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Coach Ballard's Blog #21

A Roughrider…


After Dick Tamburo turned Coach Youree down for the ASU job, he told him that he would talk to the new coach, Bob Weinhauer, and tell him to hire coach as an assistant. In the subsequent meeting between the two, Weinhauer told Coach Youree that there was no way he would hire someone who everybody in the Valley wanted to be the head coach. And that was that for ASU. As a footnote, Ben Lindsey went 4-24 overall and 1-17 in the Pac-10 and was fired after one year. He was replaced by the guy who spent three hours listening to and taking notes from Coach Youree, Lute Olson from Iowa. To this day, Lindsey remains the only native born Arizonan to be hired as a head coach in basketball by any of the three state universities. Bob Weinhauer went 44-45 in three years at ASU before he was let go. He should have listened to his AD, right? Coach Youree went on to Mesa Community College, where he teamed up as a co-head coach with Tom Bennett for the next five years, where they went 126-37 during that span. Like Lute said to me one time, basketball is basketball no matter what the level, so I will always believe that ASU missed their golden opportunity.


I was going to join the MCC staff as a volunteer, as well, after East closed, and went over with Coach Youree to Spring workouts. Somewhere in there, Coach Y got a call from Dave Brown, the athletic director/head men’s and women’s basketball coach at Yavapai College in Prescott. He was looking for someone to help him coach the two basketball teams and asked if coach knew of anyone that he would recommend. He said he knew of one guy that Dave should hire immediately- me. So, Dave called and we met at a restaurant in Mesa for an interview. He was looking in particular for some defensive help and asked me immediately what I knew about that. By then, I was on fire with defense, having just spent a whole season with a basketball genius. I cleared part of the table off and used salt and pepper shakers, water glasses, jam packets, and whatever was necessary to lay out floor position and how to build it from the ground up. I must have been pretty lathered up, because after only about five minutes, Dave stopped me and said, “OK, OK, I get it. You know defense.” He said he would let me know, but as soon as I got back home, he called and offered me the job. It was a full time job just coaching basketball, which seemed unbelievable.


We had nowhere to live in Prescott, but this is where doing all those camps up there paid off. While doing the Phoenix Suns Camp, I had gotten to know Dick Van Arsdale, and he knew of someone up there where he had a summer home who was looking to rent their place out. It was in Groom Creek, which is eight or so miles up the old Senator Highway out of Prescott in a heavily wooded area- quite beautiful. So we moved in up there and started a trend that has lasted to this very day- and that is each job that I have gotten, I have thought “well, this is it, we’re going to be here until we retire”. Five jobs later, we are still thinking that!


Dave Brown was a great guy to work for, and we were together for one season, 1982-83. He loved offense and was always deep in thought about it. Dave was one of those guys that would write down a new play on anything handy, a napkin, toilet paper, or a gum wrapper. He turned the defense completely over to me and allowed me the necessary time to teach it- because it does take time and lots of it. When I got up there, I found out that the school was embroiled in a battle of whether or not they were going to keep the men’s basketball program any longer. Each junior college is at the mercy of it’s county governing body, and the Yavapai board of regents had been taken over by a very fiscally and socially conservative group. Dave had recruited a number of African-American players over the years and, in those days, that had rubbed this mostly white and conservative area the wrong way. The prevailing opinion was that the men’s program was doomed, whereas the women’s basketball team, volleyball, and baseball- which consisted mostly of white kids- were safe. The board was using the cost of the men’s program as its reason for cutting it, however.


I stayed out of the politics as much as possible and just concentrated on the basketball. Practices were great, but doing two teams a day made for hard work. When you are passionate about something, though, you don’t think about the length of every day, you just grind it out. Games were particularly demanding, because both teams had the chance to be very good. The men’s side was pretty even across the board, with the exception of Mesa, which, with the addition of Coach Youree, was top five in the nation on team defense. This was still in the era when junior college’s only had one division and if you wanted to play basketball, you were all in the same pickle.


I actually prefer that to what we have now with the three divisions and here’s why. Junior colleges are like no other when it comes to expectations of the participants. In high school, that will be the end of the line for 90% of the players- they are not good enough to play at the next level, and most know it going into their senior year. So having classifications and multiple champions is an OK thing. Not having a shot clock is an OK thing, too, because preparing someone for college basketball is not relevant for most of the participants. My 18 years of college coaching have shown me that high school players have absolutely no problem adjusting to a shot clock when they get to college. I have never had to sit a guy down one time to explain to him how a shot clock works. Four year college guys know that 99.99% of them will never play in the NBA and only about 5% will ever make any money at all playing basketball after college, so it’s off to the rec leagues for most who want to continue. So having different levels of classifications for four-year schools is an OK thing, since this is the end of the line for 95% of the players. What makes junior colleges different is that 100% of the participants want to and believe that they are going to move on to the next level. That is what junior colleges are for essentially with that level of expectation. Having a division I, II, and III makes no sense when everybody is trying to do the same thing- move up. Having a national championship is OK, and the juco’s have a great venue for that in Hutchinson, Kansas, but it doesn’t override the fact of why the programs exist. Feel free to throw in your comments on this, as this is my opinion based on 17 years of juco coaching.


Our men’s team in 82-83 finished 16-8- good but not good enough to overcome MCC. They were the conference champions and represented the ACCAC in Hutchinson. We did finish second in the conference in team defense behind Mesa, however, and had a ton of close games. Then the program was cancelled by the Board of Regents. The women’s team was the story…


Next…becoming a women’s coach…

Coach Ballard's Blog #22

Becoming a women’s coach…


I never really considered the possibility of becoming a women’s coach when I took the job at Yavapai in 1982. I was going to do both men and women with Dave Brown and it was just basketball to me. Dave had recruited a solid bunch of female players and it became pretty obvious to me right away that they could handle the defense. We would practice the women first everyday and then the men would come on with literally no break- so it was six hours a day with no chance to go eat or take a seat or anything. But I was a young guy full of the things that Coach Youree had given me and I was ready for it. It never seemed to be a problem at the time. I became extremely close with both teams, as close as I have ever been I believe. Both teams were giving tremendous effort and I have remained close friends with many of them to this day.


The 82-83 Lady Roughriders went 25-5 and won the Region 1 championship, beating Central in the final. Maybe that doesn’t mean a lot to the readers today, but Central was coached by Lin Laursen, who won 30 ACCAC conference championships, including 21 in a row. She is in the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame and was as fierce as competitor as I have ever known. The year we beat her, she was named the NJCAA Coach of the Year, and according to a Sports Illustrated article about her, was in Las Vegas drowning her sorrows after our loss when she got the news. They had us by eight at the half, but we came in and said if we do not allow any transition baskets in the second half, we will win. We allowed zero and won 63-55.


We drew Roxbury, Massachusetts in the first round game of the national tournament- a team that was ranked #2 in the nation. I knew nothing about them and so called coaches up in their area to get as much information as I could. Film was impossible to get for women’s teams in those days, so I had to go on what coaches were saying. Everyone said “they run”. I said “what do they do when they don’t run?” Everyone said “they run”. They had a great All-American point guard who played just about all the time. She was a great penetrator, which went to the heart of what our defensive philosophy was all about- so were going to be tested. Because “they run”, they were also leading the nation in points scored per game, at around 88. There was a shot clock for women in those days- way before the men- and it was 30 seconds. I adapted to it well and didn’t need to have years of training to figure out that it actually favored good defense. What I mean is if you can get the other team down to the “red zone”, seven seconds or less, then someone is going to have to try and make a play- which usually involves driving. For us, driving meant help, which meant charges. Against Roxbury, we took twelve charges- six by our All-American guard, Julie Hanks. Their point guard only played 12 minutes, because she kept running people over and was in foul trouble. We got back like we did against Central and didn’t allow them to run. Final score- Yavapai 80 Roxbury 56. From watching the other games in the tournament, it looked to me like we had a real shot at winning it all.


Our quarterfinal game was against DeKalb, Georgia. They were also a pressing, running team, and for 35 minutes we were in complete control. We were playing magnificent defense and were up 52-39 with just over 5 minutes left. Then DeKalb started fouling. We missed eleven free throws in a row- it was unbelievable. Even our very best shooters missed. We didn’t score another point and lost 53-52 on a last second shot from the top of the key- the buzzer went off as the ball went through. It was stunning and I was as sad as I have ever been- sad because we lost and extra sad because that team was so much fun to coach. We would never be together again. The national tournament was in Senatobia, Mississippi, but we were staying in Memphis, which was about 50 miles away. We were stuck there for an extra few days, because our plane tickets took us through the day after the tournament. The ladies put a suicide watch on my room, because they thought I was going to end it all after that defeat.


Later that spring, Dave Brown took off to NAU to become the head women’s coach there. He left me behind to take over as the women’s coach at Yavapai- he made sure they hired me before he left, which was a nice gesture on his part. He took the cream of our freshmen with him, which is understandable because he had recruited them and they were big time D1 prospects. That meant that I had to scramble to recruit, but we did OK. The next year, we played Central in the championship game of the Pima College tournament and beat them- meaning we had beat them twice in a row, which I am pretty certain was never repeated by anyone. I remember looking down at Lin near the end of the game and she was looking back at me like “what the hell’s going on here?” She was as tough as there was and would eventually beat us in the Region 1 championship game up in St. George, Utah later that year. We ended up 22-7. The year after that, we were 20-8, but beaten in the region semi-finals by Cochise.


So, with a shot clock and all, I ended my Yavapai women’s career at 67-20. I knew at the end of the third year that I didn’t really want to be a women’s coach- no offense to the ladies. It was just not what I wanted to do, but thanks to the Universe, was sure glad I got the opportunity when I did to do it. We loved Prescott, particularly Groom Creek, and my wife had gotten a position at the Hassayampa Hotel there in town that was a great opportunity. But she has always been very supportive of my career and knew that it was time to move on. We made plans to move back to the Valley and see what we could find.


Again, the camps I had worked in Prescott led to another opportunity. I had met Bill Farrell at one of them, who was the coach at Paradise Valley High School. He and I talked late in the spring of ’85, and I told him that I didn’t want to be a women’s coach and that I was moving back to the Phoenix area. Eventually, he got me on at his high school as a teacher in the Social Studies department (dual major, right?), and I would help him with the basketball team. So, I had gone from a private high school, to a community college, and now to a public high school.


For those of you who have been reading these blogs, I am going through this history to let you know that I love basketball and have been around the block a few times when it comes to playing and coaching. Because I am doing this, I have kind of been taking stock of my own career in a way that I don’t normally do. For example, I was outside working on the lawn today and remembered that I had written in a previous blog that I had 18 years of college coaching experience. That’s a lot- and I never really thought of myself that way. I have had 25 years of high school coaching experience. That’s 43 years- an unbelievable number for me to ponder. I have served 6 as an assistant and 37 as a head coach. If you have any thing to add, any questions, and stories of your own- please do not hesitate.


Next…Trojans…
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Coach Ballard's Blog #17

Growing…


The Judson School was located just north of Lincoln Boulevard on Mockingbird Lane in a very upscale area. First year of coaching high school basketball- no gym, no possibility of a summer program because it was a boarding school which was closed in the summer, and practically all of the athletes at the school played football. There were no charter schools back then, but there were many private schools who had formed their own association- separate from the AIA. They called it the Arizona Independent Athletic Association (AIAA) and, just to give you a reference, some of the schools in the league were Phoenix Country Day, Orme, Arizona Lutheran, Northwest Christian, and us. They were scattered all over the state actually and the travel schedule for basketball was pretty rough, and covered Yuma all the way to the White Mountains. I, of course, had no idea about any of that and just wanted to get a job and get started with a career in coaching.


I was at the mercy of whoever the school had as athletes, because I had no hand in the selection of students for the school. It was an expensive school and had a rich clientele. For example, there was a kid from Iran whose parents gave him a monthly allowance that was more than my yearly salary. Being a really good basketball player was not the main criteria for getting in to Judson- being wealthy was. So my teams were always a crap shoot and I had to find something simple, but effective for groups that I would really not have much time with. So I settled on the diamond press as a main weapon. The good thing about the diamond press is that it forces a certain tempo that is hard for the opponents to get out of. You are forcing the ball to be put in the hands of players who may not be so good at decision making, as well as enticing teams to constantly be attacking the basket without running much in the way of an offense. The bad thing about the diamond press is that if a team has simply more talent than you do, or is well coached, the above mentioned things are not that much of a problem. So then it becomes a high possession game that may not favor you. In my head, I had a picture of what I wanted to do if I could build a program, but Judson was not going to be that place. We were going to get in great condition and press. We didn’t have a gym, only two outdoor courts. Practices didn’t start until after school, so many times I would have to pull my car up to the edge of the car and turn my lights on so we could finish practice. If I had an assistant, the court was really well lit. If I didn’t, it wasn’t. Sometimes the AD would let us rent a gym, like the Scottsdale Boys Club for a practice and that was like going to Disneyland- a real gym!


Most coaches can tell you what it felt like to get on the bus for that very first road game of their career, and I can remember it now 40 years later. We were headed for Superior, Arizona to play our opener- my first high school game as a coach. If you are ever headed towards Globe and you get all the way through Superior, just before you start to climb the hill, look to your left and you will see the old Superior High School gym- a quonset hut. Every time these days that we drive up that way to play Eastern Arizona in Thatcher, I always look at the gym as we go by. I really shouldn’t, though, because Superior really handed it to us that night. The diamond wasn’t effective, and we looked like we were running in mud. Still, though, there was a thrill that was memorable- the day of the game, the players dressed in shirts and ties, the bus ride, the camaraderie- there was nothing like it. I hated losing, but knew I was doing the right thing.


Eventually, the pressing clicked, as our guys went from football shape to basketball shape. Our season was comprised of games against the various private schools around the state, small high school varsities like Superior, and big school junior varsities. Our AD made the schedule and his idea was to play as many games as possible to keep the boys busy and under constant supervision. Money and boredom are bad things for a boarding school, so Joe kept us busy. We made it to the semi-finals of the AIAA state tournament before losing to San Pasquale from Yuma. They had some really good guards and handled the press well. We had split with them during the year.


One of the advantages to not being able to have a summer program at Judson was that it gave me an opportunity to work in the summer. Since Judson didn’t pay very well, that was really important to me and my wife. It also opened the door to some of the best times I ever had in my growth as a basketball coach. There were some unbelievably good basketball camps in Arizona during that time- the Phoenix Suns Basketball Camp, the Arizona Sports Camp, and the Adams-Westphal Camp stood out. It was a basketball burnout for someone like me who was soaking every bit of knowledge he could from the many great coaches that I roomed with, worked with, and hung around with. The next three summers, I did eight to ten weeks of these camps each summer. It was like Perry’s Sports Camp in Oregon all over again, except now I was a coach. If only every coach could do this, instead of being bound by their own summer programs as we all are now. I talked basketball with some of Arizona’s greatest coaches and it was priceless. A typical camp day would go eighteen hours and I would be completely spent at the end of a week, then rest on the weekend, and go do it again.


One of my close friendships in coaching grew out of the Adams-Westphal Camp. Rob Babcock, whose brother Pete was the camp director, was coaching and teaching at the American School in Mexico City at the time, and he could relate to my situation at Judson, as his was very similar. He invited me to bring my Judson team down to Mexico City for a holiday tournament the next season. That would be an unreasonable request for many high schools, but since most of our kids were rich, we pulled it off. There would be us, the American School, and two local Mexico City teams playing in the tournament. We were housed in homes of his players’ families, and Brigitte and I were in one of the most palatial homes I have ever seen. Sadly, right down the street and out of the neighborhood gates, was a hillside where thousands of people lived in absolute squalor and poverty. Just before our first game, the students from the Mexican school that we were playing unfurled a huge banner that said “Remember the Alamo!” I went to the scorers table and told them that I would take my team off the court unless that sign was removed. We all knew who had won the battle of the Alamo. We ended up winning the tournament and that team in1980 would go on and win the AIAA state title. We still pressed, because with so little time to work with players you have to be kind of one-dimensional. We were down 15 going into the fourth quarter of the championship game and came back and won 76-75 against that same San Pasquale team that had beaten us the year before. I still have a picture of us rushing the court hanging in my house. Just before they tore down the Judson School to build new homes, one of my ex-players rescued the trophy and it sits today in my office at MCC.


Next…need more dimensions…
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Coach Ballard's Blog #19

A Longhorn once again…


As previously mentioned, Coach Youree had built a remarkable program at East High when I stepped aboard in the fall of 1981 to be his assistant. He had never had an actual varsity assistant during all those years, simply because there was no pay attached to such a position. The guys who sat on the bench with him over the years were always his freshman and jayvee coaches, most notably Hector Bejarano. So there was no precedent for me as far as responsibilities. Through the fall off-season, I showed up for the 3on3 sessions, and could even still play in them from time to time. By this time, Coach Youree was no longer playing, and he and Coach Bejarano would sit near the championship court games and basically watch those, while pretty much ignoring loser courts. The lesson there for the players was basically nobody cares for losers and if you wanted the coaches to see you, your team needed to get to championship court. 3on3 was so established by then, that the players knew the best way to get on Coach Youree’s good side was to get to and stay on championship court. That made the loser court games extra tough, unlike many places where if the coaches are not paying attention, it brings out the worst qualities in some players. That is how we have run our 3on3 sessions to this very day.


When the season came around, it was amazing for me in every way- I have never had an experience quite like it. I saw Coach Youree in a completely different way as I did when I played for him. The first thing I noticed was that he smoked cigarettes- not many, but sometimes he would be back in the coaches locker room and he would have his hand curled in a little ball with a cigarette tucked in there. Before you get too critical of that, it was not the first time I had seen that from a great coach. Almost all the WAC coaches smoked, many profusely, including Don Haskins. The first basketball clinic that I ever attended occurred when I was coaching at Judson. I flew over to San Diego to a clinic at Mission Bay, and was late getting to the first session, which featured the Duke coach, Bill Foster. I came into the ballroom where the session was being held and it was completely packed, so the only place I could find to sit was a long table in the back which had a large industrial coffee maker on it with hundreds of cups stacked up. I moved everything over and sat down on the table. A few moments later, another gentleman sat down next to me. I looked and it is was Dean Smith, the already legendary coach of North Carolina. I really wanted to say something, but couldn’t figure out how to begin until I noticed that Coach Smith had a cigarette stuck inside his curled hand. So I said “I didn’t know you smoked”, as if I had known him my whole life or something. He turned to me and said “yeah, it’s really a bad habit”. After that we spoke about coaching quietly in the back for about twenty minutes, and I thought of that moment when I saw Coach Youree doing the same thing years later. As a side note, in my career in coaching, I have had the great pleasure of speaking to Dean Smith, Bob Knight, Lute Olson, and John Wooden and all four expressed a deep fondness and respect for high school coaches. Three of the four actually said they preferred high school coaching, but the money was an issue. I’ll let you speculate on that one.


Coach Youree never told me exactly what I would be doing in practices going in, but each day he would go over the schedule with me and tell me what he wanted me to do and where I would do it. So immediately from day 1, I was actively involved and encouraged to help him coach. I never just stood around or didn’t feel involved, and he always encouraged me to make corrections as necessary. Practices were our time to teach- our classroom, if you will- and games were the practical labs. Coach Youree was a perfectionist- do it until it is done right and even further- do it until you can’t do it wrong. The good thing for me to see was that the culture was so strong from top to bottom- freshmen up- that the varsity kids were like a machine. There was no copy machine in the PE area- in fact, there was only one copy machine for the whole school in those days- so I would copy the practice plan everyday by hand and then when I went home at night, would make notes about each drill. I couldn’t get over how perfectly every detail fit the overall picture. This was everything I had ever imagined about coaching and I was soaking it up. And I am talking about every aspect of the game, from basic footwork and handwork, up through offensive and defensive strategies. The defense was particularly precise- almost like teaching people sophisticated dance moves. It was all the things that were floating in my head, all put into reality in front of me. Coach Youree was so well known by then across the nation, as he had coached the USA Junior team in 1978 to a gold medal in Brazil- a team that featured James Worthy, Sam Perkins, and “Fat” Lever to name a few- that on many occasions during the 1981-82 season, college coaches would come to practice not for recruiting, but to watch the coaching and take notes. I have never seen anything like that before or since. One time, Lute Olson, who had just taken Iowa to the Final Four, came by with his assistant coach Scott Thompson. They stayed after practice and we adjourned to the coaches locker room. Lute pulled out a small notepad and said to Coach Youree “let’s talk defense”. We stayed for the next three hours as Coach Youree answered questions and drew things up on the whiteboard in the office. I sat over in the corner on a file cabinet and every now and then shot Scott Thompson a look- he would just shake his head in wonderment as Coach Olson was writing stuff down.


The year before, East had gone 28-0, and was eventually named the team of the century. The year I came in, there were no returning starters and only one player, LeRoy Dean, who had been a major contributor. We still went 23-3, which speaks volumes for the culture that had been built. All three of the losses were by one point. The first game of the year was at South Mountain, who was ranked number 1 pre-season. It would be obvious why East would not be ranked number 1, with no returning starters, but as a compliment to the greatness of the program, we were still ranked number 2. To the East High kids, however, being ranked number 2 was a slight, not a compliment. South was loaded and very confident- the locker rooms for the two teams were right next to each other and they were yelling things at our players- basically about how it was a new day, and you don’t come to the mountain, etc. Our guys remained quiet. When we got out on the floor, with the gym packed, I saw for the first time just how big and athletic South was, and during warmups, they were trying to stare our guys down. I, being a rookie to this level, said something to Coach Youree on the order of how are we going to handle this team, my God they’re huge. Coach just looked at me and said, ”we’ll be alright”. He still reminds me of that moment to this day. We took the lead early, got it out to 10 at some points, went in and out of the vaunted spread offense as necessary, and won 46-43. We ended up being #1 all year, and playing South three times, and beating them all three. Yeah, coach, “we’ll be alright”.


Next…East closes…
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Coach Ballard's Blog #20

East closes…


All year long in the 1981-82 season that I was involved in, there had been a shadow hanging over everything. The Phoenix Union High School District had decided to reorganize and sell off some properties that were problematical, with Phoenix Union and East High being put on the chopping block. Phoenix Union sat right downtown in an area that had become increasingly valuable as real estate and contained fewer and fewer residents. It had been a terrific looking campus for many years, with a huge in-the-round gymnasium and magnificent football stadium- Montgomery Stadium. It was so big that the Rolling Stones played their first Phoenix concert there. But with a declining enrollment and a city on the rise, it began to look like the district had lost interest in it’s future and it was gradually falling into state of disrepair. Argie Rhymes was the basketball coach in 81-82, as he had replaced the legendary Gerald “Wimpy” Jones. East High, on the other hand, was still almost brand new by school standards- only 17 years old and in great shape. It also, however, had an enrollment problem- it sat at the corner of 48th Street and Van Buren, which was becoming more of an industrial area than a residential area. From a real estate point of view, it was not in the same ball park as Phoenix Union, but the enrollment was definitely falling. There was also an underlying racial issue at play- Phoenix Union was mostly African-American and Latino, whereas East was mostly white. That issue is never far from the surface in America and it was certainly discussed in this context. I remember a lot of the East High people feeling like they were being sacrificed on the alter of politics. They felt the closing of Phoenix union to be justified, and that East’s enrollment would benefit from the closing of the downtown school. It was in the newspapers and it became an ugly issue. Several times during 81-82, it looked like the district might save East, but in the end they didn’t. Both East and Phoenix Union had powerful sports programs and legacies, but those things are shoved aside when it comes to money and politics.


That situation had an affect on Coach Youree during the season. He had given East High and the district all he had, but it didn’t seem to matter. That situation is what made the final season all the more memorable. Each game seemed to draw us closer to the end of something that no one wanted to see gone. As I mentioned, we lost three games- all by one point. One loss was to Argie and Phoenix Union in that old palace, but then we routed them in the finals of the Phoenix Union Holiday Tournament. We lost at home to Casa Grande, by a shot that was debatedly at or after the buzzer. After that one, Coach Youree told me to go get one of the referees from their dressing room, because he wanted to talk about the ending. Obviously, that is not something that is readily done- going to fetch a ref after a game, that is- so I said “are you sure you want me to go get him?” In no uncertain terms, he told me to go get the guy- I will not use his name here. So, off I went and knocked on the referee’s dressing room door. The one guy Coach Youree wanted was sitting down and I told him that Coach wanted to see him. He said “no way am I going out there!” Awkward. We played Casa Grande later in the year at their place and smashed them pretty good.


We went into the Metro Region tournament as the top seed and won the first two games to set up a final with South Mountain, who we already defeated twice during the season. By getting to the finals, Coach Youree had made it 13 consecutive years to the state tournament in the state’s toughest conference, hands down. No power points in those days- you had to win your way in against teams who could win the whole thing. The championship game was at Brophy and the place was packed on both levels, both sides. There was just barely enough room for us to sit on the bench, which was part of the bleachers. We were down 51-50 with three seconds left, when LeRoy Dean drove the right side of the lane. Everyone knew he had to shoot it- everyone but LeRoy that is. It seemed like South’s entire front line rotated over to block his attempt, so being one of the smartest players I’ve ever been around, LeRoy passed the ball off the backboard to Uvonte Reed who was coming in unguarded from the other side. Uvonte caught the ball in the air and laid it over the rim as time expired. East 52 South 51. As the gym exploded, I looked at the ref, Jerry Steitler- a very courageous man- and he signaled that the basket counted. Coach Youree grabbed me and told me to double check with the scorer- and as I got to the table, I was immediately pinned in by the South coaches, players, and God knows who else. Another very brave man, “Dub” Davis, the scorer, said the basket was good. As I got down to the locker room, and went by the referee’s room, I saw that Don Petroff, the South coach had gotten in there and was letting Jerry Steitler have it. Jerry was just sitting there, with his feet up on a chair saying, “Don, it was good. I saw it all the way”.


Our third loss would be in the state quarterfinals against St. Mary’s. We led by 5 with 43 seconds left, but would lose by 1. A lot of people naively think running a four corner offense is easy, but it is most definitely not when people come after you with traps and fouls. You have to be able to handle the ball when trapped and make good decisions. You also have to make free throws. We did neither in the last 43 seconds. Even at that, we led by one with 5 seconds left, when there was a classic block-charge scenario on the baseline. The baseline ref called a charge, but was overruled by the senior official who huddled with him after the call. The call was changed to a block and the St. Mary’s player, to his credit, made both free throws. We missed a final attempt and East High’s illustrious basketball program came to an end.


Right after the season, both Arizona and Arizona State had openings for a head coach. Word had it that Ben Lindsey, the successful coach at Grand Canyon College, was going to get the Arizona job- which he did. The ASU job seemed like the perfect fit for Coach Youree. He was a great player there where he had played for the retiring Ned Wulk, was nationally known, and was a popular choice from people all over the valley. Radio talk shows and op-ed’s in the Republic said it was a no-brainer. Ned Wulk came out and said that Coach Youree should be the choice. After Ben Lindsey got the Arizona job, he called Coach Youree and begged him to take an assistant’s position with him. I was in the office when the call came in. Coach said he was in the ASU process and could not do it. It was really a heady few weeks in the midst of a very sad situation with the impending closure of East High. It came down to Coach Youree and Bob Weinhauer, the coach from Pennsylvania University, who had just taken them to the Final Four. In the end, Dick Tamburo told Coach Youree that he just couldn’t pull the trigger on a high school coach. His quote was “how would I look if you didn’t win?” to which Coach Youree responded “how will you look if I do win?” I have no doubt that Coach Youree would have taken ASU places it has still never been. And I would have been right there with him.


Next…A Roughrider…

2019 Jalen Williams (Shadow Mountain)

In a surprising move the former 2-sport star of Football and hoops deciding to quit football-he had a Nevada football offer. I'm sure all in here remember him!! That's why I posted in here..

He RED-SHIRTED at Scottsdale CC--and like NO ONE knew lol.
He spent summer in Reno Nevada and went into Scottsdale in November. Has been practicing with the team all year.

He will play for Scottsdale CC (an actual qualifier)-so most likely play 1 year there--do well--
then prob go D1. With his toughness and HUGE motor--he'll find a D1.

Coach said he's 6'3-6'4 and 195 and had been shooting the cover off the ball. Which is a big deal since he's not known as a shooter!

Just an FYI for the football junkies LOL

Which Arizona high school football program has the best uniforms?

I think some of the best I've seen have been Valley Christian's white helmet, blue jersey and white pants combo. Also, Chandler's white helmet with blue jersey and pants is a very clean look. If you can't tell, my favorite color is blue.

Huge fan of Hamilton's new uniforms from last year and Highland's black, teal, gray and white (way better than when I played there).

I've barely scratched the surface with those four schools. What are some of your favorites?

Coach Ballard's Blog #18

Need more dimensions…


I never really had a plan for how long I would stay at Judson. It was just so out of balance with the world that I didn’t think anyone could stay for a long time, but there were teachers who had been there for twenty or thirty years. When I say out of balance, I mean that the clientele was a bunch of filthy rich kids, being taught in rustic surroundings, in a neighborhood with multi-million dollar homes spreading out in all directions. My “locker room” for PE and basketball was a converted storage shed almost off the property out by the football/soccer field. The basketball courts were at the other end of the school near the entrance, so I would drive to work in the mornings and park down by my shed, then drive out towards the basketball courts at the end of the day, just in case I needed to use my headlights. The classrooms were old adobe style buildings with very Spartan technology. The students always had more devices than we did. Their dorms were also old adobe buildings, but many of the rooms had better furniture in them than I did where I lived with my wife.


Going into my third year, I knew I couldn’t last much longer there, because I would not be able to grow as a coach. It was impossible to get much off season time with the guys that played basketball, because almost all of them played football, basketball, and baseball. And no, playing multiple sports did nothing to enhance their college careers and make them more attractive to scouts. That’s been a tired argument over the years, mainly put forth by football coaches who see every other season of sport as a chance for their guys to work on things that will make them better football players. If a kid wanted to play other sports, I never tried to stop them, but there were plenty of guys who liked basketball enough over the years who would just get better and pass those other guys by along the way. There’s a couple of good books out there about the power of dedicated practice- “Outliers” by Malcom Gladwell and “Talent is Overrated” by Geoff Colvin if you don’t want to take my word for it.


Anyway, the third year, the talent that came into the school was not quite as good as the previous two years, and that was something I simply had no control over. You may be wondering why my Aunt Barbara was not more help in moving me up the ladder and out of Judson, but I never really called on her much for that. This was before cell phones or the internet, so there was not nearly the network for job searching that exists now, so if I heard of something interesting through the grapevine, I would call her. Deep down, I didn’t really want to coach women, and she was not as in tune with the men’s side, so nothing much ever materialized. And, over the years, I came to understand that most of the interviews I got were done as a favor to Aunt Barbara and were not real considerations of my coaching abilities. Examples, Aunt Barbara hooked me up with Steve Patterson, who was the head coach at ASU in the mid-80’s. I thought I had a real shot at that one, and had a two and half hour interview with Steve in his office and left feeling really good. I walked in the door to my apartment and within five minutes the phone rang and a friend of mine said he knew who ASU had hired- he saw the guy moving in to an apartment a few days prior. It was already a done deal before I ever walked in to Steve’s office. Another time, Linda Sharp, head women’s coach at USC, and famous for coaching Cheryl Miller to national titles, came to my home unannounced and asked if we could talk for a bit. Of course, and she said there was a position open on her staff. We talked for an hour before she finally said that she promised Barbara that she would come by, but was really looking for a woman to fill the spot. She just wanted to meet Barbara’s nephew. I do have my pride, so after a few years of this, I quit asking.


I really knew what I wanted to become as a coach and needed someone to help me get there. The camps I had attended in the summers were fabulous ways to pick people’s brains, and I had all sorts of ideas floating around. I wanted to build a program, teach fundamentals, have a defensive system that would keep us in games even when offense was not so good, and give kids life skills through the sport. Our third team at Judson was pretty good, but got knocked out of the state tournament by Phoenix Country Day. It was time to move on and grow as a coach. And hopefully coach in a gym.


I called Coach Youree, who I had stayed in contact with over the years since leaving East High. Coach was legendary by then- he had won five state championships and was just coming off the 1980-81 season, where his team would be called the “Team of the Century” by the Arizona Republic at the end of the twentieth century. They were 28-0, and the closest game they had was 13 points. They had won the state title over Chandler at Wells Fargo and I had attended the game. Chandler’s young coach, Gary Ernst, had tried to employ a 1-3-1 extended zone against East. Gary’s team had size, but East had five guys who could all handle the ball, pass, and score. They did those things in abundance by spreading the floor and were ahead at the half 44-14. It seemed like the whole city of Chandler had showed up to the game, and I still remember many of them filing out at the half. It was a clinic of tactical basketball, unlike few I have ever seen to this day. Chandler was very good, don’t kid yourself, and Gary’s career speaks for itself. When I called Coach Youree later, I told him that I needed help becoming the kind of coach that I thought I could be. He suggested that I come work with him. I jumped at the opportunity, even though there was no job attached. It would be purely voluntary. In our business, and many coaches will echo this, it’s called “paying your dues”.


When I told Dennis Gray, the principal, and Joe LaMer, the AD, that I would be leaving Judson, they understood that I needed to grow in the profession, and were all for it. Good guys and good memories for me. I had one last summer of camps before really diving into the business, and then had to find some kind of work that would help Brigitte and I pay the bills and also allow me to pursue my passion. I caught on at the old Dillard’s at Fashion Square Mall. It has since been rebuilt over the years and for me is always the “New Dillard’s”. I would have never been even close to the kind of coach I am now if I hadn’t made this move. Many of the stories I have heard from successful coaches over the years have involved moments of great sacrifice to learn from somebody who had it all together. Coach Youree definitely had it all together and the Universe provided for me once again. As it turned out, I was headed for an unbelievable experience at East High.


Next…a Longhorn once again…

2020 signed players and who is left?

Top-25 players in state left:
1. Sincere Parker SG 6'4 AZ Compass Prep
2. Eduardo Andre C 6'9 AZ Compass Prep
3. Fallou Diagne C 6'11 AZ Compass Prep
4. Peter Filipovity SF 6'6 Bella Vista Prep
5. Isaiah Floyd SG 6'3 AZ Compass Prep
6. Blaise Beauchamp SG 6'1 Bella Vista Prep
7. Terrence "TJ" Green SF 6'5 Carl Hayden
8. Shemar Morrow SF 6'5 Shadow Mtn
9. Xzavier Lino SF 6'5 Sunnyslope
10. Jerry Iliya SF 6'5 Paradise Honors

11. Anthony Garza PF 6'7 PHH Prep
12. Byron Brown SG 6'4 Sahuarita
13. Robby Devries SG/CG 6'4 Millennium
14. Chance Garland SF 6'5 Tock
15. Sunday John SF 6'3 Willow Canyon
16. Justice Marmara SG 6'3 Millennium
17. Jamar Brown SG 6'3 Hamilton
18. Jorden Josephs SF 6'5 Chaparral
19. Jackson Risi SG 6'1 Valley Christian
20. Isaac Monroe CG/PG 5'11 Peoria

21. Nikola Gasic C 6'11 Bella Vista Prep
22. Davon Cobbs SF 6'3 Shadow Mtn
23. Trey Donaldson CG 6'1 Gilbert Christian
24. Jordan Wollangk PG 5'10 Mesquite
25. Paul Maldonado CG 6'0 Gilbert

Most heartbreaking moment for AZ sports fans?

As we sit here in another day of quarantine, many people and sports networks are broadcasting and remembering big moments from their sports fandom.

What is the most heartbreaking football memory you have as a player/coach/fan?

Santonio Holmes scoring in the Super Bowl? Joe Germaine? Something from high school?

Let us know on this thread: We'll also post an article in the coming days.

Lee Patterson's article on three of the fighters in UFC 239 being Arizona boys

“I don't know why or how it happened but it's pretty damn cool that three of us on the Main Card all wrestled in high school in Arizona. This is the biggest show in the MMA world and we are here.” - Justin Gaethje

Link: https://arizonavarsity.rivals.com/n...thje-cejudo-cruz-in-ufc-spotlight-on-saturday

I wonder if I can buy the fight and post some sort of secret live stream in the forum for you guys to see it. How awesome would it be if I just took the whole website down with an illegal stream one week after we started this whole thing, hahaha

Coach Ballard's Blog #16

Coaching in the USA…


When I came back from France late in the summer of 1978, my thoughts were on getting a job somewhere in the profession. My Aunt, Barbara Hedges, was the women’s athletic director at the University of Southern California, which was the dominant collegiate women’s athletic program in the nation in that era. They were NCAA championship caliber in every sport and won 17 NCAA titles in her tenure. Aunt Barbara would go on to become the Athletic Director at the University of Washington in 1990 and be the first woman to head up a power five football program, which made national news. In her first year there, the Huskies won the national championship in football under head coach Don James. I called Aunt Barbara when I got home from France to see if she could help me, but it was late in the summer, so there wasn’t much available. I got two interviews- San Diego State and UC Santa Barbara in the women’s programs for assistant positions, but I didn’t get offered either position. I thought no big deal- this is easy, I will catch a big time job sooner or later. The Universe had other plans.


Aunt Barbara called late in August to tell me of a high school position that was open at a small private boarding school in Paradise Valley called the Judson School. She knew the principal there, Dennis Gray, because his son, Riki Ellison, was on the USC football team. I had heard of Judson, because that was where Coach Youree got his first high school job. I did not have a teaching certificate, but I did have a Bachelor’s Degree in a dual major- Political Science and Physical Education. That degree would play a huge role in the next thirty years of my life- which is why I am thankful that the advisor at Wyoming had no clue what he was talking about when he told me to switch majors. The position at Judson was for a head basketball coach and phys ed teacher. I met with the AD of Judson, Joe LaMer, and within five minutes of walking in, I was the new basketball coach. They were as desperate as I was, as school was just about to start.


I did not have a teaching certificate, nor had I ever done any student teaching. I don’t know how it is today, but in those days you could earn a certificate in one of two ways- student teach or work at a private school for a minimum of two years. That was the upside. The down side was that I had no practical experience teaching phys ed, or coaching in high school. The guys that I had coached in France were men who played for money, and there might be a difference in perspective there.


Here is an observation for the readers of ArizonaVarsity- don’t become a head coach without having a philosophy that is written down and thoroughly understood, first by you, then by your charges. Making up things as you go will not be healthy for your career. I think a lot of people get into coaching first and foremost because they love a particular sport that they played and want to pass that love onto others. Remember, I got into it because I just believed there had to be a better way to do it than my coach at Wyoming. If I would have been smarter, I would have begun to write down the main principles that I believed in and how they would relate to coaching. I did not have those written down going in to Judson, but gradually began to work them out in very difficult circumstances. For the sake of discussion here are the six principles that shape my life and coaching, as they appear in our basketball philosophy that all players have received, with some revisions, since 1980:


“My philosophical approach to coaching, teaching, and living revolves around six principles. I let these guide me and help me know who to associate with. The first principle is to be a good person. Being a good person is a function of living according to timeless natural principles of behavior that are universal and inarguably linked with what humans consider as “good”. Those would be honesty, loyalty, fairness, desire to serve others, spiritual, and aligned with the “true north” of the ethical compass. I do not espouse perfection, rather alignment, which is easy to spot. You can depend on good people, and you can trust them. When I write a letter of recommendation for someone, that is my highest compliment- that they are a “good person”.

The second principle that guides me is the constant desire to learn. In our basketball philosophy, we refer to this principle as “education”, and tell our charges that it is the chief business of a good life. If being good is the ultimate, then learning what good is follows. There is too much to learn, therefore you can never learn too much. It is a lifetime pursuit and is the baseline for wisdom. Being considered wise by good people is an honor.

The third principle is loyalty. I believe it is the best of all human qualities and is analogous to the rudder on a ship. Loyalty keeps us from floating loosely and dangerously, and gives us direction and purpose. We tell our players that if an endeavor is not worth your loyalty, then it is not worth your time. We must be careful what we attach this great quality to, for if it is misplaced it can cause great harm. Used correctly, it gives achievement its truest blessings.

The fourth principle that guides me is self-discipline. We tell our players that you cannot goof around all day in class and then come into what you believe is your passion, basketball, and suddenly be totally self-disciplined. Your habit of bad self-discipline will rear its ugly head when times get tough on the court. I believe that applies to my life, as well. If I have been self-disciplined in my approach to routine tasks, it will carry over to tasks which are more complicated and/or stressful. I have found that my ability to prepare for an opponent as a coach, has influenced my ability to prepare as a teacher, as a husband, and as a father. The old axiom for this principle is ‘your actions speak louder than your words’.

The fifth principle of influence is relationships. These are cultivated and nurtured by the aforementioned timeless principles of a good person. Loyalty is not to be given casually, and if carefully managed, relationships have great meaning. They are the bond to this world, and spiritually the bond to the next. We tell our players to care for each other, as I care for my immediate family and friends. There will be tough times, but they will be less bitter of relationships are true and strong.

The sixth and final principle that guides me is building skills in whatever endeavors are important. Family relationships, teaching, and coaching require constant improvement. This part of my philosophy has led me into an intense study of leadership over the past few years. The qualities that make good leaders also lend themselves to making good husbands, fathers, teachers, and coaches.”


If this helps get some young coaches off the ground, then it is worth sharing. It is definitely important to have something that you live by in the hands of players, because the old axiom is “who you are is more important than what you teach”. Players will see right through a phony. Judson was a good place to start to test who I was, because it was a private boarding school for rich kids from around the world. Many were damaged goods, because they had problems that their parents no longer wanted to deal with. Those problems became our problems right away, and these kids were sharp- you couldn’t BS them. In that sense, it was a great place to start building a coaching philosophy, but again I would highly recommend having one already built before you start out. You can tweak it as you go through the years, as I have and as John Wooden did with his Pyramid of Success.


Next…Growing…

How would you grade the Arizona Cardinals 2020 NFL Draft?

Here's who they selected:

Round 1, pick 8:
Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
Round 3, pick 72: Josh Jones, OT, Houston
Round 4, pick 114: Leki Fotu, DT, Utah
Round 4, pick 131: Rashard Lawrence, DT, LSU
Round 6, pick 202: Evan Weaver, LB, California
Round 7, pick 222: Eno Benjamin, RB, Arizona State

They also received former Houston Texans WR DeAndre Hopkins, who has averaged 1,200 receiving yards per season over a 7-year career in exchange for their 2nd round pick, which ended up being used by Houston to select former TCU DT Russ Blacklock.

I personally like the value of Eno Benjamin in the 7th round in case they can't re-sign Kenyan Drake to a reasonable deal after this year. I'm a huge Leki Fotu fan, but I'm not sure how they're going to use him. The Rashard Lawrence pick must have been on potential, because his college career wasn't something that will blow you away.

I think whether or not this draft ends up being worthy of the highest possible grade really depends on whether or not Josh Jones can find his way into a starting role sooner rather than later.

Isaiah Simmons might be the rebirth of Adrian Wilson.
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