Archive | September 2013

Could this be the year for McCallie and Duke?

9781118087114_cover.inddTwo preseason polls for the upcoming NCAA Women’s basketball season have pegged Duke as the most likely contender to reigning national champion UConn this season. ESPNW and Lindy’s Magazine are both ranking Joanne P. McCallie’s team — which returns all of its starters from its 2013 season — second among their Top 25 picks.

These predictions will be tested early in the season, as Duke opens its regular season at California (ranked third) on Nov. 10. Then on Dec. 17, the Lady Blue Devils will host UConn (the favorite to repeat as champions).

At Duke, McCallie has consistently brought in some of the top recruiting classes — and this year is no different. But from the beginning of her career, recruiting has certainly been one of the keys to her success. Just as an example, McCallie had only been at the University of Maine for a year when she started recruiting Lawrence High School star Cindy Blodgett back in 1993. She knew the University of Maine was high on Blodgett’s list, but she worried that Blodgett might opt for a bigger, better school. McCallie knew that Blodgett wore black Nikes, so she got the shoe company to provide the Lady Black Bears with shoes and other athletic equipment

As most Maine sports fans know, Blodgett did choose Maine and helped reverse the fortunes of the Lady Black Bear program. The Nikes might not have been the difference, but that small detail shows just how little McCallie is willing to leave to chance – a philosophy embodied in the title of her book, Choice not Chance, co-written with Rob Rains in 2012.

The full title: Choice not Chance: Rules for Building a Fierce Competitor, positions the book as a primer for players and coaches. But Choice not Chance doesn’t read like a coaching advice book; it reads like a heart-to-heart conversation with McCallie as she recounts the highlights of her career, and reveals the thoughts, feelings, and occasional regrets that accompanied them.

The book takes readers behind the scenes of McCallie’s playing and coaching career. It’s full of details that those who followed her high school career and her UMaine coaching career will relate to. It also provides context for the decisions McCallie has made. For example, we learn that McCallie left Michigan State for Duke, not only because it was a positive career move, but also because she felt that Michigan State had treated her disrespectfully in contract negotiations the year before, and because she had considered attending Duke as an undergraduate. She also reveals the pivotal role that legendary Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski (who wrote the forward to the book) played in the interview process.

McCallie’s book transcends the label of “basketball book” when she writes about family. She is candid about the struggles and the angst of juggling a high-stress career as a college coach with the responsibilities of and the desire to be a good parent. She recounts how she was dealing with a miscarriage the day of Cindy Blodgett’s news conference announcing she’d been drafted by the WNBA. She also reveals how unprepared she was for the rigors of new parenthood, which landed her in the hospital suffering from exhaustion. She makes clear how important it is to have a partner to share the ups and downs of parenting and coaching with, as she gives props throughout the narrative to her husband John.

The most poignant parts of the book come when McCallie writes about how her choices affected the rest of her family. She recounts how upset her 13-year-old daughter Maddie was at leaving behind her friends in East Lansing when they moved to North Carolina. It wasn’t until Duke played Michigan State in front of a mean-spirited crowd in Lansing a year later, that Maddie really embraced her mother’s – and her own – new life.

The introduction is a heart-felt letter to Maddie, in which she reveals that the writing of this book is the fulfillment of a promise she made when Maddie was only 4. “I want you to understand my life, and in the process your life,” she writes to Maddie, who is now playing basketball as a sophomore at Miami of Ohio.

As Duke prepares to open its season next month, Choice not Chance provides a lot of insight into McCallie and her winning methods. If you haven’t read it, this might be a good time to find out how McCallie has come so far so fast.

The present and the past

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAUConn coach Geno Auriemma was recently named to coach the U.S. Women’s Olympic team at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro. It’s the first time a coach on the women’s side has been asked back since women began competing in the Olympics back in 1976 in Montreal. Since 1996, the US women have won five straight gold medals, and seven overall. In 2012, they continued to dominate — winning all eight of their games and averaging 34 points more per game than their opponents.

By rehiring Auriemma, USA Basketball is taking no chances — just the number of international players on WNBA rosters attests to the growth of the game internationally. And with the best US players competing year round now, there’s concern about the lack of time to mold an Olympic team into a cohesive unit.

Auriemma at the helm gives assurance that the US can quickly concoct a winning formula and successfully bring together players who may have experienced very different coaching styles in high school, college, or the pros. It also speaks to his ability to establish a rapport with his players, even those (like Candace Parker) who made it their mission to beat UConn during their college career.

For the women who make the Olympic team, however, I’m guessing it’s less about the coach and more about the legacy they will become a part of. Recently, I came across this year-old video on the Fullcourt.com website (which is devoted to all things women’s basketball), published just before the championship game of the 2012 Olympics in London.

I actually got goose bumps when I listened to such current stars as Diana Taurasi, Candace Parker, and Ashja Jones, pay tribute to some of the pioneers of women’s Olympic basketball. They bemoaned the fact that they didn’t get to watch — and have only seen highlight films — of some of their early Olympic heroes, like Cheryl Miller.

For these women, no matter how many NCAA or WNBA championships they win — and no matter who is coaching — the Olympics is still the pinnacle — the chance to say you were the best in the world and be a part of an amazing legacy.