Here at Marist, Coach Maker’s wife, Erica, has been an
integral part of our track and cross country family as an assistant coach for
nearly two years. Be Better? She has made us all – athletes, coaches, alumni,
all of us – better by her graceful presence on a daily basis. Now that her
husband has been let go, this obviously makes her ability to stay on as coach
at the same school an untenable situation. We had an emotional team meeting
last night. There were tears and there were hugs. There were a lot of tears.
There was some anger at the situation, sure. But mostly there was love and
there were tears. I told the team last night, and I tell the followers of this
blog today: Although Erica was part of our program for a short time, the mark
she left with all of us was indelible. And we will all take a little bit of her
poise, her charm and her coaching brilliance with us moving forward, now and
always. Saying goodbye is never easy. In this most unusual of circumstances, it
is a bit confusing and extra difficult. We will continue to strive to Be Better,
because that’s what we do, and that’s what Erica contributed to our program for
the too-brief time she was with us. We wish the Maker family success and we bid
them adieu, with love from us all.
Wednesday, March 7, 2018
March sadness
As the college basketball tournament season heats up –
conference tournaments, automatic bids, at-large bids, bubble teams, the Big
Dance – we introduce you to one dark side of that high stakes, competitive,
cutthroat sport: Good men who lose their jobs. Exhibit A here at Marist is men’s
basketball coach Mike Maker, who on Monday was “relieved of his duties” as part
of a “change in leadership.” Late comedian George Carlin, a master of language,
would have a field day with these euphemisms. Carlin would probably say: “How
about this? Marist fired Mike Maker. Blunt. Brutal. To the point.” Yeah, that’s
just me going off on an English language riff. Whatever. Anyway, it is not my
job nor is it my place to debate the merits of this decision, especially in a
public forum like this blog. The team did not perform well on the court.
Multiple losing seasons. In the revved up world of college basketball, that
costs coaches – even honorable, upstanding men like Mike Maker – their jobs.
What fans and followers of the sport sometimes forget is that, even though
these coaches do get paid well, there is a domino effect of unintended
consequences. Most of these men have families and lives away from the hardwood.
When they get fired, it upends households and sends them into a whirl of
confusion and unplanned, unexpected change.
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