENNIS.

A brochure that highlights SHOT DOCTORS.

A new section , THE REST of THE STORY, focuses on three recent developments that have an effect on college tennis in America: 1. The Portal and Likeness issues  2. Article Intelligence (AI) and 3. College tennis is becoming “ the minor leagues of Professional tennis!”

“WHOA, NELLY!”

REDSHIRT (Definition of an athlete staying out of college competition for a year to develop one’s skills and extend one’s period of playing eligibility: He redshirted last season

Most humans max out physically at about age 27 or 28, College freshmen start college at 17 or 18.

Aspiring professional tennis players have long been advised to not go to college.

A new scenario has emereged !

The first and main problem listed is described this way:

“… if you don’t start out with a trust fund, you’re stuck, especially for a sport like tennis that requires years of youth investment. This is a major, fatal disadvantage for American tennis. In Europe, South America and lately in Asia, kids from all social classes have a shot at a tennis career. If they show sufficient talent and motivation, there are numerous community organizations, government programs and general social assistance systems to help build up their careers, in part because these other societies strongly support investment in their youth. “

My inclination is to cite #1 as the core flaw to be dealt with.

Best current estimate for annual pro tour ? $100.000. PLUS A COACH! Big dogs now have a TEAM.

This hopefully covers travel , room. meals , coaching. facilities use, equipment. Stringing cost Borg $60K in 1980. Bottom line annual expenses – 200k plus. Average annual prize money ? About 25k.

Very few make the top 200, who about break even, The conditions are often horrible, lonely and dissapointing. One fine college player after trying the pro circuit said ” I got tired of eating mayonaisse sandwiches. You need about 3/4 years to develop physically”.

The galloping aullure of American College Tennis is attracting more and more, better and better potential pro players, who are betting on a different developmental arena.

College tennis is becoming the minor leagues of International tennis. 2024 was ample proof that that day is already here. And why not? Annual expenses? That is up to you. Great facilities and coaching, schedules featuring high quality match play. Fine practice partners (a team full ), not to mention a free college education. That most often is worth more than tennis.

And don’t forget- Pro tennis expenses come after years of very similar amounts of annual costs to be in the hunt.

The KICKER–The portal and likeness monies will make very lucrative possibilities for the best borderline international players. True too of the very top Americans. But only a few. Already the first year rumor mill is adrift with wildly questionable numbers and propositions being floated.

THE BAD NEWS IS A LOT OF FINE AMERICAN ASPIRANTS WILL BE IGNORED, And the same is probably true of many “global ” sports. Basketball, golf, soccer, volleyball, track and field are right behind. Tennis just got there first. See NEXT PLEASE ( https://wordpress.com/post/littlegreenbookoftennis.com/6105 ).

Currently college coaches go after the best players . Pretty simple. Earlier the players came from the student body. Then they recruited areas, then statewide, regionally, nationally, and internationaly. Now we are attracting elite players world wide. Is Mars next?

We have created a pathway only possible for the very best and richest, What about the majority of our kids?

THE CURRENT RUBICON

The NCAA holds it’s Convention in January. Changes are inevitable. Now is the time for wise choices that affect our children and our populace. Education, reason, health-physical and mental, sportsmanship , teamwork, on and on.

Do tennis players pay their own travel expenses?

The enormous and uncertain costs. PLAYERS ARE RESPONSIBLE for paying for their own transportation to and from tournaments, as well as the support staff who travel with them, including coaches and physios.Jan 17, 2023

“…as they start their journey toward the higher echelons of the tennis world. If we’re honest, prize money at this level is modest, with tournament funds typically totaling somewhere between %15,000 and $25,000. This is to say that the winner takes home anything from $2000 to $4000.

 ATP Challenger Tour saw players competing for prize money ranging from $36,680 to $156,240 per tournament, with approximately $21 000 going to winners on average. ( 2021 )

to qualify for Grand Slams, a player usually needs to be ranked amongst the 104 best players in the world, which is not an effortless accomplishment.

GOLLY PETE TONEY

JIM TONEY

* JULY 4, 1985.  AW LED ME DOWN A NARROW PATH WITH DOZENS OF CARS PARKED NEARBY.    OPENING.  TENNIS COURT, POND, HOUSE AND POOL.   EVERY ONE HAD EITHER TENNIS RAQUET OR A BUD DRAFT FROM  RH BARRINGERS IN HAND.  SOFTLY, BETWEEN INTRODUCTIONS,  DR WHITE WHISPERED,  WE NEED YOU TO MANAGE THIS TOURNAMENT.  I ALMOST WENT BACK TO WILSON.

IT WAS A HAPPENING.   AND RAISED A TON OF $ FOR  TENNIS SCHOLARSHIPS AT  ELON.   J.POWELL WAS  THE $,   LACY HALL WAS THE PARTY, JERRY TOLLEY WAS THE  DESIGNER.

OVER MY EARLY YEARS  TWO THINGS THAT EMERGED WERE A DEEP FRIENDSHIP WITH JIM TONEY,  AND A REALIZATION THAT A MAJOR INCARCERATION WOULD LIKELY ACCOMPANY THE TSHF DOUBLES CLASSIC.

HOW CAN WE REDIRECT THE  EFFORTS AND POWER OF THIS GROUP?

THE JIMS,  POWELL AND TONEY AGREED  LETS FOCUS ON KIDS.

THUS BEGAN THE ALAMANCE JUNIOR TENNIS FOUNDATION.   AND A DEEPENING KNOWLEDGE OF JIM TONEY.

HE CALLED ME TOAMY.  WE NEED A PLAN.  YOU GOTTA HAVE A PLAN.  A GOAL.

WE ESTABLISHED THAT OVER DOZENS OF LUNCHES ( A VEGETABLE PLATE AT BAKATIAS), OFFICE MEETINGS, DISCUSSIONS AT MATCHES OR ON THE PHONE. 

OUR GOAL WAS HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS BETTERMENT.   HE BOUGHT MY SUGGESTION TO FOCUS ON TENNIS FACILITIES.    THERE IT WAS:   WE WON’T QUIT UNTIL ALL SIX HIGH SCHOOLS HAVE  GOOD COURTS. 

AS WE DEPARTED I REMEMBER THINKING,  “…IF I STAY HERE TEN YEARS I MAY SEE THIS COMPLETED.   IT TOOK ABOUT A YEAR.”

ALMOST IMMEDIATELY THERE “TONEY SIGHTINGS”.    FROM JOE BARBOUR ( THE MAYOR ) , HAROLD OWEN ( RECREATION DIRECTOR ). AND  JOHN BOY WALTON ( DIRECTOR OF TENNIS ).

*COACH,  HE WAS WAITING IN MY OFFICE WHEN  I  GOT TO WORK.”

*HEY PARHAM, CAN YOU BACK YOUR BOY TONEY OFF A LITTLE?”

**TOM—I HEARD HE HAS MADE APPOINTMENTS WITH  THE SUPERINTENDENT,  ALL THE PRINCIPALS.    ADS, COACHES.   COMMUNITY LEADERS AND TENNIS PEOPLE.  GRANTS, MATCHING GIFTS.”

I SOON GOT A CALL FROM HAROLD AND JOE.    ESSENTIALLY THEY SAID  PARHAM YOU GOT THIS GOING.   WE MAY BUILD A CITY FACILITY AND WE WANT YOUR HELP.   SURE.   MORE  FUNDRAISING! 

ODDLY—NO MORE CALLS.    THEN I HEARD SOMEONE SAY IT LOOKED LIKE SOMETHING  WAS HAPPENING DOWNTOWN.  OK—THE CALLS WILL COME SOON.  NOTHING.  3 WKS LATER I’LL RIDE DOWN THERE AND SEE IF THE GROUND IS READY.   BURLINGTON TENNIS CENTER.   NEARLY DONE. 

 I LOOKED OVER AND THERE WAS TONEY.  HE SMILED.

THAT LASTED A  DAY.   I WANT TO DO CUMMINGS HIGH SCHOOL NEXT.  I WANT TO MAKE SURE THOSE KIDS HAVE TENNIS.

SO, WE WANDER AROUND THERE, WALKING OFF THE AREA, WHAT NEEDED MAJOR REPAIR.   NEXT, THE WALKERS LED  WESTERN ALAMANCE. TO SIX  BEAUTIFUL COURTS AND GREAT TEAMS.   

“NOTHING LIKE THAT GONNA HAPPEN AT SOUTHERN!”   OH  YEAH?  TELL THAT TO ELANOR JOHNSON AND A MRS BONNIE MARROW WHO WRITES A 50K CHECK FOR  THE PATRIOTS TENNIS COURTS.

JOHN WALTON AND I SHOOK OUR HEADS IN AMAZEMENT.   IT WAS FRIDAY –WE WERE THROUGH. 

MONDAY AM —JOHN BOY.  Coach—you ain’t gonna believe this.    WE NEED MIDDLE SCHOOLS TEAMS.   ALL COME TO BTC  4 MATCHES AT A TIME.  INSTRUCTION.    COACH THERE IS NO MIDDLE SCHOOL PLAY IN THE ENTIRE STATE.

THEY MADE  A GREAT PICTURE OF 85 KIDS AT MIDDLE SCHOOL TENNIS DAY.

 HOLD THAT THOUGHT AND BACK UP SOME 30 YEARS.   ROBERT AND TOM REGISTER HAVE BURST ON THE  JUNIOR TENNIS SCENE  IN A FLURY OF RACKET THROWS AND SALTY LANGUAGE.    AN ACKNOWLEDGED FINE  ADULT  PLAYER OFFERS TO PLAY WITH THEM.   ONE BROTHER SUGGESTS “…HAVE YOU NOTICED HE NEVERS SAYS ANYTHING BUT GOLLY PETE , TONEY,  WHEN HE MAKES AN ERROR?

“WISELY THEY AGREE TO ADAPT HIS POLICY.   ONLY “GOLLY PETE TONEY” FROM THE REGISTERS.   NOT ONLY THAT IT BECAME FAMILY VENACULAR USED IN BOTH ADULT HOMES.   SECOND NATURE.

FLASH BACK TO THAT OPENING MIDDLE SCHOOL DAY AS FATHER ROBERT TAKES MIDDLE SCHOOL DAUGHTER TO HER FIRST TENNIS DAY.    ROBERT WALKS ALEX UP TO THE COMMISIONER AND PROUDLY INTRODUCES ALEX TO MR. JIM TONEY.

AS THEY WALK AWAY ALEX ASKS HER DAD,  “…DADDY, IS THAT GOLLY PETE TONEY? 

THEY NAMED THE MIDDLE SCHOOL SPORTSMANSHIP  AWARD THE “GOLLY PETE TONEY “ AWARD”.  ALEX REGISTER WON THE FIRST ONE.

PEG WORDS AND ONE-LINERS



For Coaches

On Critics 

“Bullfight critics row on row,

Pack the vast arena full.

But there’s only one there who knows,

And he’s the one who fights the bull.”

From Michener’s “Mexico” 

******

Next to net play, the service return requires the most quickness. Good players “unweight” or bounce slightly to ready themselves.

You have to get wide, get low, and get ready. The first part of quick is ready!

******

Diversity: Coaches hitched on to the popular gravy train of “diversity”. Diversity in college tennis became an American with a large scholarship.

********

There are four corners on each side of the court. Two are up at the net.  Hint: Drop shots.

********

********

Service Returns

********

“OFF SEASON” ?

“There is no off season”

********

A NEW SHOT?

Watch this shot emerge as the next  “ old “emerging shot: THE TOPSPIN LOB.

********


I watched one of Coach Leighton’s varsity players use a forehand grip that violated much of Leighton’s fundamental thought. I asked, Are you gonna let him keep playing that way? He simply said, “Watch him hit it!” Boom, boom, boom! Then the Coach said, “if a flaw works don’t change it.”

********

 “Every match is preparation for another match.”
********

 If I taught a 2015 talented youngster I might suggest: 

You must change your western forehand to this universal grip to volley, hit most forehand approach shots, and short, low forehands.

Use a western grip for all deep forehand shots

Use the backhand to continental grip(s) for every other shot. It is the most versatile and functional grip.

********

Your knees are your elevators on low volleys. Right-handers – on your low forehand your right knee almost touches the court. Backhands, left knee.

********

Once Borg, when asked by Bud Collins to cite his most valuable tennis asset, replied simply, “legs!”

********

Golf Advice Only?

It’s the only thing written on his (Harvey Penick’s)  personal brand of golf clubs. “Take dead aim!” ThinkTarget.

********

Good Eye?

We adopted this policy: 1) In practice, if you have any doubt let it go and see if you are right. 2) In a match, with any doubt, go ahead and play it. Soon I could see our players use better and better judgment. We would occasionally let one drop in, but our percentage grew dramatically.

*********

—don’t have your finger in your ear and your mind in neutral
and miss the one-two of doubles.

********

THROWING ?

 If you think women are anatomically limited in throwing,

watch modern women’s tennis, or better still, collegiate women’s softball.

Zing!

********

Charlie Owens perfected a “just high enough” forehand lob down the line to force the net player to hit a lukewarm backhand overhead to his only logical cross-court target. Charlie would be there waiting for it with a  “passer.”

********

Volley Tip

This is an area in which American players and teachers could get better. For example, we are “spot specific” on passing shots, but on volleys many of our kids just sort of “bang it over on the other side.”

********

“Balance is the clue to good tennis, and footwork is the clue to good

balance” –Welby Van Horn.

*******

Two rally suggestions: (1. Hit ground strokes off the first bounce only. Second bounce hits are not legal, plus first bounce makes you hustle to the ball and hit some awkward shots. 2. There is no need to hit balls that are out of bounds. Just knock them down, or let
them go, and start a new inbounds rally.)

*********

Compare the “hit spot” for a backhand two-hander to a one-handed backhand slice.

*********

“Doubles is a one-two game”. “Double faults are double trouble in doubles”.

********

“YOU ARE COACHING THE WOMEN’S TEAM! “

Before I said anything, one young lady offered, “we are so glad we now have a man coach.” They all shook their heads in agreement. I didn’t agree and told them so. In my first “coaching” of women. I offered, “You wouldn’t mind a good woman coach. What you don’t want is a poor coach,

man or woman.” 

*********

MEN COACHING WOMEN? Men are from Mars; women are from Venus. How do you identify these
differences as far as coaching goes? The best source for a “crash course”
on the subject would be to consult Anson Dorrance’s book on the subject.

*********

BEGINNING FOOTWORK

  • Tennis starts in your eyes and brain and goes to  your feet and legs immediately.  Here is a beginning footwork drill for newcomers:  It is done without a racket or ball.  ONLY FOOTWORK.  And  mimicking several shots you will have to master.
  •  ALWAYS RETURN TO THE MIDDLE OF THEIR BEST SHOT, USING PROPER FOOTWORK-BEGIN WITH A QUICK WALK-LIKE FOOTWORK TO THE BALL. USUALLY SHUFFLE STEPS BACK TO CENTER.

*********

A “BIGGIE “

Teaching “killer instinct” is key. Ahead a service break? Get a second.

I think that the most vulnerable points are “ahead points,” 40–15 and

30–0. These are the points that 20 year olds lose concentration on, thus

allowing that “old sinking feeling” to reenter.

When ahead, keep the pressure off yourself by staying ahead.

********

THE TOUGH AREA

There are three main “parts” you have to coach: physical, mental, and

emotional. The emotional part is the toughest to deal with. However, there

are really only two villainous emotions: Fear and anger. And they are both

Self-directed.

*********

COLLEGE CHOICES—ANOTHER ANGLE?

Malcolm Gladwell’s new book, DAVID AND GOLIATH has an interesting viewpoint regarding one’s choice of institutions for pursuing higher education. He suggests being a

” big fish in a little pond” yields better results than the other way around. Being in the top third of your class breeds esteem, whereas being in the lower third (albeit a third with fine students) often discourages those who are always looking up at those who out-perform them.

*******
Some one said “… a tennis player is as strong or as weak as their weakest link, and the weakest link in tennis is the second serve.”

********


BORG’S SPEECH

BORG’S SPEECH

Borg taught a magnificent lesson one day on TV. Having just beaten McEnroe in “the greatest match ever” I watched commentator Bud Collins interview the Wimbledon Champ. Collins asked Borg how he did it? Borg, stoic as ever said simply: “legs.” Nothing more. Collins had several minutes in his hands and rambled on in a commentary I don’t remember. 

Then, Borg, having thought some, took the mike from Bud. His comments were: 

  1. I was very nervous inside 
  2. I thought, surely I will lose. 
  3. I told myself, I must put these thoughts out of my mind. 
  4. I will not quit under any circumstances. 

End of clinic. Pretty good advice for a lot of areas

A PIVOTAL MOMENT FOR AMERICA

A PIVOTAL MOMENT FOR AMERICA

The NCAA holds its annual convention in January. 

Good luck!   No one has a clue.

My hope is that the powers that be use this opportunity wisely.  One possibility I hope  will be considered.

And I have gathered support  that is  collected and compiled within the link below.  

There is no simple answer.  But big changes are a surety.  Hopefully  wise pivotal moment legislation.

First—the Short Version—

2024 will be a watershed moment for sports in America.  Ideally  the NCAA will set in motion changes that enhance the traditional joys and benefits of sports, but also a vocational pathway to reward talent and effort.

THE SECOND MOUNTAIN

The data below is a  pot-pour-ri  of related thoughts”

*  “ Well, he hands you a nickel, and he hands you a dime

And he asks you with a grin, if you’re havin’ a good time”

(MAGGIE’S FARM—Bob Dylan ) 

I grew up in small towns in North Carolina,  Yet in a state with a large black population I never had a close black friend.  Even through college.  In eastern NC.   Eastern NC had a lot of crops ( mostly tobacco, cotton. )  While those jobs are greatly diminished the workers are largely still there. And their children.   In no small part these were the first black students, most were athletes,  that I knew,  (* see appendix.)

So many are great people.  Adversity made strong people and tough athletes.   Still I wonder how many were missed. 

My reason for this article stems from my hope that the new NCAA rules will help even more have opportunities.   How ?  Now is crucial window of opportunity for higher education through athletics  to broaden current avenues and new ones.  How? This is what makes the January 2024 NCAA convention crucial for these youngsters.

HOW?  Not many of these kids are passionate about classical Greek literature.   But they know sports.  Is that wrong ?   

There are tons of vocations in sports already in place.  If we elevate the status  of sports done right,  can we grow a job market that many sports minded can pursue with logical success in the future.  

What’s wrong with a SPORTS major in Higher Education,  Many exist already and just need some publicity and dignity attached.  

 Next month I hope a lot of thought goes into helping this large and worthy population.   Find them, make rules to help them.  Make sports a vocation of real worth. 

*  TIME FOR A RAISE

  • Even after slavery was abolished the roadblocks were manifold.  Granted all poor people were limited but African-Americans were singled out. —-(From a George Will book) — At one time education was literally and legally impossible.  THERE IS NO TELLING HOW MANY INDIVIDUALS  married into wealth.  Illegal for Black men or women.  

BRAINSTORMING

  • Grants vs loan

One issue  is student debt.  Administrators, Athletics Directors, all coaches, should clarify whether the athlete’s  “package “ of money is defined (grant or loan ?). A lot of deception occurs  here.  And a lot of crippling,  unpayable  lifetime  debt.  A clear, stout rule in 2024 —-NCAA!

 *  Reading to education to scholarships, to degrees to jobs to family wealth ? 

How then. to professional sports salaries?

** Or when does childhood play evolve, or morph , into work,   to a profession.  Even a dangerous one?

*When does supply and demand  enter?

  • Is it worth less if it is fun ? Or that so  many aspire?
  • Can you limit market value?
  • Is higher education wise to entertain the public ?
  •   Insurance for the gifted ?
  • “…elite institutions have entered into an athletic arms race that has pulled them from their core educational missions.”
  • As Rahm Emanuel, the former White House chief of staff under President Barack Obama, once famously said, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”
  • Education and the Market mix ?
  • We are weeks away from TV college basketball.  Last year ( 2023) none of the players were supposedly paid;   The schools,  the networks,  coaches, trainers, vendors, refs all were paid.   What if Cinema didn’t pay the actors. Or Broadway?  Mr. Eastwood, “…all employees are paid minimum wage on this film.” 
  • No one has all the answers.  The country is mulling the sports world over.  Most think their opinion should rule,  But it is time to change some major rules,  

*SQUARE PEG INTO A ROUND HOLE?  

  • Look at the stands during Michigan football games,  or Kentucky men’s basketball crowd.  Then the field or court.  
  • WHO IS IN THE SKYBOX VS WHO IS ON THE FIELD ?

SUPPLY AND DEMAND  ?

When a former Duke basketball player ( Dick Divcenzo ) suggested college players should be paid,  he was deemed a radical. 

The old guard concluded “.. .Hell, he gets a scholarship”,  while administrators quietly deemed it unaffordable.  

2023-24.  THINGS HAVE CHANGED

LIKENESS, PORTALS, NCAA  PROBLEMS

Pay or Punt ?  PAY WHO? PAY HOW?  WHO PAYS? SEZ WHO?

*SQUARE PEG INTO A ROUND HOLE?  

SCENE:  A COURTROOM. JUDGE :  You get the legal maximum—twenty years.

CONVICTED :  But Judge, if you give me 20 years I’ll die 

in jail !

JUDGE:  Well—-do the best you can.

*****         A random library choice led me to THE SECOND MOUNTAIN  by David Brooks. The two main ideas seemed first,  a “mountain”  of self interest. .  The second  mountain’s orientation—selflessly help others !  Hmmm!

Published in 2019, the book hit an incidentally current chord with me.  

Many have said if you love your job you never have to work.  And I did  love coaching.  Retirement and physical limitations  led to “hobby writing”,  

Surprisingly blogs and books flowed.   I knew tennis—help the high school coaches and teams!  Save some college tennis scholarships for Americans ?  I’m all in.  Serious ideas?  Hell yes!

Save the Middle  East?  World peace is above my pay grade,  

But the same old problem nagged at me.

Most adults wonder what if they had chosen another profession.  I think at 8 or 9 I was coaching (sort of) and  always enjoyed the choice of this high calling.   

And what a time period to be in the athletic world, even at the small college level.  Title IX, steroids, weight training, academic standards, TV,  alignment.  By far the most volatile—Integration. Early 60’s teaching  in eastern North Carolina——lots of worry about drugs and Vietnam.  While worthy opponents,  I advised to watch drinking and driving as of major concern.  And Racism.

 *Reality 1965 : Jackie Robinson, et. al. vs sports history is now.  What kind of kids are these ?  Hey— these are good people.  They need help.  I voted for altruism.   Mostly simple advice  and experience rendering of a new world  ( the talk on the radiator,  finding a dentist,  your kids and reading).  “Your job is to advance your family one generation.  Your children should EXPECT to go to college!”

******** Allow me one last personal experience.  I was given an award at athletic banquet at Barton College.  While I certainly appreciated this recognition, the moment that touched me was at the end.  After the banquet several people came by our tablet to speak.  I try to always be courteous to everyone.  After a few minutes I noticed a Black woman waiting patiently to the side.  I did not recognize her immediately.  After the others went their way we addressed each other.  I listened to her opening comment : “ Coach Parham , you probably don’t remember me.” 

 I quickly headed her off.  “ I can’t call your name but I can tell you that  you made an “A” in the tennis class you took from me.”

She looked puzzled—then spoke.  “Well yes you did  and I didn’t deserve it.  But  I am glad I can thank you and  tell you about that time.”  Other than athletes there were few “average” Black women attending the college.  She was struggling  with being in this strange environment, which became more difficult in a class of white kids, many of whom had some tennis background.  “My feelings of isolation had increased and I truly had about decided to quit college. The same day you called me aside after class.   You gave me some extra minutes of personal instruction on my tennis serve—about which I hadn’t a clue.  You told me to practice some at the lesser used and more private courts near the gym.   And you gave a bucket of tennis balls and a racket.  You also seemed to sense my unhappiness and gave me some encouragement as well as some kind words.   I came here tonite to tell you that I went back from that class and decided no to quit.”

She went on to tell me she had graduated and gone on to a full career and although tears were in our eyes , what was going through my head was how grateful I was that i’d had enough sense, early in career to be kind  to this young woman.

Momentarily I told her not to feel she didn’t deserve an “A”in this strange class.  “Do you know why you deserved that grade?

My syllabus stated the high priority I placed on attendance and effort  I arrived at work at 8am  each morning.   After our conversation I watched you at the courts near the gym, early in the morning, practicing your serve .

Your serve got pretty good.”  ( From A LEVEL OF THINKING by Tom Parham ).

*********WHY TEACH AND/OR COACH   (  An earlier Blog )

You never know who you’re influencing when you coach.   The same was true for teaching in college.   Formal classroom or just talking to kids.

A basketball player named Damian Carter appeared in my doorway one day at Elon.   He said he rode up and down I-85 often and had planned to stop by many times.

He was in his forties, had been a pretty solid player at Atlantic Christian, having transferred from UNC-Wilmington.   At Wilmington he hadn’t played as much as he wanted.   The same was true at ACC later on, and he found his chances of pro ball weren’t going to materialize.   He was about to quit college though his grades were good.

I don’t remember the specific conversation with Damien, but it was one of fifty I’d had with basketball players.

It went like this:

  1. Are you the first from your family to go to college?   Often the answer was yes.
  2. You’re not going to make $100,000 playing pro ball, you understand?
  3. You can get your degree and get a very good job.   People are looking for athletic people with degrees.
  4. Your job is to elevate your family and its expectations one generation.   Put your money in compound interest, and expect your children to go to college.

I agreed with Damian that that was the gist of what I advised the “first kids.”   Damian smiled and added, “Coach, my two daughters have college degrees, and I’ve got a million bucks in the bank!”   Compound interest.

*Much has been written about the “Black athlete.” There is no question in my mind about the talent level of these athletes.

Coming from the South and being a minister’s son there was little question, early on about God. Certainly, in my mind, he was male, white, and looked a whole lot like Santa Claus. Surely too, he was lovable, kind, and simply good “supreme being.”

After watching sports in America the last forty years my guess about God’s nature is more Machiavelian.   After watching America make a religion out of sports, while at the same time mistreating the black population so badly, I picture God’s role differently. My guess iswe’ve put so much emphasis on sport he’s peeved. Think not? Watch where parents are at 11:00 am on Sunday’s if their child is in a soccer match. Hmm? Did God say “I’ll give these fanatics a dilemma!” He then put this glorious athletic talent in many of the Black population, and now he’s “up there” giggling at what America is doing with sports.

Please don’t get me wrong. The Black athletes have paid their dues in practice, injury, and sweat just like anyone. Probably more so.

Still -” “…they got the “A” bands .”

Integration caused a lot of headaches in the alignment of conferences, etc. Who plays and who you play, is important, and alignment turned things upside down.

I do believe Proposition 48 (the academic guidelines for collegiate eligibility) yielded a lot of good. I wonder about the S.A.T. and fairness, but it is a “hard” number.  Read DAYS OF GRACE by Arthur Ashe. 

My guess is the best barometer for academic success is the athlete’s class rank. With exceptions, most of those who could achieve class rank had enough ability to succeed.

******Malcom Gladwell says reading lovingly to every child is indispensable. Without this parental effort failure is imminent.

********Pat Conroy from MY READING LIFE: “…if anyone knows a more important profession than teaching i wish they would let me know what it is before I die.”  

**********A fellow coach once suggested, “…the NCAA should be limited to 10 rules, and if they add one they have to eliminate one.

************PORTALS AND POTHOLES (2022 )

*******Even the pros have a salary cap.

Was it Southern California that recruited twenty plus PORTAL footballers? Does that equate to that many legit freshmen who didn’t get that scholarship/ opportunity? How many times did this happen in all football programs combined? All sports? How many closed doors to the high school class of 2024?

For years football coaches have often recruited unhappy players from other teams. Or those who can legally transfer and play at a different school. The new NCAA “Portals Rule ” has jet streamed this strategy. One of the sad side effects of “Portals ” is that high school seniors are overlooked for older and seasoned upperclass college kids.

My guess is that this avenue will be adopted by  American college tennis. And it will undoubtedly involve international players who can now easily move to “greener pastures.” American high school aspirants will be moved down the prospects list, or be dismissed even quicker.

******** “…it’s time for cool. cool change.”

********** MAYBE NOT!

Money will dictate a ”Power 5” style membership.    Division III may still play without athletic grants.  Will the groupings in the middle be determined by the level  of financial limits each school chooses?

HAZARDOUS DUTY PAY?

PRESCIENT ?

1976 James Michener wrote SPORTS IN AMERICA. He made the statement then “…I might allow my child to play football, but I wouldn’t encourage him to play.”********

How many over matched youngsters get hurt in these games? One player said “…our coach would give OUR lives for the school!”**************

The consolidation of schools eliminated many of the smaller players.  African American footballers were added to the talent pool, along with weight programs, better diets, and better coaching, and in many instances steroids.  Tremendous contact ensued.

And while college and professional football are in the crosshairs of violence, perhaps high school footballers are even more vulnerable. And here is why: the weak and small and slow are eliminated at the college level.  But in many high schools small youngsters, who are very limited players, may face tremendous opponents that wouldn’t be admitted to college. These guys hitting the “canon fodder” can create catastrophe.

JR HIGH FOOTBALL DISPARITY— 125 lbs pre-puberty vs 250 pounder.

********** NCAA MEN’S BASKETBALL 2023 ( 26 )

ON MARCH 23, 2023 BY ETHOMASPARHAMIN E. SPORTS COMMENTARYLEAVE A COMMENTEDIT

“Senor, Senor–can you tell me where we’re heading, Lincoln County or Armaggdeon ?”  B. Dylan

—- “People get all caught up in the coaching and all that stuff. It’s Dudes ! You’ve got to have players, and these Dudes put in the work !” Kansas State Coach, Jerome Tang.

—Soon ? Concealed carry in the game?

—Coach Boeheim–on St. John’s hiring of Rick Pitino : “He has coached forty years. That is not a lot of trouble for that long.”

*  I took my wife , a Canadien,  to her  first college basketball game.  After the game she asked “ …is there a  gym somewhere full of  Black people watching white kids play.

***************

********CAN IT  WORK ?   (1960’S POSITION— (  ‘…you can’t legislate morality “” )

********* Oh yeah——-Ask these Women about 

TITLE IX

2019 on Athletics in the USA  

World Cup soccer competition began in 1930. The United States men have never won it. Soccer is more widely played world-wide than any sport.
Title IX was implemented in 1970. The World Cup for women began in 1991. Our women have won twice. No other country has a “Title IX”.   Sports and sociology go hand in hand.

************ON PROXIMITY

Vans, buses, and planes with loads of college kids are dangerous enough.  Add severe weather often experienced due north, to inexperienced, or young, or ambitious coaches and players, and a recipe for tragedy looms.

   ***********Ask Campbell University’s  coaches, who just “came in from the cold!”   They were in a league with teams in 11 different states!   How is that a reasonable conference?   Maybe it’s just me, but I loved the “southerness” of the Southern Conference.   No need to fly anywhere. Believe me, with no TV revenue, and travel out the wazoo, these programs and people take big blows.

***********Radical idea?–Carolina, State, Duke, Wake Forest, Appalachian, and East Carolina all play each other? ps-UNC Charlotte will be ready soon. Western Carolina Univ. No flying required, football or women’s volleyball.  Anybody.

******* Football has got to change the frequency of concussions.  Or lawyers will break anyone who charges to see the game.

********  Women’s and girl’s soccer must create rules and training  that drastically reduce anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) knee injuries.

*********When annual college/university costs exceed $70,000 per year, what sense does a “liberal arts” degree make? 

******** Every time an Incorrigible is recruited, selected, hired, etc., a good kid will be eliminated, or cut, or not given a chance. Same for coaches, administrators, owners, all the way up and down

  ********** ON DRUGS :  If the top (pro sports) demands usage,  the news will flow to the bottom (even children’s sports).   Hopefully parents will guard their kids,  but some have turned a blind eye or even encouraged the madness.   Sanity is the only hope…

*********** “The mystery masked man was smart

He got himself a Tonto

‘Cause Tonto did the dirty work for free

But Tonto he was smarter

And one day said kemo sabe

Well, kiss my ass, I bought a boat

I’m going out to sea”

( IF I HAD A BOAT )  by Lyle Lovett )

ACKNOWLEDGING  ( Some new friends,  students , players, coaches, that taught me.  Thanks. 

I don’t remember any real relationship with Black persons until I began teaching and coaching in the fall of 1964.   That year Henry Logan became the first Black basketball player in our North State Conference.  As an assistant varsity basketball coach I helped recruit Clifton Earl Black and James Jones from nearby Pinetops, N.C. the next year.   Below I have listed some who followed.  Mostly students , I thought I was teaching THEM.  First athletes were all American males.  Then- young women, internationals of both genders, coaches and colleagues.

Atlantic Christian College changed the school name to Barton College  (1959-63 as a student, 1964-1985 as faculty ). 

NEW BULLDOGS AND FRIENDS:  Cliff Black, James Jones, Richard Battle, George Bell, Rafael and Tyra Boyd, Kathy Wall, Shelia Keel, Annie Mae Wooten, Damien Carter, Sarah Leonard , Lorraine Riley, Speedy Ganor, Tony Barriteau, Elfateh Eltom,  Sharhabil Humeida. Lorenzo Jones, Stan Lewter, William Bogues, Bobbie Edwards, James Leggett.

Elon ( !985-2004 )  John Bradsher, Tony Settles, Gino Mc Rea,  Frank and Mae Haith, Richard Evans , Dwayne Clark, Derrick Moore, Chris Smith, Harry Burroughs, William Massenburg,  Ann Lashley, Leo Barker, Grady Williams,  Mike Howell, Larry McClain, Steve Ferguson, Arketa Banks.   And my assistant coach Bryce Holmes. Helping administer Football was new to me,  The football players at Elon really helped me.