N.C. State’s Woodson continues dazzling start

The spectacular start to Randy Woodson’s tenure as chancellor continued Friday when the Wolfpack named Debbie Yow its new athletics director.

Yow, who had been at Maryland, credited Woodson with convincing her to come. And in landing Yow, State lands an experienced athletics director who succeeded at a similar school and brings a legendary name – Yow – back to the West Raleigh campus.

The move, which was kept out of the public eye until Thursday night, gives a fresh jolt of energy to the Wolfpack and continues Woodson’s impressive run.

State needed a change at athletics director, with Wolfpack fans unhappy, and rightfully so, with the overall success of the program under Lee Fowler. The ground was laid for Fowler to leave before Woodson arrived, but Woodson made four critical, and important, moves:

First, he articulated why State needed to move in a new direction, and in particular because the school’s athletes needed to graduate at a higher level. In reading his comments and watching his delivery, you couldn’t help but feel Woodson appeared quite confident in his new role.

Second, he put together a smart committee that was chaired by Smedes York, the former Raleigh mayor who is highly respected in town. That committee included athletics department personnel and showed that Woodson was quick to grasp the lay of the land here.

Third, he kept the search confidential, which is no small success in the Twitter era.

And fourth, he landed an AD who knows the job and has succeeded in it. Maryland athletes also graduated at a higher rate than those at N.C. State. According to the NCAA, incoming freshmen in 2002-03 graduated at a 66 percent rate at Maryland and a 51 percent rate at NCSU.

Yow was clear about her goals on Friday. She said she wants to meet with Wolfpack coaches and find out what they need to be successful. She praised State fans for their support, which is especially impressive in football. And she said she had already met with the football staff and said of Tom O’Brien, “I did say to Tom, You’re my man.’

“I want and need him to be successful,” she said.

The only real disappointment in the announcement of Yow as that the popular head of the Wolfpack Club, Bobby Purcell, was passed over for the position. Purcell would have been a great choice, and has the personality and temperament to succeed in the job.

But in Yow, Woodson found his own person, and an experienced administrator with a strong tie to the school. It’s yet another impressive move by the new chancellor, who has set a goal of tripling the endowment to $1 billion – and needs the fan base energized to do that.

Home run hire for Wolfpack

NC State clearly made a great choice in luring Debbie Yow home from Maryland to be its next athletics director.

The Gibsonville native’s appointment to replace Lee Fowler is indeed a wonderful family tale. Her late sister, Kay, was a legendary N.C. State women’s basketball coach before finally losing her long battle with cancer. Her sister, Susan, was N.C. State’s first all-American women’s basketball player in 1976.

As heartwarming as that is, it pales in comparison to Debbie Yow’s career accomplishments.

They alone would have made her a great choice for this job. Her family and geographical ties are mere icing on the cake.

Maryland’s athletics director since 1994, Debbie Yow saw the Terrapins win 17 national championships under her leadership. They came in high-profile sports like men’s basketball (2002) and women’s basketball (2006). Plus Maryland also became dominant in women’s lacrosse and field hockey, which combined to win 13 national championships.

And one particular situation she faced recently at Maryland will prepare her well for her new job.

The Terrapins aren’t living up to past success in men’s basketball and football. Yow publicly clashed with Gary Williams, the coach who led Maryland to the 2002 NCAA title, and has stuck with football coach Ralph Friedgen. While Friedgen coached Maryland to an ACC championship and Orange Bowl appearance in 2001, the Terps were a woeful 2-10 last season.

In Raleigh, she’ll be challenged to improve the fortunes of N.C. State football (under coach Tom O’Brien) and men’s basketball (under coach Sidney Lowe). The Wolfpack have gone 16-21 in three seasons under O’Brien. N.C. State is a pedestrian 71-62 in four seasons under Lowe and has yet to play in the NCAA Tournament in his tenure.

So welcome home Debbie Yow. The Wolfpack family clearly has a soft spot in its heart for you and your family. But come July 15, when you officially begin work, there’s a serious job to be done.

Challenging a national sports columnist ends with me being called an idiot

I objected to a recent column by CBSsports.com senior writer Gary Parrish, who also hosts an ESPN radio program. He “bravely” denigrated the basketball talents of a pair of former Duke players – Taylor King and Greg Paulus, both white. He wrote that he always felt they were overrated and not as good as a number of other players he noted, all black.

He wrote, “What I hope is that it teaches the folks handing out cherished things like invitations to the McDonald’s All-American game to take their jobs more seriously. Bestowing that kind of honor on an obviously inferior talent doesn’t do anybody any favors. It’s almost certainly going to make the committee look stupid in due time, and in the meantime it’ll add expectations and eyeballs to a prospect whose more likely to be just another guy than the guy at a high-major university.”

It all came across to me as just another liberal white sports writer, who either has an inferiority complex because he couldn’t make it in sports or who has white-guilt syndrome. But I was willing to find out by emailing him.

I wrote, “The two overrated players you point out both just happen to be white, right? Stereotypes work all kinds of ways, don’t they?” He responded quite frankly by writing, “Are you asking whether I believe the reputations of Paulus and King were elevated because they’re white? Yes, I think there’s something to that.”

I wrote back that as a former sports writer (and current blogger I guess), I have found that white basketball players have more prejudices to go through than black players. So, the opposite would be true. White players have to work harder to prove themselves.

I remember people thinking Larry Bird was only good because he worked hard, as if black players don’t work hard. I remember a white high school basketball player who sat on the bench, even though when he saw rare playing time he drilled shots. I remember talking to a scout who told me that white football players are adversely affected by stereotypes. White players that should be at the major college level are relegated to smaller schools and that white players who should go in the first round of the NFL draft drop to the third, fourth or fifth round.

Parrish wrote that I was just plain wrong that white players have to work harder to prove themselves. He wrote, “No way Taylor King (or the Wear Twins, for that matter) are McDonald’s All-Americans if they’re not white. A good white player is a rarity. Which makes him a commodity. Which leads to accolades he might not deserve.”

I wrote back, “Why is a ‘good’ white player a rarity? Could you also say that a good black student is a rarity? Could you get away with that? You have stepped right into a stereotype of your own – the liberal white-guilt media which has no problem finding and pointing out the limitations of white people but seem to find no limitations of black people. It doesn’t take courage to talk about white basketball players being overrated. Let’s see a story about black baseball players or hockey players being overrated and see what kind of mail you get. That would be courage.”

Of course those provocative comments earned me the Parrish label of “idiot” and the correspondence was over.

Prior to last basketball season, when questions abound about the future of Duke basketball, Bomani Jones, who is being called “sports radio’s rising star” right now and who happens to be black, said that Duke basketball was failing because all you have to do is look down the bench and see all the white faces. I wonder if a white radio host could get away with saying that NC Central baseball is failing because, well, all you have to do is look down the bench and see all the black faces?

If Parrish’s thoughts (and Jones’) are still universal in the sports world, I guess Duke’s basketball title last year had no effect on the stereotypes.

Barakat brought dedication, patience to ACC

Fred Barakat died Monday of a heart attack in Greensboro, and if you’ve followed the ACC for years, you have a sense of who he was and what he meant to the conference.

Barakat, 71, had two critical roles for the ACC as associate commissioner, overseeing officials and managing the league’s men’s basketball tournament. He worked more behind the scenes but loved his work and was always available and willing to answer a reporter’s question.

I remember calling him one night at 11 p.m. on a hot story. I thought, “Gosh, he’s going to blow me out for calling this late.” Instead, he patiently and respectfully answered my questions, and when I said I was sorry to call so late and wouldn’t except in extraordinary circumstances, he said no, that was fine, he understood.

Managing officials was a bit of a thankless job. While Barakat could be overly loyal to showy officials like Dick Paparo, you have to admit the ACC was blessed with strong officiating overall in his tenure.

He was tremendous at managing the ACC’s showcase event, the men’s basketball tournament. Barakat was always on the floor, walkie-talkie in hand, making sure all was running smoothly. Yet he always had time to answer a question. I can remember many times stopping to ask him something while his walkie-talkie squawked in the background.

Covering the ACC is different than covering many sports leagues. It has more of a community feel, and people in the league office treat reporters and fans with respect. Barakat was a major part of that, a high-level, high energy executive who had time to listen and laugh. He’ll be missed.

Breaking down Duke’s fouls from 2010 season

A great site for sports fans is Statsheet.com, run by Robbie Allen. On the site, you can break down all sorts of stats from sports and see what is, or is not, true.

Here’s a good example involving fouls for and against Duke from some ACC basketball statistics provided by Allen

Duke averaged 19.5 fouls in ACC play last season and its opponents averaged 19.9 in league play. So there was little difference in the number of fouls called on the Blue Devils and their opponents.

Also interesting – Duke had eight players disqualified in ACC games and its opponents had only five players disqualified. The entire chart is below:

Fouls and Ejections

Team
Opponent
Loading data…
Boston College 6 10 297 18.6 5 0 0 275 17.2 4 0 0
Clemson 9 7 296 18.5 5 0 0 310 19.4 5 0 0
Duke 13 3 312 19.5 8 0 0 319 19.9 5 0 0
Florida State 10 6 295 18.4 7 0 0 296 18.5 9 0 0
Georgia Tech 7 9 316 19.8 5 0 0 300 18.8 5 0 0
Maryland 13 3 269 16.8 2 0 0 289 18.1 4 0 0
Miami (FL) 4 12 312 19.5 10 0 0 276 17.2 5 0 0
NC State 5 11 326 20.4 9 0 0 302 18.9 8 0 0
North Carolina 5 11 256 16 3 0 0 313 19.6 8 0 0
Virginia 5 11 285 17.8 4 0 0 253 15.8 6 0 0
Virginia Tech 10 6 333 20.8 9 0 0 357 22.3 14 0 0
Wake Forest 9 7 322 20.1 15 0 0 329 20.6 9 0 0

No boost on African soil

Given the build-up to the World Cup coming to the African continent for the first time, you would have expected the African teams to have success. After all, France won the Cup in 1998 with a home-soil boost.

But that hasn’t happened so far. The six African teams have combined for one win – by Ghana – going into Monday’s play. Cameroon and Nigeria are even 0-0-2. Overall, the African teams are 1-4-7 in through two matches, and homestanding South Africa is 0-1-1.

One of the best Red Sox fans, a Tar Heel, passes away on Father’s Day after long battle

I’m a member of a very active and successful Red Sox fan club. One of the friends of the club has been an inspiration to us and has, as we now know, been an anonymous donor of thoughtful gifts to help members and to contribute to charities such as the famous Jimmy Fund.

At 3:30 p.m. on Father’s Day, Scott Davenport, passed away surrounded by family and friends after a long and courageous battle with cancer.

In making the announcement to the club, Sean Bunn, who serves as Red Sox Nation Governor for North Carolina, a team out-reach program, wrote:

“I’ve learned a lot about how to be generous even in the smallest things, about how best to savor moments, and about how to treat each day as a gift. He had a distinct and profound impact on my life, and I hope to remember those lessons every day and pass them on.

“I know that Scott savored every last moment of his August 2009 trip to Fenway Park, and that he represented all of us quite well when he threw out the first pitch of this current, exciting Red Sox campaign. When it counted, we all knew that Scott would be able to deliver.

“I take comfort in knowing that my fellow Sox fan was able to see two Red Sox Championships in his lifetime, and that Dustin Pedroia and the Red Sox won a late-inning thriller yesterday afternoon in the last game he was able to watch on TV with his family.”

To read a March article about Davenport, please click here. To see a Triangle Red Sox Nation photo gallery tribute to him, please click here.

Thoughts and prayers go out Scott Davenport’s family.

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Bobby Hutchens has his Father’s Day priorities straight

Bobby Hutchens, director of competition for Stewart-Haas Racing, lost his wife to cancer last December and has decided to stay home in Winston-Salem with his two sons rather than join the racing team in California this weekend.

He is attending a father-son basketball camp at Wake Forest with his 12-year-old son. The other son just completed his freshman year at NC State.

To read more about this touching story, please click here.

World Cup odds and ends, and an odd end

Well, I waited all day for our soccer expert to post something here but, alas, you’re stuck with me – someone who watches soccer only in support of the United States.

I even went to XL Soccer World in Raleigh to watch the U.S. match against Slovenia and I enjoyed the atmosphere. I might not know a lot about soccer but as soon as Slovenia scored first, I told the person next to me, “oh well, this is going to be another tie.”

I admit that I thought it would be a 1-1 tie but it did end in a 2-2 tie, a scoring bonanza by World Cup soccer terms. And it should have been a 3-2 U.S. victory save for a referee who nullified the goal for no apparent reason. A Sporting News article posted at 11:15 p.m. says, “It’s still unclear why (Referee Koman) Coulibaly disallowed Maurice Edu’s 86th-minute strike, which could have given the U.S. a remarkable victory.”

The official is likely to be barred from the rest of the World Cup, Yahoo Sports is reporting. Within the first 10 minutes of the game, my unknowledgeable self was spouting off about how that referee was terrible. Even I could tell. Unfortunately, it cost the U.S. team a victory. Of course the U.S. has got to stop getting behind early.

As for the events at XL Soccer World, I must say that the Cary-based Railhawks soccer team is really trying hard to promote itself. Dozens of kids in soccer camp and several of us big kids were treated to the Railhawks mascot and giveaways and an appearance by one of the key Railhawks players.

While I’m not really interested in the Railhawks, and I’m not real fond of the club’s efforts to attract Spanish-speaking-only illegal aliens, I admire their enthusiasm and hard work. I wish them well in getting American citizens interested in their product. How the U.S. team does in the World Cup will undoubtedly affect the interest in the Railhawks and all soccer-related businesses in the area. And they know it.

Raleigh Sports Club getting some big name speakers

Those who like to talk about sports and support local sports teams have been joining the Raleigh Sports Club for years now – with the club having grown from a handful of people to more than 400 today. But perhaps the biggest selling point is the wide variety of well-known speakers.

The club, which has hosted notable sports figures such as baseball hall of famer Stan Musial and basketball analyst Dick Vitale, has already lined up NC State football coach Tom O’Brien, NC State basketball coach Sidney Lowe, new ECU basketball coach and former UNC star Jeff Lebo and Duke football coach David Cutcliffe for this fall.

The club is making a pitch for UNC coaches Roy Williams and Butch Davis too. But frankly some of the best insider information they hear comes from lesser known speakers who are experts in recruiting or are sportswriters or broadcasters. They are less guarded and don’t have to worry about quotes inspiring opponents.

Lunch meetings are held at Highland United Methodist Church at 1901 Ridge Road in Raleigh. For more information, go to the Raleigh Sports Club Web site. Take a look at the big names that have spoken to the club over the years by clicking here.