Tuesday, March 8, 2011

"Here-I'm Open": A Day in the Life (Part 2 of 2)


While juggling being on Co-Op with Nelligan Sports Marketing at the University of Pennsylvania Dept. of Athletics property, with the many other responsibilities being a college student brings, days become quite hectic. To offer you some insight on just what one can do in a day and to inspire you to do more with your day, below is a recap of my day today, Monday, March 7, 2011. A day in the life of Kevin Giordano:

6:30am-7:00am: The alarm goes off, roll out of bed, grab my ipod and head to the rec. center for the morning workout.

7:00am-8:00am: Workout and 3 mile run.  Keeps me awake and get’s me started for the day!

8:15am-9:35pm: Arrive back to the room.  Eat breakfast, shower, prep and head over to the Palestra for work.

10am-12:05pm: Arrive at the Palestra offices. Stop downstairs to greet the rest of the marketing department. Head upstairs to my desk in the Big 5 office to quickly grab a few things for our 10am meeting with the beverage company who owns the pouring rights for Penn Athletics. Meeting goes well, though it was rather long. We all seem to be on the same page for the Penn Relays, which is held the last week of April.

12:10pm-12:45pm: Lunch time back at my desk. Brought my boring brown-bag lunch, as usual.  Peanut butter sandwich on whole wheat, with yogurt, an apple, and a fruit granola bar.

1:00pm-1:50pm: Internal Basketball Meeting in the Dunning Coaches Center. Prep. for tomorrow's (Tuesday's) basketball double-header vs. Princeton. Women at 4:30pm and the Men at 7pm at the Palestra.

2:00pm-2:45pm: Weekly External Operations Meeting with the staff of the Marketing and Corporate Partnerships (us!), Communications, and Ticketing departments, and the folks at the Penn Relays Office.  The meeting is led by the Associate A.D. for External Affairs.

3:00pm-4:15pm: Mike (the GM for Corporate Partnerships) and I head to our important follow-up meeting with a new local business owner interested in a sponsorship with the Penn Relays and Penn Athletics. I went alone on the initial meeting so it was nice for Mike to meet the business owner for the first time.  Goes well, establish a timetable for decisions to be made.

4:30pm-4:45pm: Back at my desk.  Answer emails and follow up on a few left voicemails. Pack up my things and leave the office for the day.

5:00pm-6:00pm: Sport Management Student Union (SMSU) Officers Meeting in the Goodwin College of Professional Studies back at Drexel. We discuss Wednesday's Members Meeting and our Sports Industry Ambassadors Program initiative.

6:15pm-7:15pm: Dinner at a local pizza place with my roomate from last year. Nice to catch up and talk about our lives.

7:30pm-8:15pm: Grocery shopping at Fresh Grocer, a few blocks away. Usually go on Sunday but it was poring most of the day yesterday. Head back to the room to drop off the week's groceries.

8:30pm-9:45pm: Library with some friends working on an assignment. Good to see them again. Being on Co-Op is different. I'm used to seeing sport management friends in class.

9:45pm-10:00pm: Back to the room. Quick change into gym clothes again. Time for some soccer.

10:05pm-11:55pm: Soccer with some friends at Buckley Field on campus.

12:00am-?: Writing this! Time to unwind a little. Respond to some pressing emails. Bed and getting ready to do it all again tomorrow!

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Kevin Giordano is a sophomore sport management major, with experience working in women’s and men’s professional soccer and collegiate athletics. For questions, comments, and story suggestions, he can be reached at kgiordano25@yahoo.com. You can also follow him on Twitter (@KevinGiordano).

Monday, March 7, 2011

FIFA Officially Bans The Snood

The International Football Association Board met this past week to discuss many different matters, some more important than others. One of the hot topics was goal line technology and the decision on whether or not to use video replay. While a concrete decision was not reached there, a ruling was handed down on another topic that is very important to some players- the wearing of "snoods". The IFAB officially decided to ban snoods, which are pieces of cloth used to keep the neck warm, citing that they are not part of the official equipment of the game. 

The popularity of the snoods skyrocketed this past winter, and one could be spotted in just about any Premier League match. Some of soccer's biggest stars like Samir Nasri and Carlos Tevez enjoyed the comfort of warm necks during winter's coldest months. Virtually everyone sounded off with their own opinion, with the likes of the legendary Roy Keane criticizing them strongly.

FIFA's controversial (and blatantly corrupt) president Sepp Blatter commented on the matter: "It can also be dangerous. It can be like to hang somebody." How this makes sense is beyond me, but I can agree that there is no place for such unnecessary attire in the game of soccer. Hopefully by next winter the snood conversation will have been dropped altogether and we can listen to soccer commentators instead ramble on about something more relevant to the game itself.

image: complex.com

"Here-I'm Open!": A Day in the Life (Part 1 of 2)


As a college student on Co-Op (a 6-month, full-time internship), taking an evening class, and running this organization with our outstanding group of officers, time is at a premium. 

With my many responsibilities, "busy" is a bit of a misnomer. Throughout the day today, I will be documenting my activities. Later this evening, I will post my day today, hour-by-hour. It will serve the second part of this week's edition of, "Here-I'm Open!" Hopefully it inspires you to take on a bit more responsibility on campus.

Be sure to check back either later this evening for Part 2! Until then, make it a good one.

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Kevin Giordano is a sophomore sport management major, with experience working in women’s and men’s professional soccer and collegiate athletics. For questions, comments, and story suggestions, he can be reached at kgiordano25@yahoo.com. You can also follow him on Twitter (@KevinGiordano).

Friday, March 4, 2011

CAA Tournament Preview

  It’s that time of year again; March, which means only one thing to me: March Madness! Last year was particularly mad, as Northern Iowa, St. Mary’s, Cornell, and the CAA’s own Old Dominion made names for themselves on the largest stage in college basketball.
This year, the Colonial Athletic Conference has been as strong as it’s ever been. Early in nonconference, VCU took down Wake Forest and UCLA, while Old Dominion handled Clemson and Xavier at the Paradise Jam tournament, then defeated two more A-10 team in Richmond and Dayton. When our Drexel Dragons went down to Loserv—ahem, Louisville—and handed the Cardinals their first loss in the new KFC Yum Center, 52-46, the hype was on. Just recently, the CAA went 7-5, including a spectacular 4-1 record on national television, in ESPN Bracketbusters.
For the first time since 2007 (and only the fourth time ever), the CAA looks like they can get multiple bids to the Big Dance. ODU and George Mason ought to be locks to make the field of 68, and if another team can pull the upset in this weekend’s CAA Tournament in Richmond, the CAA could have three bids for the first time ever.
The tournament starts Friday at noon at the Richmond Coliseum. Here is my $0.02 on the first round games for Friday:
(8) UNCW—13-17 ( 7-11) v. (9) Georgia State—11-18 (6-12)                        12:00pm
This should be an interesting game. UNCW’s been lead by the Chad Tomko-Keith Rendleman duo this year; they’re 1-2 in minutes per game, points per game, rebounds per game, and steals per game for the young Seahawks. Since Feb 12, Tomko was held under 20 points only once: the season finale at Northeastern (where he ONLY scored 19). If Buzz Peterson’s squad has a chance, it’ll be on Tomko’s 5’11” shoulders.
On the other bench, head coach Rod Barnes was fired this weekend after losing on senior day to George Mason, the fourth straight loss for the Panthers. Assistant Paul Graham will be coaching this game. Nine players are averaging more than 15 minutes per game, with not a single one averaging more than Erik Buckner’s 9.2 points a game. The Panthers win when they find a way to outrebound their opponents. The propensity to throw fresh legs on the court helps in that regard. That being said, this team struggles without a go-to scorer. If Buckner can take over the game, GSU has a shot. UNCW is not a great rebounding team.
Prediction: Buzz Peterson gets his young team ready to prove their worth. It goes down to the wire, but Tomko makes a big play late and the Seahawks pull off the win, 61-59, and take on George Mason.
(5) Drexel—20-9 (11-7) v. Towson—4-25 (0-18)                                           2:30pm
In the third meeting (and the second in less than a week), the Dragons and Tigers face off. The 0-18 Tigers will come into the game, looking to end the season of futility with a win. This has all the makings of a trap game for the Dragons, who have lost on Friday in Richmond three straight years. Isaiah Philmore gives the Tigers a consistent threat both inside and out. The Tigers have shot well from beyond the arc against Drexel this season, going 13-25 (52%) in two games. On Senior Night, guard Josh Brown finished with 21 points.
Drexel, one of the early picks for a NCAA Tournament dark horse, started strong, then lost some steam at the season’s midpoint. With big wins at Louisville, at home against VCU, ODU, and Kent State during Bracketbusters, Drexel looks strong based on strong team defense. They are 9th in the nation for rebounds per game, with 40.4. Lead by senior Gerald Colds (9.9 ppg), redshirt sophomore Chris Fouch (14.7 ppg), and junior forward Samme Givens (11.8 ppg, 10.0 rpg), this young Drexel team was able to pull together a very strong season under Bruiser Flint, going 6-2 in the month of February. If they play strong defense and dig deep, this team could make a run.
Prediction: Senior captain Gerald Colds has never played in the postseason—potentially the only player to play for Flint for four years and hold that distinction. Friday, he and his teammates will take another step towards changing that, dropping the Tigers for a third time this season, 56-50.
(7) Delaware—13-16 (8-10) v. (10) Northeastern—11-19 (6-12)                    6:00pm
Delaware won both games against Northeasternthis season, lead by the fearsome Jawan Carter (15.7 ppg, good for 5th in the CAA this season). Nine players average 15 minutes or more for the Hens this season. Freshman Devon Saddler is second on the team with 13.4 points per game, while sophomore Jamelle Hagins lead the CAA with 3.0 blocks a game. Delaware limped down the stretch after a five game losing streak to the top half of the CAA.
Senior everything-man Chase Allen lead the young Huskies in minutes per game (37.1), points (16.8 per game, the 4th highest in the CAA), rebounds (6.0 per game), assists (3.8), and steals (2.1). Sophomores Joel Smith (12.3 ppg) and Jonathan Lee (11.6 ppg) round out the major offensive threats for  Bill Coen’s squad. After a nine game losing streak, ending with a 72-58 defeat at the DAC, the Huskies went 7-4 down the stretch. During a 4-game winning streak in the CAA, Northeastern defeated VCU 91-80 at home.
Prediction: This will be a tight game, but try as they might, the experience of Delaware’s five seniors will be too much for Chase Allen and the Huskies, 59-56. Old Dominion looms.
(6) James Madison 21-10 (10-8) v. (11) William & Mary—9-21 (4-14)             8:30pm
In the nightcap, a very scary William & Mary team takes on the James Madison Dukes, lead by potential first team All-CAA selection, Denzel Bowles. Bowles (arguably the most dominant player I saw live this season, along with Charles Jenkins), ranks second in the CAA in scoring (18.2 ppg) and third in rebounding (9.0 per game).
Another likely All-CAA player leads the young Tribe. Junior wing Quinn McDowell leads his team in scoring at 15.2 a game (good for 7th in the CAA), a close second in rebounding (5.4 per game), tied for third in assists (2.1, one of four players averaging more than 2 per game), and first with 1.2 steals a game. Better yet, he’s been at his best in big games: in their 73-68 victory at JMU, McDowell scored 23 points and pulled down 8 rebounds for W&M. Joined by senior forward Marcus Kitts, McDowell is the face of a very young team who will return six of their seven major contributors next season.
Prediction: I’ve been going back and forth on this one, but have a gut feeling the Tribe will pull it out. This is the third straight year the Tribe has faced the Dukes in their first game of the CAA. The game will come down to rebounding—if JMU can’t dominate the boards, W&M has a shot. McDowell’s going to come up huge, especially from three. W&M 66, JMU 61.

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By: Ryan Pratt

Developing and Managing Coaches

 
Most sports research and literature focuses solely on developing the technical, tactical, physical or psychological components of the athlete, little attention is paid to the coach. That is problematic at both ends of the sports spectrum. At the highest level, the professional coach or manager is an asset, they represent a cost center for teams (at times, a large one), and when they are terminated, it can result in reputational and even financial damage. Millions of dollars / pounds / euros are spent on players, would teams or clubs be more successful if they invested to the same degree in the education and wellness of their managers?

At the youth level, the role of coach is far more critical. Coaches serve as role models, substitute parents, and guides into the sport for armies of children. Youth sports organizations rightly focus on creating the best environment for player development and enjoyment, but how much more effective would those programs be if a larger investment was made in the education, career development and wellness of their coaches? Would happier, better educated coaches develop better players?


As a Director of Coaching (DoC), Director of Player Personnel, Athletic Director, or General Manager, a growing challenge is managing and developing coaches in addition to managing and developing players. At the youth level, grass roots recreation through high school sport programs, investing in and developing coaches is critical not only to ensure coaches are developing players capable of competing at increasingly higher levels, but also ensures coaches’ unhappiness or lack of education isn’t turning children away from sports at a young age limiting their opportunities to live an active, fit lifestyle. Youth administrators continually struggle with trying to get coaches to improve their sport-specific coaching education but are consistently told “I don’t have time” or “I played, I know everything I need to know about the game”. To be an effective organization, sport leaders need to overcome those objections, even if it means replacing coaches unwilling to remain students of the game.

The modern DoC, GM, or athletic director is forced to transform coaches who believe they ‘know it all’ based on playing experience from 10, 15 or even 20 or more years ago as well as change the mentality of coaches who “coach how they were coached” meaning many of their methods are based on punishment, embarrassment and exclusion. It doesn’t help that ESPN and other sports media outlets glorify ‘coaches behaving badly’ on a nightly basis. By making an investment in the education, training, support systems and wellness of coaches, sports organizations increase their ability to be successful on and off the field, and directly create better environments for players at the same time.


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Gerry Montague lives in Bridgewater, NJ and is currently the Director of Coaching for Hillsborough Soccer Club and the Assistant Coach for the NJSA04's U18 Development Academy. Gerry has a masters degree in Sports Leadership and Athletic Administration and holds a National B license from the US Soccer Federation. He can be reached via email at
gmontague@optonline.net.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

The Pink Zone

Over the last few weeks, you must have watched (or at least flipped through the channels and seen) the Women's College Basketball players smothered in pink uniforms, headbands, shoes, warm-ups, towels, etc. With the intention of raising money and awareness of the Kay Yow and JimmyV Foundations for Breast Cancer Research, thousands of schools and organizations across the country have been a part of "Pink Zone 2011". The Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) is working to raise awareness not just on the court, but also on campuses nationwide, to put an end to breast cancer and help find a cure to save millions of lives.

From Akiachak High School in Alaska to the Baylor University Bears, from the University of Michigan to NC State University (where Coach Kay Yow and Coach Jimmy Valvano called their home for many years). On February 17th, our very own Drexel Dragons Women's Basketball Team hosted William & Mary for their "Pink ZOne" event. At the basketball game that night, there was a performance by Eagles Cheerleaders alumni to help support "Team Ra-Ras Kicks Breast Cancer". Team Ra-Ras is an initiative to fight breast cancer. By watching their video (below), you can help their quest because for every view, United Healthcare of Pennsylvania has agreed to donate to the Susan G. Komen Foundation.





For more information on the WBCA or their Pink Zone events, click here.

Written by Hayley Zedeck

image: www.drexel.edu

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Major League Baseball's Super Prospect


With the 2011 Major League Baseball regular season quickly approaching, fans begin to wonder which young rookie phenom will make a splash this year.  Steven Strasburg of the Washington Nationals created the buzz last year.  Steve Strasburg shed new light on the so-called ‘cannot miss, once in a lifetime prospect’ and reached a level of hype that nobody believed could be duplicated.  And then the Nationals did it again.

‘With the first pick in the 2010 Major League Baseball Amateur Draft, the Washington Nationals select Bryce Harper!’  The rarest of prospects, Bryce Harper quickly joined Steven Strasburg as the face of the Washington Nationals’ future.  But what do we really know about Bryce Harper to already put him in such an elite category?  He is only 18 years old.  He put up absolutely silly numbers throughout his high school baseball career in a highly competitive Nevada league.  He dropped out of high school to get his GED so he could be drafted into Major League Baseball sooner, by the way putting up astonishing numbers as a JUCO.  And of course we know that the legend himself hit the longest home run in Tropicana Field (home of the Tampa Bay Rays) history at age 16.

Baseball scouts drool over Bryce Harper, but what do they really say about him?  Many describe Bryce Harper as a five tool player, a major league baseball body, and one of those ‘cannot miss, once in a lifetime prospects.’  Uh oh, red flags!  For you who have read Michael Lewis’s Moneyball, you all the can see the red flags as well.  High school baseball prospect.  Major league baseball body.  The dreaded label of being a once in a lifetime prospect.  Do all of those red flags remind you of someone?  Ah yes, Billy Beane.

Billy Beane was the super, Bryce Harper type, prospect of the 1980 MLB Draft.  However, if you ask the average baseball fan what Billy Beane did during his playing career, they would probably look at you funny wondering if he even played in the majors.  Contrary to the belief of some, he played in the minors with multiple unsuccessful trips to the majors.  Though Billy Beane was a freak athlete, he had a flaw that prevented him from ever being successful at the major league level.  His flaw was that he was never faced with a slump or personal defeat before getting drafted.  When he started playing in the minors he couldn’t handle the struggling and the challenges, something he would never mentally bypass and something that would ultimately end his playing career. 

Bryce Harper has yet to face a major slump or a personal struggle in his young baseball career.  With his first season in the minors upcoming, it will be interesting to see how he fares.  The point is not to say Bryce Harper is going to fizzle out of Major League Baseball and become a bust just like Billy Beane.  The point is to highlight that Bryce Harper is the exact same type of prospect that Billy Beane was and the exact same prospect that Moneyball says to be cautious of.  So, before we all give Bryce Harper our Hall of Fame votes, let’s just see what he can do in his first season.


-Written by Kevin Rossi