Friday, April 3, 2015

Arnie Ball leaves legendary mark



I don’t really take the time to write much anymore just to write. But this strikes me as one of those things that I really need to put fingers to keyboard about.

Tomorrow night, April 4, I will sit in Hilliard Gates Sports Center for about the 200th time in my life and I will watch Arnie Ball coach for the final time. Ever.

It is, deep down, mind boggling on about every level. Ball is, more than anyone ever has been to me, the single biggest representation of IPFW. Not volleyball, not coaching, not athletics; Arnie Ball is IPFW.

I was an eighteen-year-old freshman the first time that I ever saw a men’s volleyball contest. It seemed like an odd idea to me when I stepped foot into the Gates Center to cover a match. I don’t remember who they were playing or even if they won that day in early 2003, but I was enthralled. The way that Jeff Ptak and Matt Zbyszewski hit the ball with such velocity was a thing of beauty. I was sold on having the men’s volleyball beat.

Then I wrote a column for the IPFW student newspaper, The Communicator, that didn’t exactly make Coach Ball happy. So I covered men’s volleyball for a full season basically without any quotes from him, instead drawing on the likes of Zbyszewski, Serdar Sikca and Mike Daiga for my stories. But this isn’t about my relationship with Coach Ball, which was healed pretty quickly. Instead, it is about the legacy that he leaves behind.

Ball, simply put, has left a mark on every person he comes into any significant contact with. He taught me a lot of things as a young student writer that I wasn’t getting anywhere else. He wasn’t a journalism guy and couldn’t teach me how to write a lede or about AP style. But he also was the easiest and toughest interview I have ever had and because of that, perhaps my all-time favorite.

If one of my questions was too vague or too dumb, Arnie would answer. And his answer would be vague or unusable. See, for Arnie, if I couldn’t ask him good enough questions, why should he spoon feed me an answer? I don’t know if that was ever his intention or not, but it is how it worked on me. In his own way, sitting on the other end of the phone or of his office, Arnie coached me to become a better interviewer and challenged me to do a better job covering his team and his program.

It propelled me into some of my best stories I ever wrote for The Communicator during the 2006 season, watching the Mastodons break records, including for most consecutive wins and a trip to the Final Four in State College, Pennsylvania. The trip to State College to watch IPFW unsuccessfully challenge UCLA will always be one of my favorites when it comes to covering a sport. I watched the team grow and I grew as a reporter because of Ball’s willingness to keep me in the loop and interest in sitting down with me or being just a phone call away whenever I needed some last second thought.

What also made my time covering men’s volleyball at IPFW easier were the players. From all of the guys previously mentioned to CJ Macias, Brock Ullrich and Elon Fyfield, the players in the system have been nothing short of amazing to interview or simply to talk to. And that isn’t thanks to his coaching as much as it is to his recruiting. The reason that IPFW has been so successful on the volleyball court is because Ball, at least in my time watching the team, has recruited good kids who work hard to be the best but also don’t take life, or the sport, too seriously.

By the time I covered my last IPFW volleyball game in the spring of 2009, sitting down with Arnie in his office weekly on a Monday afternoon for 30-45 minutes became the regular. We would interview and we would just talk. In that time, much more mature than I was when I first met him at eighteen, Coach Ball became a good acquaintance. Back at The Communicator after a couple of years away from school, I really looked forward to nothing more than he and I’s conversations.

Tomorrow night will be surreal knowing it is the last time that I will see him coaching in that gym, on a court that will now be named for him.

In the world of men’s volleyball nationwide, Arnie Ball is a legend, widely respected by his peers. In my 15 and change years of journalism, there has been no story or interview subject that has left as big of an overall impression on me as Coach Ball. His candidness, his swagger, his ability to get the absolute best out of everyone he comes in contact with — they are all legendary.

And after tomorrow night, Arnie Ball Court, surely will never be the same again.