Tuesday, March 18, 2014

A technical situation

So over the weekend, I hit a coaching milestone. Not one to be particularly proud of I am sure, but a humorous one none the less. In the midst of a game coaching for Always 100 on Sunday afternoon, I was assessed my 10th career technical foul as a coach.

What stood out to me afterwards was the interesting point in what a referee’s line is. Do they always have the same line? Does it vary day by day? Coach by coach? I’ve been hit with some justified technical fouls and also with some, as this weekend was, humorous ones. My quandary after the game about what justifies a technical met up nicely with Duke’s Mike Krszyweski getting one that same day for throwing his dry-erase marker at the ground during a timeout and then being t’d up by a referee standing half a court away who Coach K has his back turned to.

As for me on Sunday, I was given the old ‘T’ sign with the hands after expressing my opinion to the official that perhaps he could go over to one of the adjacent courts in the field house where volleyball was taking place.

He didn’t even let me explain it was because in that sport, it wasn’t required for an official to call fouls. He didn’t take the time to think maybe I was just concerned with expanding his horizons in his secondary job of choice.

He also didn’t want to hear anything about the call he missed where an opposing player literally grabbed one of my player’s ankles with his hands to trip him right in front of the referee.

Nope, just a whistle, a hand gesture, told I was “done” and forced to take a seat.

Which has led me to think, with 10 under my belt now, how many technicals were actually justified in the traditional sense? Is it right to give a coach a technical for sarcasm? Maybe. It all depends on what your definition of “attempting” to “show up” the “referee” is.

Technical #1 came in 2006, almost seven and a half years ago at Huntington North High School while I was coaching the Fort Wayne North Side freshmen. It was the one and only time vulgarity was the cause of a technical. Using the word bullshit in a high school basketball game, probably not the best idea. But was it justified use of the word on my end? Of course. But this isn’t about my morality. Bullshit was mild when you look at the phrases and racial slurs slung at my players that day in Huntington North High School, the heart of hate. Especially when it was in direct response to the referee (yes I remember you Tim Enyeart) refusing to acknowledge my constant pleas to end the hateful remarks. But again, their morality, not mine. I’d do it again, but was the technical justified? Sure was.

Technical #2 came 13 seconds later for standing up. It is a no-no once the first technical was received. But considering it came with 15 seconds left in the game and I stood up to get a better angle on a loose ball and immediately sat back down, it sure wasn’t justified. Never the less, I was able to make an early retreat to the locker room where I had to listen to a midget Athletic Director with a complex act like he was relevant for a couple minutes.

It wasn’t again until 2011, amidst my first season coaching in Vinton that I received Technical #3. Since that game, I grew all too use to the horrible officiating in Roanoke County, especially of these guys I could only assume buy their VHSL official patches from the Goodwill. But back then, it was all too new. We were playing the 76ers in an overly aggressive game fully of fouls and beatings. Were we innocent? Probably not. But were we the worst? Nope. So after watching two players tumble to the ground going after a rebound and then see my player shoved while on the ground by the 76er on the ground, only to be ignored by the referee who was looking at them, I was hot. On the next defensive possession, more over aggression led to a hard foul on a 76er and my immediate assertion that they needed to call the game on both ends of the floor as the foul total for the half was now at 7 for us and 1 for them. Then came the whistle. Then came me sitting down and letting the referee know that if this wasn’t fixed then I was pulling my team off the floor because the officials were not taking care of any of the kids on either team and I wouldn’t put up with the dangerous environment. And then game Technical #4. I’d love to give the official the first one, but his lack of warning (I hadn’t, believe it or not, been mouthy up to this point) makes it a no go. And the second? Well he was just not level headed at that point. Protecting kids is technical worthy? Ok then. But remember this isn’t high school you are working.

To end the following season, again with the Vinton Blue Devils, I continued my early exit streak of “if you get one, might as well get two,” with technicals in the final regular season game, a meeting with the Hidden Valley Heat. As usual, the referees were having mental lapses and I was on them most of the game. The final straw came close to the end of the game when our point guard was called for a charge when he collided with a defender 4 feet behind the three-point line while they were both in mid air (our player was trying to make a pass). It was ridiculous. I said as much, though the specific words (unbelievable? terrible? ludicrous?) escape me at the moment. Justified on Technical #5? Not so much, but I also knew what my tone was going to be, so I knew I was getting one. And moments later, in one of my better off the cuff moments, I let Mr. Referee know “that’s the best call you made all day.” Whistle, T, Ejection. Justified of Technical #6? Yup.

I kicked off the next regular season ready to knock out my technicals with Technical #7. Maybe it was the referee’s assertion during the pre-game coaches meeting that “we (the officials) are basically volunteers,” and that as a reason we shouldn’t be hard on them. I’m no mathlete, but $25 per game (aka per hour) doesn’t really seem too volunteer to me. Especially since these meeting came after a lot of incidents during football season. But anyway, I was not thrilled with Ben Minton from the get go. What followed up was the usual amount of no calls and half-ass paying attention from the officials. This culminated, down by 1 point with under a minute to play when we got on a 1-on-1 fast break. This ended with an errant block attempt from the other team that ended up (unintentionally in my opinion) with a punch to our player’s forehead. He went down in a heap and in tears (this was a 10 year old after all), with no whistle and Mr. Minton staring down at the kid as he jogged back up the court with the play. He refused to stop play so I could check on the kid for a good 20-30 seconds, all of which I was heated. As I went to check on him, I lashed out back in the ref’s direction “see, this is why coaches get mad at referees.” Whistle time. Justified? Are you kidding me?

Now that I got that single technical out of the way and actually didn’t get ejected, I tried my hardest to be on my best behavior for the remainder of the season. That was until the Vinton Redskins played the Vinton Thunder, Technicals #8 and #9. A rough game with rough officiating that saw the Thunder coach also T’d up, we trailed in the final seconds of overtime by 3 when I called a timeout with the ball at half court. I let them know to inbound the ball to our best player and instructed him to put up a shot as soon as he felt contact. I knew this other coach and I knew that he would try to foul as quickly as possible to not allow us to shoot a three and potentially tie the game. By us throwing up the shot, I was hoping we would at least get three free throws and try to foil their plan. He did what I thought, met with one of their players basically tackling our shooter. He fired the shot, the referee called the foul and the bucket swished through. Barely over 2-seconds left and we were tied with a chance to win. Then after discussion between the referees (the one near the shot called the foul, the one in front of me on the other side of the court didn’t even blow his whistle), the call was overturned. The basket was no good. I emphatically urged to the referee who called the foul that he “couldn’t do this” as he walked to the scorers table to wave off the shot. It was to no avail and I lost my mind. Call it a rage blackout or whatever you choose; I don’t remember what I said to him. I heard a whistle and saw his hands. The game ended, we “lost” and I proceeded to let him know how ridiculous it was immediately after hand shakes. He let the scorers table know to mark me down for a second technical at that point, which I followed up with “put me down for 5, the game is over. And everybody in this gym just saw what you did.”

First one totally justified. Second one, highly questionable.

He didn’t put me down for 5. But those technicals earned me a 2-game suspension. Those are the breaks I suppose.

It was my last technical before Sunday and the last time I really lost it on a ref (if we exclude baseball umpires who don’t know that a ball bouncing in the dirt is not a strike).

At the end of the day, it comes down to this…what crosses the line? I have done way more to get one than I did Sunday. In fact, I have said way more and not received one. So I don’t think referees have a “line,” I just think they have agendas. In game agendas, against the coach agendas, life agendas, plan for the day agendas.

I joked with a parent after the game Sunday that our ref (always in a Duke hoodie) was too worried about the Duke ACC title game on TV and he didn’t want to be there. I joked. And then moments later realized that after the game, he left all of his stuff at the court and raced over to the snack bar to watch that game.

That was his agenda. And if that is how he wants to make some extra cash, he might as well go ahead and referee volleyball instead.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Redskins have solidified themselves as the best ever

The last time I wrote about Fort Wayne North Side’s basketball team, it was the day of the Summit Athletic Conference Holiday Tournament finals. In that blog, I compared them to the last team to win said title, in the 2006-2007 season.

North Side beat Snider that night on a thrilling buzzer beater. Since that time, they have gone 13-1 and improved their record to a state best 21-1 for the regular season. Their lone loss? A tough road match up where their two brightest stars sat out the vast majority of the first half in foul trouble.

Tonight, that same North Side team plays Snider again. This time, it is the opening round of Sectional play. 21-1 is nice and all, but a loss for either team tonight ends their season. And it ends a lot of careers.

For North Side specifically, this is the final run for four starts and their 6th man. Tonight and the remainder of their season will be all in for Tre’vion Crews, Mike Davis, Oosha Mitchell, Jeremy Jones and Myluv Sutton. But what stands out to me as we enter the postseason, no matter results tonight or down the line, is that this North Side Redskin team has every right to claim themselves as the best team to lace up their sneakers for the school since it opened in 1927.

Not just one of the best. They have the legitimate argument for THE BEST.

I am a North Side basketball purist. I may very well be one of the foremost authorities on the history of the program. I have loved to study the program since I was in school at North Side and carried over more strongly when I was a coach in the program between 2003 and 2008. And there have been some extremely talented teams: runs at state titles in ’33, ’55 and ‘65, the all-time winningest team in 1978, a state-ranked 1999 team that fizzled out too early and a trifecta of 15+ win teams from 2005-2007 at the peak of modern day local prep basketball.

What makes them possibly the best overall is hard to quantify outside of numbers. But those numbers do not lie. They will, no matter what, be the first team in school history to finish with less than 3 total losses. They will, no matter what, end with the best winning percentage in school history. 1978 be damned, North Side has already done almost everything better than that year, widely regarded as the best year ever.

When you look at “modern day” North Side, we can call it the post-By Hey era, there have been five really good years and two squads stand out the most before this group.

The 1999 team was ranked 7th in the state heading into the post season but faltered after a Sectional win. However that team, led by still professionally playing Vernard Hollins, set a standard for modern day North Side. Run and gun benefited this team greatly. Getting out on the break with Hollins, Quincy Rutledge, Tyone Little and Wes Williams was practically impossible for most other schools. And if they could slow the Redskins down, the 6’10’’ junior center Ross McGregor wasn’t exactly easy to stop when he wanted a basket or a rebound. They boasted the 5th best winning percentage in school history, complete with SAC regular season and Sectional titles. It was a blueprint, a foundation, as a high bar and stepping stone for other North Side teams in the post-By Hey Era.

Then from 2005-2007, North Side stepped all over it.

Never with a better record, but with one of the best three-year runs in school history, the Mike Novell coached squads (with a common denominator in Eshaunte “Bear” Jones) were the talk of the area at a time when the area was at its best. Every school had a strong piece or two at that point. South Side with Juston Hairston and Fred Ford, Snider with Marques Johnson and Ryan Sims, Concordia with Brandon Knox and Kyle Pressley, Harding with Evan White, DeAundre Muhammed and Pryce Underwood, Bishop Luers with Kevin Fogler, Bishop Luers with Cory Howard, Troy Amos, Lawrence Barnett and later Deshaun Thomas. Fort Wayne alone was the who’s who of prep basketball.

And North Side, win or lose, always stuck out. They overachieved into a Sectional crown in 2005, underachieved with only a conference regular season title 2006 and peaked early in 2006-2007 by winning the Holiday Tournament and never getting more than a sniff of any other crown from there on out.

All of these teams were good, but none do what this year’s team does: they quite frankly, are the epitome of consistency. You could break it down player by player as I have done in the past and this year’s team would win some and lose some. But as a team, as fun as those other teams were…could they handle this group?

Part of that is their maturity and part is how well they gel. North Side has the area’s best point guard (and in my humble opinion best player) in Tre Crews, the best inside presence in Mike Davis and a complimentary core of guys who would be the best player on any other team. And there are not egos. Well, I am sure there are egos, but they never show them. One guy may want the ball more than he gets it, but come game day, they show no cracks like that, no little nuisances that naturally inhabit high school teams. When it is game day, only one stat matters: that their side is lit up a little more brightly on the scoreboard, that their opponents cannot finish with more points.

The last time North Side played Snider, I thought they were playing to be the best in the program’s history to win that tournament crown. Tonight, they have nothing to prove. This North Side team is as good as it gets and they don’t have to prove that to themselves or anybody else.

The best part of that? I think they already know they don’t.