When you talk about the long
and proud history of Marist College men’s cross country, one of the first names
that should come to mind is Rich Stevens. Stevens coached the team for a total
of 12 years – eight years in the 1970s and four years in the late 1980s and
into the fall of 1990, right before I started in the winter of 1991. Among the
many interesting factoids of the Rich Stevens’ tenures: He coached Marist cross
country when they were NAIA, NCAA Division 3, as they transitioned into NCAA
Division 2 in the 1970s, and then finally as an NCAA Division 1 program in his
second stint in the late 1980s/1990. My tenure as a runner at Marist was from
1982-1986 – during that in-between period in which Stevens was not coaching at
Marist.
His eight-year stint in the
1970s was marked by great growth in the program, innovation and amazing success
in cross country and track. He had NCAA national qualifiers. He had an
undefeated season. The roster more than doubled under his watch, due to his
meticulous and relentless recruiting of the best cross country runners in New
York State. He augmented that recruiting by forming the Marist Cross Country
Invitational, which at the time was among the biggest and most sought-after
meets in the state. And yes, it was run entirely on campus! What a natural –
and incredibly smart -- recruiting tool. He created the Marist Running Camp,
attracting some of the biggest names in the sport at the time (old-timers will
recognize them all). He created a Marist Cross Country Hall of Fame. He secured
a trophy case in Donnelly Hall, where the team would sometimes do late-night
practices around the natural “indoor track” hallway (fun fact: 11 laps to the
mile). He had pre- and post-season booklets about the program. He kept
meticulous records of workouts and races – sadly, many of which were lost
forever in a house fire in Hyde Park. And amazingly, he did all this as a
part-time coach, which teaching math at FDR High School in Hyde Park.
Rich Stevens did so much, it’s
difficult to imagine how he had time to sleep and eat. He had popular radio
shows on WKIP-AM in Poughkeepsie (I recall being a guest on his show on more
than one occasion!). He was public address announcer for Marist College
basketball games and later for New Jersey Nets basketball games (fun fact: he
has been credited for nicknaming the late former NBA star Darryl Dawkins as
“Chocolate Thunder” … although Wikipedia says it was Stevie Wonder … hmmm). All
that announcing, and time behind various microphones, was one of the reasons
for his hiatus in the early and mid-1980s, but he still remained connected with
the program. Even though he was not my coach, I got to know him while a student
at Marist, and then as a post-graduate, through his announcing of games and
through his background in the sport. And when it was time to hand over the
reins of the program, I met with Rich a few times to discuss the transition
from one-season sport (just cross country) to all three seasons.
One word to describe Coach
Stevens – especially during his retirement years in San Diego – would be
“flamboyant.” His frequent posts on Facebook feature some outrageously colorful
outfits. And when I say “retirement” in San Diego … don’t think that he’s just
sipping pina coladas on the beach. Rich Stevens doesn’t sit still. He kept
teaching math, finally retiring from THAT recently. And he wrote a book, about
the benefits of eating a strictly organic-food diet. He even came back to his
native mid-Hudson Valley several years ago to promote the book. So, for today’s
Pandemic Papers, we take a trip back in time for a deep dive into the history
of the program. And there is no one more steeped in the history of the program
than Coach Rich Stevens.
You did not attend Marist, so your background is a little bit
different from most of these Pandemic Papers interviews. Tell us where you are
from, where you went to high school and college, what your athletic background
is (did you run cross country or track in high school or college?), what you
majored in and how and where you got into teaching?
I grew up in Beacon, NY,
graduating 4th in my class of 164 seniors in 1964. I then attended SUNYA
(UAlbany), where I majored in math and minored in Psychology getting my BA in
1968 and went summers for five summers until I achieved an MA in Math Education
in 1972 from SUNYA. I did an additional 30 graduate hours in education courses
from College of St. Rose, Georgetown University and LIU (Long Island University.
In Beacon, I was a coach of Babe Ruth baseball, youth basketball, and was the
youngest Little League Director in the USA and was a summer playground
supervisor for three years.
I started teaching Math at FDR High
School in Hyde Park NY in 1968 and coached cross country and track for four
years and then coached Marist College cross country for eight years including
NAIA, NCAA Division 3, and NCAA Division 2. I also coached four years as Marist
head track coach. I later coached four more years of Marist cross country in
the late 1980s in NCAA Division 1.
When and where did you start coaching cross country and/or track?
Again, did you have a background in the sport? If not, how did you evolve with
your intricate knowledge and detail-oriented approach to the sport?
I was told the day I arrived at
FDR that I was to coach cross country so I read some books and had my only
losing season of cross country that opening year 1968. I got a LOT of my theory
of best coaching practices from high school coach Joe Newton of “The Long Green
Line” fame. Also, Arlington High School coach Bill Murphy was instrumental in
my practice of pre- and post-season team booklets I produced.
When and how did you become coach at Marist? Did you interview for
the job or just come into it?
Howard “Doc” Goldman, athletic
director at Marist, offered me the job after I had coached his son on the track
team.
Tell us what it was like your first year at Marist. What
traditions did you start, implement? What was the program like when you
inherited it? Who was the coach before you took over?
When I inherited the cross country
and track teams, they were having a hard time just getting people to come out
for the sports and my first job was to recruit locally in the area high schools
and establish larger and better teams. The previous coach of both was Len Olsen,
who was a great field coach for me and a great athlete himself in almost all
the weight events.
Some of the things I introduced
were the pre-and post-season booklets, the Marist cross country high school
invitational, the distance running camp with Marty Liquori, which ran for eight
years, The Marist cross country honor roll and Hall of Fame, the Marist cross
country banquet to honor those athletes, and the night before the invitational
we had a clinic where the high school teams would come for different sessions of
learning.
What were some of your coaching career highlights in your first
stint at Marist?
We won the cross country league
that we were in one year and we placed fourth in the NCAA Division 2 regional
championships and one of my runners, Ron Gadziala, qualified and ran in the
NCAA Division 2 national championships, placing 42nd.
We had a long-standing team
record for the top five runners combined time at Van Cortlandt Park which ran
many years into the 1990s.
We were the first Marist team in
any sport to have an undefeated season in both cross country and track in the
1970s
We entered many large
invitationals and won many of them winning many trophies which we displayed in
the Donnelly Hall XC display case.
Tell us about the cross country camp you created. Where did you
get the idea for that and what “big names” in the sport did you attract to
Poughkeepsie?
I brought up the idea of the
cross country camp with Marty Liquori and he agreed to be a major part of it
through all eight years we conducted it. We wanted to emphasize a lot of
teaching and learning and drills to help the runners besides just running
distance runs as other camps had done. We had each year more than 100 campers
and our outstanding guests included Frank Shorter, Marty Liquori, Steve
Liquori, Barry Brown, Tony Waldrup, Dave Wottle, Dick Buerkle, Don Paige, Tom
Osler, and other top runners.
Tell us what it was like coaching cross country and track at
Marist College in the 1970s. Obviously, there was no track. Where and how did
you practice? What was the home course like?
We would practice at many nearby
places like the Hudson River Psychiatric Center grounds, golf courses nearby,
and Dutchess Community College and Vassar College tracks. Our home course was
developed over the campus and we had many students watching our races.
You created the Marist high school invitational and were
instrumental in its growth to one of the biggest high school meets in the
state. Tell us how that came about.
I just thought that having a
high school invitational would be a great way to introduce high school runners
to our college and campus and would be a great recruiting tool. Our first year,
we had 37 high school teams and later it devolved into an even bigger high
school invitational in the state as we had more than 80 teams and some of the
big teams from across the state would attend, like St. Anthony’s. I was able to
recruit several runners from this invitational. One of the top runners that I
recruited because they were in the invitational was Jerry Scholder of
Nottingham High School.
Do you remember the first-ever indoor state championship for high
school girls at the McCann Center track? If so, tell us about THAT!
I do remember they had that and
Louise Tricard of John Jay High School was responsible for that, but that’s
about all I remember.
You utilized Donnelly Hall for both practices (it is an oval
building, 11 laps to the mile!) as well as the trophy case, which remained in
existence for the track/xc teams well into the 1980s. Tell us about that.
We didn’t have any place to
practice except using Donnelly Hall after 10 at night, but at least it did help
and we would do that quite often. I figured the display case would be a good
way of recruiting from on campus and even when we had the high school
invitational and they attended the lectures we had the night before it was a
good recruiting tool.
Describe the many other innovations you had with regard to the
cross country and track programs. You did brochures and booklets, kept
meticulous records. What motivated you to do all of that?
With not having a track, you had
to think of any way possible to recruit runners and keep runners interested and
get others from on campus to join the team so I just tried anything possible
which wouldn’t cost too much money. The printed brochures were expensive but a
big recruitment tool printed by an outside printing establishment.
How were able to balance the many things you did at Marist with
your job as a math teacher in Hyde Park?
It wasn’t just teaching math, I
was also doing radio on the weekends and in the 80s was the PA announcer for
the Nets and was in the 70s and 80s the PA announcer for Marist basketball. I
do not know how I did all that and I was essentially “married’’ to all those
different jobs; but I loved them all and that’s what kept me going. But that’s
also why I quit because each year I figured I had to do better and more and
after a while I just didn’t see how I could spend more time and develop a
better program.
You had a gap in your coaching career in the early- to mid-1980s.
What did you do during this time (other than your full-time teaching job!)?
In the early 80s when I wasn’t
coaching anymore at Marist, I was doing weekend announcing on WKIP and doing
the PA for Marist basketball and doing the PA for the New Jersey Nets. I also
was the PA announcer for the New York State public high school track and field
championships each year both indoor and outdoor. I developed my PA announcing
style from Jack O’Reilly, who I admired and was the PA announcer of the Penn
Relays.
Tell us about your side career as a public address announcer, both
at Marist College and with the New Jersey Nets? How did both of them come
about?
Howard Goldman had me do the
Marist PA when I first joined Marist as he heard me do the PA for Roosevelt High
School basketball. During a preliminary high school game at Marist, I was
approached after the game by Fred Weinhaus, who was the general manager of WPAT,
the flagship station of the New Jersey Nets as his son was playing in the
preliminary game which included Arlington High School and Ramapo High School of
New Jersey. Fred thought I did a good job and asked if I wanted to do some more
work. I figured he wanted me to do CYO games but he said the Nets were looking
for a PA announcer. He got me to do a trial which was an actual Nets game so I
wasn’t nervous because I figured well at least I can say I did one professional
game and after that game and one more tryout game which was another actual pro
game. The Nets hired me and I was the PA announcer the first seven years they
played in the Meadowlands arena. Funny, but later on in the early 2000s, my
scorekeeper when I did PA for Marist basketball games, Rick Zolzer, also became
the Nets PA announcer.
Tell us about your second stint as Marist cross country coach in
the late 1980s/early 1990s. What made you return to the job and how was it
similar or different to your time as coach during the 1970s?
The job was quite different than
the 70s as now it was Division 1 and we weren’t giving any scholarships and
were competing against scholarship Division I teams so the success of the team
was very minuscule. But they needed a coach and I missed coaching so I stepped
in and they were mostly concerned about having the program continue because
they needed so many sports to function as a Division 1 basketball team and they
had had dwindling numbers of runners on the team just prior to my return.
You’ve been out in San Diego since you retired, but you have kept
quite busy during your retirement years. Tell us some of your endeavors out
there – still teaching? And talk about the book you wrote many years ago!
I finally have retired from
teaching (although I could come back in the summer of 2021). I taught 51 total
years of teaching high school and college math, which included now some 17
years of teaching college math at three different community colleges in the San
Diego suburbs. Ten years ago, I wrote the book “The Easiest Diet in the World ...
And It Works’’ and came out with the second edition of the book two years
later. You can see a 2-minute video of me shot from my San Diego backyard and
learn more about the book and diet on my free website www.theeasiestdiet.com
Have you stayed in touch with any of your former athletes at
Marist as time has gone by?
I have stayed in touch with a
few of the runners, and one of them, Dennis O’Doherty, actually visited me in
San Diego a couple of years ago. It was great to relive the moments with him -
he was a top-five runner each of the years he was with me in the 70s. I have
talked with others via email and phone and Christmas cards.
What message can you send to your former athletes and what message
would you like to impart on the “younger” generation of Marist cross country
and track?
To my former athletes: thanks to
you, I had some fantastic times and great memories and it was a pleasure to
have worked with you; and if you’re ever coming to San Diego, let me know in
advance and let’s get together for lunch and you can email me at: Mrstevens4u@aol.com To future generations
of Marist cross country and track: you’ve got a fantastic coach in Coach Pete
and you’ve eclipsed every record in the books and had a phenomenal record of
achievements there at Marist, which I follow and am excited about and thankful!
2 comments:
As a coach he was a totally incompetent and didn't know his head from his ass. Former track and cross-country athlete at FDR Hyde Park, NY. class of 1972.
Totally over-rated. Overweight and couldn't run a quarter-mile in under 3:00 minutes. A total douche-bag.
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