1. May 12, 2011

    More Than A Game

    A year ago tonight I helped my dad lay down on the couch at my house. He had just been released from the hospital the day before after being diagnosed and treated for disease that was supposed to be very manageable. Less than thirty minutes after helping him down to sleep, I went back across the room to find that he wasn’t breathing.

    After panic, CPR and calling 911, dad was rushed back to the hospital. Unfortunately, it was only to discover that he had gone without oxygen for too long suffering irreparable brain damage. There was no coming back. Twelve days later we took dad to his home where his life support was removed. He passed away a little over an hour later with my mom, sister and I by his side.

    It’s times like these where you have to reset your compass and make sure you’re contributing your life to things that matter. Things that add value to the people you love the most.

    My family stood for twelve hours greeting friends at dad’s casket. The devotion to his faith, church, friends and family were obvious. The stories of his generosity, sacrifice and integrity made it clear he passionately devoted his life to helping other people; often in quiet; always personal.  His funeral was simulcast from the church to another building, so to accommodate the overflow of friends who came to say goodbye.

    In the context of life and death, it may seem that baseball is just a game. It’s not.

    Baseball is a game of both the old AND young. Baseball is one of the common languages that allow fathers to connect with sons, and sons to connect with fathers. As for me; baseball motivated me to study and stay out of trouble. Baseball was the way I paid for college. Baseball allowed me to play and see Alaska and Europe. Baseball allowed my dad and I to spend time together, often going to get something to drink and talking about whatever after. Baseball defined where I went to college and perhaps who I married. Baseball is my passion and vocation. It helped build the relationship with my dad so much so that when I got married, I asked him to be my best man. He was my best friend.  Baseball created events that gave us some tears but lots and lots of laughs. Through baseball, I learned to what extent a parent will go to help their child. In later years, for my dad, it opened the relationship with his grandson. He could give good advice. The insights were timeless and stretched across generations. I don’t, however, want to give the impression that baseball WAS LIFE. It was not. I was in band, choir, a class officer, student council, a football player, President of FCA and active in my church. Baseball wasn’t my life; but it was more than a game. It is for you too.

    It’s our choices that define us. The activities we choose, whether it is baseball or choir, will impact our lives in different way. It is our hope as parents, that we select sports, organizations and people that will shape them in a positive way. That even through struggles and difficult moments, we hope that the opportunities to develop life skills won’t be lost. While baseball offers a tremendous platform to grow, develop and succeed as a player, the greater hope is that the experience makes our son stronger and better prepared for the next challenge life will bring.

    We all want our boys to be able to play baseball around people who care about them. Since success is at least partially about getting better on the field, we want a coach, team and organization that gives his skills a chance to improve to their highest potential. I have not met a parent who’s goal was to make their kid professional baseball player. Although we all approach the game with different personalities and passions, I truly believe we just want them to have the chance to be as good as they can and continue to play for as long as they can. Then …. at the end of the day, where ever things fall is ok. Even the greatest of athletes will one day lay down their bat. But when that time has come, what will you have wanted your son to take away from his experience in the game? Hopefully it’s a life long father/son love and appreciation of the game. It’s memories of time together in the cage and one the field. It’s the family memories of the travel and friendships. It’s the life skill of learning to work hard and sacrifice for things you want and believe in. The discipline of showing up and following the rules as well as the unfortunate, although invaluable, skill of learning to handle failure and disappointment.

    USAthletic is just one relationship of many you will have in your baseball career. Schools, private coaches, and different teams will help you down this important journey in your son’s life. There are lots of options and different types of approaches you will encounter. Our purpose is intentional and different. Our mission has two parts: First is to give your son and family the very best information, coaching and resources so that he can develop to his full potential as a baseball player. The second, and more important, is to provide that information, coaching and resources in a context mindful of the larger responsibility of developing the essential life skills that will help him succeed in whatever direction he chooses in life. Although it begins with learning to say please and thank you, we hope to become more and more intentional and systematic. The bit of irony is that we’ve had great baseball success over the years without making winning at all cost. Our success will come through the collective development of our players. We succeed when former players like Matt Kline graduate from law school this week. When Chris Sweeney graduates from Yale. When TC Knipp finishes his career with the IU baseball team and graduates. We succeed when our players, your son, makes good choices about who he is and what he wants to become in light of your values and mindful of the opportunities ahead.

    In the next email you will find information about our 2011 fund raising initiative. As the leader of USAthletic, I also expect us, the program, to be the best we can be. I also understand that our collective choices will define the opportunities we are able to provide your son. While fund raising is often one of the greatest challenges an organization faces, it is an essential component. That’s one of the reasons we put it in the player agreement we have everyone sign prior to committing to the program. That agreement says who we are and what we need and can expect from each other. I certainly appreciate your full support including helping us meet our fund raising goals in a way that is simple, yet consistent with our values. The program will consist of five tools which give you different options to raise money for the program. In addition, we will offer incentives to individuals and teams that exceed their goals. It is important to me that in a tough economy we offer you personally, a tool to raise money for whatever you need to operate this summer: money to pay for gas, a hotel room, food, shoes, or equipment.

    In closing, the disease that contributed to taking my father’s life is called Myasthenia Gravis. It is in the same family of neuromuscular diseases and ALS, that took the life of Lou Gehrig.

    Lou Gehrig was the player my dad held in the highest esteem. He felt that Gehrig embodied the work-ethic, persevering spirit and integrity that is the game of baseball. So in October 2009, my sister and I took my mom, nephew, son and dad to next to last game at Yankee Stadium. Although dad grew up a Brooklyn Dodger fan, he was a lover of baseball history. That night we sat in the epicenter. About half way through the game, I gave dad an ear bud from my iPod and asked him to close his eyes. I played Gehrig’s short farewell speech from seventy years earlier.

    It was only one great moment in a great night. It was only one great night in a great trip.

    One only one great trip in a great life.

    Enjoy the journey.

    Rob


  2. April 11, 2011

    Always Play Like VIPs are Watching – Because They Are.

    By Jake Chapman, Showcase U Co-founder

    Very Important People are watching you every game you play, whether you realize it or not.  If you want to be taken seriously as collegiate prospect, you need to be aware that your performance, behavior, body language, effort and sportsmanship are always under review.  Letting your guard down and having a “moment” may cause an observer to form an opinion of you that doesn’t necessary reflect who you are as a person or athlete.

    We are all human.   We make mistakes, have bad games and get frustrated in the heat of competition, but the best athletes have a SHORT TERM memory and are able to shake off a bad play and respond with greatness.  I’ve talked with several scouts and college coaches who have told me that their first impressions carry a lot of weight when recruiting.  If they are there to watch you play, THEY ALREADY KNOW YOU ARE A GOOD PLAYER.  They want to see what separates you from the rest of their prospects.  Make sure your “separators” are positive attributes…and remember, they show up on game film and video too.

    So, besides colleges coaches, who are the other VIPs that have their eyes on you?  Let’s discuss:

    Your Family

    Parents and siblings are your biggest fans and at times, your biggest critics.  You are a reflection of your parents and there is no better way to make them glow with pride than to hustle, play fair and positively encourage your teammates.   Stay focused, disciplined and resilient in the heat of the battle and steer clear of behavior that could bring shame and embarrassment to you and your loved ones.

    Your Coaches

    In the world of college recruiting, your most important advocates are your high school coaches.  They play a crucial role in your success and can positively and/or negatively impact your chances to play athletically at the college level.  During your career, they spend as much time with you as your family and friends.  They see you how you handle adversity and can vouch for your character.  Make it easy for them to confidently look a college coach in the eye and give an enthusiastic testimonial on your behalf.

    Your Teammates

    If you haven’t heard it before, one of the most fulfilling things to have in competition is the respect of your peers.  Being a good teammate is displaying character when you are having a great game or the worst game of your life.  Again, no one is perfect.  True competitors SHOULD be upset with poor performance.  If you are reading this blog, there is a good chance you are one of the better players on your team.  Set a good example example for the players that look up to you.  Show the rookies that you respect the game, always play hard and instill a positive and encouraging behavior that defines your program and leaves a lasting impact.

    Your Fans

    As a father of 2 young future stars, I’ve noticed that my sons watch a high school “ball game” much differently than I.  They lock in on their favorite player, which probably includes you, and they watch your every move.  They watch you before the game.  They watch you in huddles, on benches and in dugouts.  They observe your body language, copy your mannerisms, style and attire….and yes…they can even read your lips.  You are a role model and your actions and behaviors influence the youth in your community. It is an HONOR to represent your school in competition and if you are lucky enough to participate in front of supportive fans, please do so with class.

    Jake Chapman is a Co-Founder of Showcase U and a former professional baseball player of 8 years. His passion for helping student-athletes and their parents stems from a very unsatisfying experience in his own, personal college recruiting process. This blog includes helpful dos and don’ts, personal stories and anecdotes, and heartfelt advice to families looking for ways to help themselves.


  3. February 28, 2011

    The Impact Of Good Choices On Your Personal Brand

    There is a new way to measure an athlete’s power and it has nothing to do with lifting weights.

    Nielsen/E-Poll’s new N-Score was created by CSE analytics to quantify the value of an athlete’s brand effectiveness (marketing power). While on-the-field success is part of the equation; perhaps the most leveraged measurement has to do with the choices an athlete makes in his personal life.

    For example, the brand power of Tiger Woods, Michael Vick and Brett Favre remains affected by poor off-the-field decisions. Meanwhile, the squeaky-clean and wholesome Tim Tebow’s “power” value is 165, well above superstar status, even with a modest rookie year in the NFL. Choices make brands. Good choices build brand power and are rewarded financially.

    So what kind of things are measured? Off-the-field metrics include an athlete’s name awareness, appeal, influence, trustworthiness, overall popularity, and a number of other attributes. Another tool used by Nielsen/E-Poll was a public survey that essentially asked participants what they thought of certain athletes–how much influence does each athlete have? That is good news for our kids because it means we are about to be more intentional in paying athletes to be good citizens as well as penalizing those who “don’t care” what fans/consumers think.

    In the 2011 rankings, Peyton Manning is valued as the most powerful athlete in all of sports. While his on-the-field performance can’t be minimized, his greatest financial asset is how he is perceived by his peers and in the sports world in general. Manning works hard on being at his personal best while remaining the consumate team (and company) player. He’s tough, cool, calm and collected. He’s funny and animated. He’s smart, charitable and consistently makes good decisions in his personal life (or at least avoids the publicly dumb ones). And as if that weren’t enough, Manning is simply likable and extremely humble.

    Even if you’re not a Colts’ fan, it is hard not to have a deep respect and admiration for Peyton Manning. He embodies the American sports ethic, and we take notice as does corporate America. The amount of money an athlete makes from endorsements is yet another off-the-field metric in the “power calculation.” Last year, Manning earned $15 million from Reebok, Gatorade, Mastercard and Oreo. Not bad for being good.

    “Credibility is the currency by which sporting figures’ effectiveness as endorsers is measured,” says Stephen Master, Vice President, Nielsen Sports. “From Wall Street to Washington, people want to surround themselves with individuals of influence.”

    Therefore if the N-Score formula is a reliable predictor of influence, it might also tell us something about leadership.

    What we say, how we dress, the choices we make will affect our value and the opportunities that follow. Wise choices will have positive implications: jobs, schools, scholarships and increased opportunities. Poor choices can cause a loss of of control and independence. It can close doors, create financial distress, and in extreme situations create problems with the law.

    Every day coaches, bosses, teachers, admission counselors, family and others make value judgements about your leadership. So even though no one may ever hand you an endorsement check, the same qualities used to determine the value of Peyton Manning’s influence are being used by those around you to place a value on your brand. The higher the value, the greater your influence, the stronger your leadership.

    And while the currencies may vary, you will, mostly likely, receive the fair market value for the brand you choose to become. Choose wisely.


  4. January 7, 2011

    Peyton’s Refining Fire

    I have to admit, I’m a bit intrigued by the “Colts in decline” mantra that feels like the national consensus outside of Indiana.

    At issue, is the era of the Indianapolis Colts (more specifically Peyton Manning). This season, for some, seems to be the beginning of the end of the Colts. This season’s aberration is the unfortunate and proverbial “perfect storm”. But for many fans, the lessons of this season aren’t going away. The funny thing is, this team may not be either.

    Sometimes theres more to the story than what show up in the win column. The Baseball Writers Association of America recently had to place a value on the win column in voting for the American League Cy Young. They gave the award to Felix Hernandez over the Yankee’s CC Sabathia (21 wins) and David Price of the Devil Rays (19 wins). Wins is often viewed as the key statistic in garnering votes. Not this year. Hernandez won the award by a comfortable margin.

    Hernandez, who pitches for Seattle, won just 13 games and lost 12 as the Mariners finished 29 games out of first place and scored the lowest supporting run total of any team since 1973. There was a lot of speculation before the voting about the worthiness of Hernandez given the almost .500 record. However, when the Baseball Writers considered the context (lack run support) in his performance (in terms of fewer wins), their verdict came back loud and clear. Context is a factor. And in this case, may have made his achievement all the more astonishing. The writers awarded Hernandez 21 of 28 first place votes. A dominant 2.67 ERA stands on its own. He was the best pitcher in the American League in spite of not having the wins. I think the baseball writers got it right.

    As with the case of Hernandez, the wins don’t even come close to telling the story of this season for the Indianapolis Colts, or Peyton Manning. That’s not to say the Colt’s will win the Super Bowl or that Manning should be the MVP. However, it’s not an apples to apples comparison of Manning and Tom Brady, as some have implied, to say that Brady has had a great year in spite of some adversity (losing Randy Moss and throwing to rookie Rob Gronowski). That’s like saying both President Obama and Haitian President René Préval had a tough year.

    Tough is losing the 2007 NFL Defensive Player of the year again in the first quarter of the first game – then his replacement (Melvin Bullitt). Tough is losing another starting and promising corner Jerraud Powers (IR) and Kelvin Hayden questionable for much of the season. Tough is being without your defensive captain, Garry Bracket for six games and the other season-opening line backer, Clint Sessions, who is emerging but is still out. A patched together, next man up defense has turned into a wounded band of brothers who are now on the next, next, next man up. Tough is the group that “can’t stop the run”, quietly holding Maurice Jones-Drew, Darren McFadden, and Chris Johnson, below 50 yards rushing each. They’ve also quietly won four in a row with this rather motley crew of defenders. That’s tough in a tough situation.

    Survival is when you again find yourself without your 2007 first round pick, WR Anthony Gonzalez (IR). Without one of the best tight ends in the league, Dallas Clark(IR), and slot receiver Austin Collie(IR), who tied Percy Harvin last year for league receptions by a rookie. Sure that leaves Canton-bound Reggie Wayne. BUT for all his talent, week in and week out he draws the top corners in the league and often double coverage forcing Manning to go to Hatian-born Piere Garcon. I’m not sure Danny Woodhead’s emergence from a division III program is a liability that Brady had to overcome any more than Garcon’s on emergence from Union College was for Manning. Both great stories. Just keeping it apples to apples.

    If you think the Colt’s are down to a fish and two sticks, that might seem like a feast to them.

    It’s true that Manning gets rid of the ball quicker than anyone in the league. However, he does need a COUPLE of seconds and maybe a half more as some of the new faces try to get a interpret the complex defenses and stay on route. For that, the Colts need a back that can pick up the blitz and catch a pass. For twelve games this season, the backfield has been a carousel. The loss of Joseph Addai for six games was painful. But the Colts now have him back and seem to have found a running game in the process. (another fact that seems to be overlooked).

    The pundits just like to say the Colts are last in the league at “something to do with running the football”; yards per carry, yards per game, yards per game over the last give years.. whatever. It’s been tough but things have changed and few seem to notice. Colt’s running backs are valued by their ability to block, receive and then run; in that order. By the way, the top offense and the top defense in the league didn’t make the playoffs (the Chargers). The closest the Colt’s came to a replacement for Addai is the electric but elderly Dominic Rhodes. Meanwhile Manning has been throwing to league unknowns Jacob Tamme and Blair White for most of the season. They’ve performed admirably but there has been an alarming number of drops by everyone – secondary included. I thought last week we might be on the verge of Tom Moore (the semi retired senior offensive guru) moving from consultant to the slot.

    So what does this mean to Manning? Basically he’s been without two-thirds of his normal receiving core for most of the season. And the loss of a familiar set of hands would seem pretty significant considering the amount of repetition and improvisations required by the Manning passing game. The lack of experience in at receiver means every smart coach can now take away a lot of his options using their shut down corners and double coverage exclusively on Reggie Wayne. Incredibly, he has found a way to have another Pro Bowl year. The inexperience also means Peyton needs another half second – at times, because young players are still in development NOT because he’s losing his battle with “father time”. It means his pocket has been tighter and he’s been hit more often than the last few years. If his arm was not hit during the last throw of the Patriots game, he might (would) have handed New England another come from behind loss to the Colts.

    We’re now down to a couple of sticks and the clouds seem to be rolling in via New York (weird season). We know that the health of the offensive line has been marginal at best and held together by the reliable Jeff Saturday. So considering a closing pocket and the loss of his best blocking back and the initiation of a host of new targets, I thinking it might be a bit premature to attribute much of this season’s adversity to Peyton. Even the string of interceptions were evidence that as great and experienced as Peyton is, he realized that he has to play within himself. His response to the losses, adversity and interceptions? He took ALL of the blame. It wasn’t his to shoulder but that’s what leaders do. He took the heat off the rest of the team and put it squarely on himself. That’s the reason for the “over the hill” talk.

    So just like Manning’s theatrics at the line of scrimmage tempt the all-knowing corner into his lair, this season has also drawn the football gods into new territory. And as with the hungry linebacker, they just might find that “Peyton’s Code” has not at all been compromised or that the last chapter is being written. It just might just have been adversity’s way of showing us we’re at the beginning of the sequel, and the best is yet to come.


  5. December 4, 2010

    Five Reasons I Love Peyton Manning

    1. He never makes excuses.

    2. He never points the finger at his teammates.

    3. He works incredibly hard at his craft.

    4. He is a tremendous leader.

    5. He is a role model on and off the field.