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Next up: A long offseason

Marquette
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Sir Lawrence

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-06-21/sports/ct-spt-0622-haugh-chicago--20120622_1_jerry-wainwright-head-coach-life-coach

Wainwright happy back in well-grounded Midwest
After 'wonderful experience' on West Coast, former DePaul coach taking expertise to Marquette

June 21, 2012|David Haugh's In the Wake of the News   


During the lone season Jerry Wainwright spent at Fresno State as an assistant basketball coach, he lived in a furnished apartment but never brought a car to California. Every day Wainwright walked three miles to campus and back, allowing him to stretch his mind as much as his legs.

"Instead of being stuck in traffic, you had time to think about some things and work on your tan,'' Wainwright cracked Thursday.


 Each step Wainwright took felt farther away from home. His wife, Debbie, visited but spent the last year tending to family health issues in Cincinnati. His two sons and four grandchildren live in the Chicago area and North Carolina. Calling his son Scott at 2 a.m. Eastern in North Carolina showed Wainwright just how out of place he was.

He forgot the time difference.

"Scott was like, 'Dad, are you OK?'" Wainwright said. "My body never adapted.''

He knew his heart never would. So three weeks ago, without another job yet, the 65-year-old left a promising Fresno State program after "a wonderful experience back on the floor,'' that exposed the native of Berwyn to a West Coast mentality he says improved him as a coach.

"It's a whole different lifestyle in the West, a lot of choices,'' said Wainwright, who DePaul fired in January 2010 midway through his fifth season. "And from a political and social sphere, being liberal from birth doesn't necessarily make someone the easiest person to coach. Team sports is opposite of democracy.''

Marquette offered Wainwright familiar Midwestern sensibility closer to his wife's family and a chance to return to the Big East Conference.

Wainwright realized he wasn't ready to retire yet when a fellow senior citizen at a health club asked about the odd music blaring out of his iPod. It was a Tupac Shakur song former players once recommended that carries meaning for Wainwright.

"It sounds awful but I don't know how to deal with old people,'' Wainwright said.

Thanks to Marquette coach Buzz Williams, Wainwright gets to stay young. As an aspiring head coach, Williams wrote letters to various Division I coaches. Wainwright always wrote back. A relationship developed and when Williams heard of Wainwright's availability, he found a spot for him on his reshuffled staff.

"I always have been humbled by (Wainwright's) willingness to share wisdom with me as I have advanced,'' Williams said in a statement.

Wainwright's official title is Director of Basketball Operations. That's because Basketball Swami would look funny on a name plate. He plans to talk to players daily. He wants to coach Marquette's young coaches.

"Can I help Buzz from a basketball perspective? Sure. But it's different than at Fresno where we were trying to put a car together,'' Wainwright said. "Here, you're polishing and trying to squeeze a few more miles per hour out of the engine.''

In 16 seasons as a Division I head coach, Wainwright went 245-225. Nobody ever complained about his record as a life coach.

"Everything in college athletics now is on a fast track,'' Wainwright said. "But it's not all about basketball. When everything's lost, relationships last. I think coaches can get lost on an island.''

In retrospect Wainwright admits feeling emotionally stranded at DePaul, where he was 59-80. Humor couldn't hide all the pain of losing.

"My last few years, I don't think I took the time to enjoy everything I used to enjoy,'' Wainwright said. "There is incredible pressure in college athletics now. Everybody wants to live on top of the mountain but the happiness and perspective comes during the climb.''

In Wainwright's world, everything happens for a reason. In his last game at DePaul, he broke his leg in a sideline accident. Months later, he developed a hernia as a result of the same collision. Without hernia surgery, Wainwright doubts doctors would have conducted tests that revealed prostate cancer — which he beat thanks to early detection.

Listen long enough to a guy whose DePaul legacy goes beyond wins and losses and you start believing getting fired saved Wainwright's life.

"I feel extremely disappointed I didn't do a better job at DePaul but I'm not embarrassed,'' Wainwright said. "I thought the product and the kids who graduated were better for the experience.''

Not surprisingly, Wainwright prefers discussing the future over the past because he likes setting goals even more than cracking wise.

"What is that old saying, you work eight hours for pay, 12 hours for a good boss and 24 hours for a good cause,'' he asked. "Marquette was close and had the right guy as head coach. I'm going to maximize the moment and enjoy the process.''

One step at a time — except this time Wainwright will drive to work.

Ludum habemus.

Blackhat

As I read the quotes I felt like I was listening to this guy.   




Hopefully Wainwright's got some juice left.

warriorchick

Quote from: Sir Lawrence on June 22, 2012, 11:53:15 AM

"And from a political and social sphere, being liberal from birth doesn't necessarily make someone the easiest person to coach. Team sports is opposite of democracy.''




I know we are not supposed to talk poliitics on this site, but this comment makes no sense.  Is Wainwright saying that people who aren't liberal don't believe in democracy?
Have some patience, FFS.

brewcity77

"Well-grounded Midwest?"

Clearly Jerry hasn't been on Scoop yet.

mr.MUskie


4everwarriors

Quote from: brewcity77 on June 22, 2012, 01:41:42 PM
"Well-grounded Midwest?"

Clearly Jerry hasn't been on Scoop yet.


Pretty sure Jerry is F*ckin'.
"Give 'Em Hell, Al"

augoman

Quote from: warriorchick on June 22, 2012, 12:24:20 PM

I know we are not supposed to talk poliitics on this site, but this comment makes no sense.  Is Wainwright saying that people who aren't liberal don't believe in democracy?

I half expected your post to be in teal- he apparently meant that basketball teams are dictatorships.

warriorchick

Quote from: augoman on June 22, 2012, 02:51:21 PM
I half expected your post to be in teal- he apparently meant that basketball teams are dictatorships.

Then he had poor word choice.  Perhaps he should have said "open-minded" instead of "liberal".  It is not the same thing.
Have some patience, FFS.

Lennys Tap

Quote from: warriorchick on June 22, 2012, 02:57:18 PM
Then he had poor word choice.  Perhaps he should have said "open-minded" instead of "liberal".  It is not the same thing.

It sort of used to be.

Skatastrophy

Quote from: warriorchick on June 22, 2012, 02:57:18 PM
Then he had poor word choice.  Perhaps he should have said "open-minded" instead of "liberal".  It is not the same thing.

I think you getting so touchy about his word choice really proves his point.

ZiggysFryBoy


MUSF

Quote from: warriorchick on June 22, 2012, 12:24:20 PM

I know we are not supposed to talk poliitics on this site, but this comment makes no sense.  Is Wainwright saying that people who aren't liberal don't believe in democracy?

You may want to look up the actual meaning of the word liberal. This word has been co-opted by people with political objectives on both the left and right. The way coach Wainwright uses it is correct, and his comment is accurate.

madtownwarrior

I think Wainright was brought in to be Buzz's henchman in the obvious Buzz / Larry Williams feud...

rocky_warrior

Not that I need to say this, but don't make this political.

jsglow

Buzz has a soft spot for old salts who he can continue to learn from.  I think Jerry is an excellent addition to the staff and will serve as Buzz' private sounding board.  There is no question he has a wealth of basketball knowledge and still very much enjoys being around young folks.

brewcity77

Quote from: brewcity77 on June 22, 2012, 01:41:42 PM
"Well-grounded Midwest?"

Clearly Jerry hasn't been on Scoop yet.

Quote from: warriorchick on June 22, 2012, 02:57:18 PM
Then he had poor word choice.  Perhaps he should have said "open-minded" instead of "liberal".  It is not the same thing.

Didn't take long for someone to make this all personal and political, going off the rails. Like I said...Jerry hasn't been on Scoop yet. To MUSF's point...

liberal (adj) Open to new behavior or opinions and willing to discard traditional values.

Calm down there, chick...no one was making this political, including neither Jerry nor the article's writer ;)

warriorchick

Quote from: brewcity77 on June 23, 2012, 12:13:08 PM
Didn't take long for someone to make this all personal and political, going off the rails. Like I said...Jerry hasn't been on Scoop yet. To MUSF's point...

liberal (adj) Open to new behavior or opinions and willing to discard traditional values.

Calm down there, chick...no one was making this political, including neither Jerry nor the article's writer ;)

Okay, then, I will say something that perhaps has never been said on this board: I stand corrected.



Fellas, feel free to return to your multiple-page arguments about whether Larry and Buzz hate each other.
Have some patience, FFS.

Knight Commission

No offense to Jerry but I would have liked a Mike Deane hire for this role better and I bet Mike Deane would have taken it.

augoman

Quote from: Knight Commission on June 24, 2012, 07:35:14 PM
No offense to Jerry but I would have liked a Mike Deane hire for this role better and I bet Mike Deane would have taken it.

Interesting thought.  I, too, would have liked that hire.  Doubt that Deane would have taken it.

Golden Avalanche

Quote from: Knight Commission on June 24, 2012, 07:35:14 PM
No offense to Jerry but I would have liked a Mike Deane hire for this role better and I bet Mike Deane would have taken it.

Other then one of them having worked for Marquette, what's the difference between the two?

lurch91

Quote from: The Golden Avalanche on June 25, 2012, 09:21:26 AM
Other then one of them having worked for Marquette, what's the difference between the two?

Apparently the seat belt....

MUSF

Quote from: The Golden Avalanche on June 25, 2012, 09:21:26 AM
Other then one of them having worked for Marquette, what's the difference between the two?

Other than Deane being bat sh*t crazy and on the complete other end of the bball philosophy spectrum from Buzz?

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