Keep on Coaching

February 1, 2013

By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor

A few weeks ago, I finally got my first chance this season to watch a friend coach his basketball team. After guiding some others at the lower levels, this is his first time running the varsity – something he wasn't sure he wanted to do with a 1-year-old just learning to walk, but a challenge he ended up taking on to the benefit of all those involved.

Simply put, he’s good. I've seen a lot of teams and a lot of coaches over the past 15 years, and although I wouldn't know much of what to do if I were walking the sideline, I felt pretty qualified in telling him I was impressed – even if he didn't buy that I was offering an unbiased opinion. The best news is he’s gone from not sure about this a few months ago to talking about next season.

We know, at least anecdotally, that coaching continues to get more challenging. The time commitment has grown substantially to make running a program a year-round endeavor in a lot of sports at a lot of schools.

That commitment – especially for coaches with children of their own – was a main reason referred to in a New Haven Post-Chronicle story Saturday that noted 23 football coaching openings in Connecticut at one point this offseason. That state has 146 football teams – meaning roughly 15 percent will have new leaders this fall.

And that got me thinking about my friend, about how glad I am he’s given this a shot, and how I've seen so many others either not do so, or not stick around long despite having some pretty nice success.

A study published last winter in Interscholastic Athletic Administration magazine – a product of the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association – noted some predictable results of a study that sought to determine the biggest challenges faced by first-year high school coaches.

The toughest according to the study was balancing the demands of coaching and teaching, experienced by nearly half the respondents – 98 percent of which coached high school teams and 81 percent of which are teachers.

The next six reasons all were noted by at least 30 percent of those in the study – personal fatigue, securing community support, securing and caring for facilities and equipment, parental contact, keeping non-starting players motivated, dealing with schedule interruptions and motivating athletes to achieve consistent, peak performance.

Nothing there is earth-shaking, and most if not all of these challenges are faced by high school coaches regardless of how long they've been in the field. But I got a little more perspective from some of the 32 items that ranked as least challenging to the first-year leaders – keeping in compliance with state and league regulations, dealing with substance abuse issues, teaching sport skills and creating a positive team atmosphere – things that seem most important, and yet appear to be easiest to do. I’m not sure what that tells us – but I think it tells us something.

Click to check out the entire three-page breakdown of the study, plus the researchers’ recommendations to remedy some of what first-year coaches face.

Giving back to Saginaw

I love reading about high-level athletes – like a star-studded group of alums from Saginaw – giving back to where they got their starts.

Pittsburgh Steelers star LaMarr Woodley made a big impact before the start of this school year by donating $60,000 to cover all participation fees for athletes in his former school district. The Saginaw News’ Hugh Bernreuter writes today about how Woodley (Saginaw High), the Philadelphia 76ers’ Jason Richardson (Saginaw Arthur Hill) and former Oakland Raiders standout Stu Schweigert (Saginaw Heritage) have combined to give more than $865,000 back to their home communities.

Bernreuter also mentions the non-monetary contributions of the Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green (Saginaw High) and former Indianapolis Colts receiver Blair White (Saginaw Nouvel).

Click to read more about it.

Quote(s) of the Week

While rifling through more papers on my desk, I found an article from the Washington Post from Sept. 2011 titled “How high school sports save our schools.” I was drawn to it in part because I spent more than a decade in a newsroom, and it was a piece by a reporter covering education who instead of reporting on school boards and the like, delved into the importance of interscholastic athletics to education as a whole.

He spoke of how participation continues to grow even as resources dwindle, and of data supporting that extracurriculars like sports are more effective than academic classes in teaching leadership, teamwork, time management and “other skills crucial for success in the workplace.” Later, he mentioned a study noting that those who participate in extracurriculars earned more a decade later.

Click here to read the entre piece. These passages struck me most.

“Coaches might be the only faculty members still allowed by our culture and educational practice to get tough with students not making the proper effort. They have the advantage of teaching what are essentially elective non-credit courses. They can insist on standards of behavior that classroom teachers often cannot enforce because the stakes of dismissing or letting students drop their courses are too high. …

“Students do better in activities they choose. If we provide more of them, led by committed adults … that can make a difference. We know the bad news about education. Dropout rates are high. Achievement scores are stagnant. But sports participation is going up, despite pressure to cut it back. Let’s cheer about that and look for a way to draw in more students.”

Caledonia Girls Catch Rival Rockford to Clinch 1st Finals Championship

By Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com

March 1, 2026

WATERFORD — Initially, you probably couldn’t have blamed the Caledonia girls bowling team from being a bit apprehensive about facing Rockford in the championship match at the Division 1 Finals at Thunderbowl Lanes. 

“We’ve seen them at two tournaments this year, and there definitely was one last year as well,” Caledonia coach Prescott Holbrook said. “We’ve always lost to them in match play. It’s usually them No. 1 and us No. 2.”

Not this time, as Caledonia picked the perfect time to reverse positions with Rockford. 

Caledonia captured its first Finals championship, sweeping a Rockford team that finished the regular season ranked No. 1 in the state. 

“The fact that we could come in here and knock it out in three is crazy,” Holbrook said. “This is way better than (losing at) all the little tournaments.”

Caledonia was the No. 4 seed out of the qualifying block and started match play with a 3-2 win over Oxford in the Quarterfinals, coming back from a 2-1 deficit.

In the Semifinals, Caledonia then swept No. 8 seed Livonia Churchill, which in the Quarterfinals had defeated the top seed out of the qualifying block, Macomb Dakota. 

In the Final, Caledonia started off by beating Rockford 139-126 in the first game, then caught fire late in the second game to earn a 186-136 win and wrapped up the title with a 1471-35 triumph in the third game.

“This is the best feeling ever,” Caledonia senior Addison Luxford said. “To finally be able to click when it mattered most, it’s amazing. I couldn’t be happier. I couldn’t be prouder of this team.”

Caledonia advanced out of the qualifying block at last year’s Finals, finishing 13th. Luxford said having three bowlers back from that squad seemed to pay dividends.

“For some of us to have that experience, it was a lot less intimidating,” she said. “We had that experience. I thought we were able to keep calm, and we were just consistent throughout the whole day.”

Rockford was seeking its first Finals team title and coming off a Semifinal appearance last season.

The Rams were the No. 2 seed out of qualifying, swept Davison in the Quarterfinals and then survived a Semifinal against White Lake Lakeland that was as close as can be.

Lakeland won the first game by one pin and the second game by three to take a 2-0 lead. Rockford won the third game by 25 pins and the fourth by 10 before outlasting Lakeland by four pins in the deciding game. 

“They fought hard all day,” Rockford coach Jerry Tarabek said of his team. “Didn’t exactly have the qualifying round we hoped to have, but somehow ended up second. In the Finals, both teams felt the nerves. They just got over them a little bit quicker than we did.”

Click for full results.