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…