Bob Knight, Indiana University, NCAA Men's Basketball

Knight Time

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Thirty years ago this week, former Indiana University basketball coach Bob Knight threw a plastic red chair across the free-throw lane early in the first half of a 72-63 home loss to rival Purdue.

It was classic Knight, which is neither meant as a compliment, nor is it meant as a completely negative thing. It was just, well, another landmark Bob Knight moment during the height of the Bob Knight era.

The anniversary of this event provides an excuse to try to make sense now of the strange relationship between Knight, the school and the fans who loved him – and loved to hate him.

Bob Knight remains an enigma in the hearts and minds of fans of a certain age, even nearly 15 years after he last coached in Bloomington. It is one thing to watch a YouTube clip of a chair toss, or to read “A Season on the Brink” – but it is quite another to have lived through it.

And really, to understand Knight, to understand why fans still love him, but from a distance, you probably need to know that Bob Knight would never exist in this way today.

Oh sure, “The Chair” might happen, but Knight would have been suspended, fined or fired.

Maybe all three.

And probably within 24 hours.

Between social media and our viral news society, the entire world would have viewed the toss 10 million times by the following morning. Sports talk shows would discuss it, Knight, his mental state, who was to blame, what should be done and how it affected the players, officials and fans in a matter of three hours.

Better stated: If we make a big deal about touchdown celebrations, deflated footballs and the smallest hints of impropriety, what would we do with Knight in 2015?

In 1985, the Big Ten suspended Knight one game, and probably only did that because they had to do something. The media favored him, especially in Bloomington, and there’s little doubt that story did not make the regional or national news, at least not the way it would have today, with big, bold font and a catchy headline.

Yet there remains another reason that Bob Knight could not and would not exist in the same manner or fashion he did back then: The world – not just the game of basketball – has changed, evolved and grown. Knight has not.

Indiana (the state) in the 1970s and 1980s was dominated by basketball, in a way that must have been experienced, not told. Between the high school state-wide, single class tournament, Notre Dame, Purdue, Indiana State, Butler and Indiana, the state had a plethora of future pros and all-time legendary players come through.

The coaching characters were just as bold: Digger Phelps, Gene Keady and of course, Knight. Loud, intimidating, charismatic, bold figures cut from a cloth of execution and perfection. To be fair, there are times I wonder if many of the coaches from basketball and football would survive, even at their primes, 30 years into the future.

Perhaps the biggest factor of all: Indiana was less developed in the 1980s than it is now. This means lots of rural towns, connected by state highways and county roads. It means less to do in a city like Indianapolis, in towns like Fishers, Carmel, Greenwood, Brownsburg, Avon and Greenfield. It means there were only four TV stations – and cartoons aired on Saturday mornings.

It means a lot of free time to practice, play and watch basketball.

The house I spent my early years in sat on three acres on State Road 252, about 40 minutes from Bloomington, built by my grandfather in the late 1970s. In the area between the detached garage and the house, was a gravel driveway where my first basketball goal went up. In the middle of the backboard, my father painted the interlocking IU logo.

“You hit the corners of the ‘U’, and the ball will go in every time,” Dad told me. My parents were huge Indiana fans. My father had Knight’s salt-and-pepper hair, and at a young age, I wanted to play for them both.

I learned to dribble a basketball on gravel. Saturdays were spent at the Boys Club in short shorts, weekdays were spent out shooting at the logo until the utility light flickered and the shadows prevented my eyes from reading the bounce of the gravel. (I learned early on, dribbling on rocks in the dark brings about a bloody nose for a six-year-old.)

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Evenings were spent watching the Hoosiers and Bobby Knight, a.k.a. the General. My memories of youth are interwoven with Martha the Mop lady, Don Fisher, Chuck Marlowe and John “Laz” Lazkowski and Indiana games on WTTV-4. In fact, to this day, I can do a dead-on Don Fisher impersonation.

The rest of my free time was spent pretending to be a player on a Nerf goal in our rec room. Mainly, it was always the National Championship game and I methodically recreated “The Shot” – Keith Smart’s baseline jumper to win the 1987 National Championship – every single time I played.  Sometimes, I’d redo the sequence until mine went through the basket. I’d celebrate. I’d conduct my own TV interview. My dad, and thousands of other fathers, had the red sweater and golf shirt combo Knight nailed down, like a uniform of his own.

I tell all this because there is no conceivable way I was the only child of the 80s in Indiana who did these things. Some loved Purdue and the Boilermakers, like my parents’ best friends and their boys, others loved Notre Dame or Butler. I tell this as an example of why everyone loved and obsessed over basketball. And all the boys believed they would play for their school. Much of this had to do with the character of The General.

Reading the stories, the books, you were convinced that there was a method to Knight’s madness, which everything he did was to make you better, as a person, as a player. There are countless former players that swear by him, fewer, but still numerous that swear at him.

What “The Chair” should have shown us, had our eyes not been so blinded, our discipleship so strong, was that there was far less method and much more madness.

Bob Knight did not throw a chair across the floor because the officials were just that bad (Knight actually respected one of the officials, Phil Bova, deeply and later worked a clinic for him for no charge).

Knight did not throw a chair across the floor because his team was having a bad season by his standards (which was true, considering IU was a preseason top-5 team after an Elite 8 run in ’84 and upset of North Carolina).

And Knight certainly did not throw the chair to help out an elderly lady he said was asking for his seat, should he not be using it, as he told David Letterman in ’87.

No, Knight threw the chair because he could not stop himself from throwing the chair. Knight lacked control, probably always did. The method really got lost in his madness. And as time went by, that remained Bob Knight’s biggest obstacle. He couldn’t control himself and demanded from everyone else what he himself was incapable of – what all are incapable of: perfection.

Knight demanded maximum effort and precision. He demanded focus in the classroom. He demanded the most of his players, every day, all day. This makes him not at all different from thousands of other coaches.

What made him different was he simply could not tolerate when these things did not occur all the time, in the manner in which he wanted them. Someone who sought control was inevitably brought down by his own lack of it. It is one thing to strive for perfection, to push your players to reach for it, but it is quite another to deem them failures or to punish them emotionally, physically for the slightest mistakes.

There was no margin of error with Bob Knight, and his true method was in recent years as something he calls “The Power of Negative Thinking.”  He has said that the worst word in the English language is hope. Perhaps that is because he lost hope in others before they ever did themselves. A self-fulfilling prophecy in many ways.

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There is irony in the fact that Knight was the last to coach an undefeated college basketball team with Indiana in 1976. Perhaps obtaining that perfection changed him, hardened him in a search for duplication over the next 10-15 years. As Kentucky chases that immortal status this college basketball season, as UNLV nearly did in 1991 when they reached the Final Four before falling to Duke, it is known that chasing perfection is draining, demanding and most of all, unsustainable.

Perfection cannot be maintained because you begin losing it the moment you achieve it. In sports, someone will find a way to defeat you after long enough. Or you’ll just have an off day. But Knight dug his feet in a little more each year. Like any general, he would make everyone else change, but he’d stay the same.

Truth be told, Knight did in fact change in the mid-1980s and into the 1990s. He stopped wearing suits, switching to golf shirts and polos before arriving at a pullover (the modern day equivalent of Bill Belichick and his hoodie). He seemed to grow colder to his players, at least publicly. He lost more players to transfer, had more players in his doghouse for longer periods of time. Look at the picture above, he smiled in 1976. He didn’t smile much in 1996. Some of his better teams in the 1989-1993 range had some of the strangest blowout losses and even with those loaded teams, never won another national title.

And this is when he lost me, and most likely when he lost many, many others.

As I reached high school, I was still playing basketball and still had that dream of Indiana (even though I knew I was not good enough to get there). But the more I watched Knight through the eyes of a 14-year-old, the more I saw that this didn’t seem like something I wanted for myself, even if I would have been able to have it.

The head-butts, the jokes about whipping his players, the feces covered toilet paper. I read “A Season on the Brink” around this time – and it absolutely terrified me looking at it through a player’s eyes. For some reason, when reading Knight’s quotes in the book, the voice in my head immediately sounded like R. Lee Emery in “Full Metal Jacket.”

What 18 to 22-year-old kid is equipped to step into the mind games a 50-year-old coaching legend is playing with them? Knight should win those games. And that dominance over others is certainly a component of Knight’s demeanor as well.

Meanwhile, I began watching other basketball teams and their coaches in the mid-1990s. Dean Smith seemed kind, yet passionate and disciplined. Knight’s former protégé, Mike Krzyzewski, had built Duke into a national power and his players seemed to love him, too.  The same for Lute Olson, and his Arizona teams moved up and down the floor, not stuck in a stagnant, set motion offense. Olson’s players were always smiling, seemed to be having fun. Indiana players looked depressed and scared.

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All of these men – except for Knight – have a court named after them, a sign of the lasting effect, the impact and the accomplishments. Knight has nothing left in Assembly Hall but the fading banners dated 1976, 1981 and 1987.

Though my skill level, height and ability did not match major Division I recruits, my mindset certainly did, meaning I wasn’t the only one who looked at Knight and knew that it would be a daily judgment and sentence handed down in Knight Court by Judge “General” Robert Montgomery Knight.

He couldn’t keep the best players in state and rarely got the better out-of-state players, either. Fewer and fewer star players wanted to play for him, which is what leads to not topping 23 wins in a season for his last seven seasons at IU and first round NCAA Tournament exits in five of the seven years. By the end of his tenure at Indiana, it was little surprise it ended the way it did. A crusty, curmudgeon bitter over a freshmen’s perceived lack of manners and a lingering tape of him choking Neil Reed, a non-descript player who seemed to give everything for Knight on the floor, but never could gain his approval.

The world changed, but Knight would not. Values, respect, seeking perfection and discipline will never go out of style.  Demanding, demeaning, degrading, embarrassing? Those do go out of style, like a plaid jacket.

Which brings us back to present day, when Indiana fans awkwardly interact with the memories of Knight and his fantastic teams – the guts of the school’s illustrious basketball history and tradition. They talk about the tradition, the candy cane warm-ups, the floor design on Assembly Hall, the banners. They rarely mention Knight. It’s like trying to remember the presidency of Roosevelt, Eisenhower or Reagan without saying their names or conceding they were the President.

This is because there is no closure, even now, nearly 15 years after his departure. We embraced Knight for nearly 30 years in Indiana – even fans of other teams miss him – but we cannot bring ourselves to patch it all up without acknowledging our role in accepting and allowing it.

Truth be told, as wild and manic as Knight was, it is hard not to miss that era a bit now. I watch less college basketball than I ever have before. The games are not as exciting as they once were. Or perhaps I’m more distracted, or have more options to spend my time doing a litany of other things. The world developed and evolved. We kind of, you know, left the Indiana of the 1980s behind. Our little towns are small cities now, Indianapolis does anything but “nap.”

We left a lot of that time period behind in sports, too. Conference re-alignment changed so much of the landscape, as did the plethora of players leaving school after a year or two. Indiana went to multi-class basketball before Knight was fired (1998). Lots of other sports and activities are available, as is cable TV, technology and loads of other time distractions. The investment is not as deep as it once was. That is also neither good, nor bad. Just the way it is. Times change, but something about the fact that Knight never did is oddly comforting, yet disconcerting all the same.

Now, and perhaps finally, in a proper way, with enough time and distance to handle such things, we can begin to figure this all out. Indiana, the school and the state, has to determine how to admit that it loved Bobby Knight, while also yielding that his methods expired and that he was a megalomaniac.

They have to accept that his ego probably won’t ever allow him to step foot back in Assembly Hall, that the same ego is expecting a grand apology. You must understand that Knight does not believe – probably never believed – he did anything wrong. He once said he wanted to be buried upside down so the world could kiss his backside. If he does return while still alive, there will be some serious backside smooching that must occur by Indiana. Not because it is due or warranted to Knight, but because it is the only way he’ll come back. He just won’t change. Then again, maybe Indiana won’t change, either. And maybe they shouldn’t.

But if it ever happens, if Knight can come back and time can ease the pain of the anger gone awry, it can be both a celebration and a little sad.

If it ever happens, it will no doubt be clunky and awkward and strange.

Basically, it will be a little bit more like life. A little less than perfect, not entirely ideal, but still getting the job done.

A little bit like a chair, clumsily bouncing across a basketball court. It’s not supposed to be there, but it is there all the same.

And here, in Indiana, the crowd will ultimately cheer either way.

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American culture, American People., Society & Culture

Less Than Super Sunday

For many, Super Bowl XLIX will always be about the game, the way in which it ended and the enduring legacies of the key participants on both sides.

For me, it will always be about the moment I understood the complexities of being a parent. With four children and a fifth on the way, perhaps that moment should have come sooner. Alas, maybe it is only now that I fully understand it.

In many ways, especially as someone who was rooting for the villainous New England Patriots, I wish the game would remain tucked away in the recesses of my memories as one that solidified Tom Brady as the NFL’s greatest quarterback (purely an opinion). I’d like to remember his nearly perfect fourth quarter, bringing the Patriots back from 10 points down and collecting a record-tying fourth Super Bowl ring.

I’d like to vaguely recall in 20 years the look of horror on Richard Sherman and Pete Carroll when that pass was intercepted – but only because it serves as a reminder of how sports can change on a dime, how cruel they can be and how nothing is guaranteed in life (pretty much fact).

And perhaps I will remember all of these things. But I also know that I will remember more about the commercials than anything else. The ads themselves might not be that memorable, but I am certain to not forget the reactions in our house to them.

Especially those of my 8-year-old daughter.

Perhaps it was my fault. I had hyped the game to our precocious second-oldest – and only girl – for hours. The boys and my wife were easy, they were ready for four hours of football’s grandest theatrics and for what would ensue – their father hollering at the TV and cheering wildly for a team that no one else in our area liked.

family patriots

And man, she was all in. Wearing a throwback Welker jersey from her brother’s closet, our daughter placed herself in a chair next to me and basically did not move – or wasn’t allowed to – for the duration of the game.

Dad’s superstitious nature kicked in just briefly after kickoff. Every Patriots first down, I ran the room and high-fived, in order, our oldest son (12), the youngest son (3), my wife and then returned to give the biggest, double high-five to our daughter before sitting the exact same way we had the play before. (Meanwhile, our 6-year-old son went back in for the between the iPad and the game and playing with toys. Sigh. I took what I could get.)

She squeezed my arm on big third downs, asked all kinds of questions about the rules and the game and cheered to please us at first, then later because she seemed to actually, briefly, kinda care.

Soon, this became as entertaining as the game. My daughter and I were enjoying a bonding moment within the bonding moment of our family.

As the game stayed tight and tension mounted, we were all glued to the TV.

Which included the commercials.

It began with the dead-child Nationwide commercial in the second quarter and ran right on through to the game’s end, specifically, Always #LikeAGirl, Victoria’s Secret and the 50 Shades of Grey trailer.

There is no one way to adequately describe the confusion on a child’s face in, what for a parent, is an awkward moment. There is also not a great way to address the confusion without convoluting it further and getting more questions.

“Why is the boy dead?”

“Why didn’t the parents stop the bath water?”

“I don’t run like that. That’s not funny.”

“Are they making fun of girls?”

“She’s not wearing very many clothes.”

“Those people are kissing a lot and kissing really weird.”

Thanks, guys. Really, just a bang-up job, advertisers. Why didn’t you just air a commercial debunking Santa Claus or an documentary on where babies come from?

And look, n the heels of a national discussion (again) on if athletes are role models and how they are not the parents, there’s Marshawn Lynch grabbing his crotch again. And if he wasn’t, people were talking about it.

Stating the obvious: My wife and I raise our children. No one else. Ultimately, how they turn out is a far greater reflection on us than it is society in general. Yet in being a parent, you’d like to shield them from certain topics and situations for as long as possible, because, as science has proven, their minds just are not ready for it yet.

And it is a simple fact that kids are influenced by their peers, other family members and yes, who they see in movies and on television. You know how I know this? Because I was a kid once. I wore the shoes, rolled the jeans. I acted like my favorite players on the court or diamond.

Back in the 1990s, we had a whole Gatorade campaign centered on “Being Like Mike” for goodness sakes. It was aimed at kids.

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Advertising has not changed who it targets, but the topics and the boundaries of those messages have changed.

I have heard it described like this: we urge caution with young athletes lifting weights, noting how the body structure of a 14-year-old is not meant to handle too much lifting because the frame cannot handle the weight. The same is true for the brain. An 8-year-old is can comprehend more than a 6-year-old, but not as much as say a 12-year-old.

These ads, geared towards adults, are viewed by kids who simply cannot contextually understand them. From what the ads mean, to what they infer. They may contain a message, but the absorption of that message is varies widely based upon the receiver.

And we simply do not care.

As eyes begin to roll of readers who fear I’m just complaining or bemoaning something else in society, I’d venture to say you don’t have children. You’d suggest we turn it off, that we have a choice in the matter, that the media does not raise and influence my child.

Some may say that we’ve always had this (though, as noted above, there is a significant difference in “Being Like Mike” and talking about the ghost of a kid whose parents were either a) neglectful or b) neglectful and without Nationwide’s accidental home prevention training.)

My response to this is humble and contrite: it is the right of my wife and I to determine if and when we talk about these issues or topics. They normally don’t see these ads, because our children are not normally up  past 8:45-9:00pm. But the Super Bowl is anything but normal.

I’d rather not be forced to address my daughter’s self-esteem during the Super Bowl because the ad #LikeAGirl – a positive message overall – was viewed incorrectly in the eyes of an 8-year-old simply because she was eight and thought they were making fun of her.

“I don’t run like that, Daddy.”

“I don’t throw like that, either.”

No amount of “I know you don’t” or “that’s not what they meant” could remove the furrowed brow of my little girl. She just didn’t understand the point. In her eyes, she didn’t even know there was a image issue to begin with. But hey, thanks Always for putting it out there.

Is it the advertiser’s responsibility to control the message? At the very least, perhaps a little?

The same as Marshawn Lynch grabbing his crotch with millions of young football players watching him, he controls the message. I can tell my kids that something is wrong or not right, but the follow-up is the same as it was 25 years ago when I was a kid: “But why does he get to do it?

Explaining six figure fines doesn’t really address that question, either.

I can defend Lynch over not speaking to the media. It does little harm and makes a mockery of what the current sports media has become. Any reporter who can tell you with a straight face they need Marshawn Lynch to write a story about the NFL, Super Bowl XLIX or the Seattle Seahawks is a reporter who is not very good at their job. Write something else, don’t give him the attention and move on.

But I cannot defend or pretend to agree with lewd gestures as an alternate sign of rebellion to the league. Kids don’t know or get that. All they see is the action, not the message.

To Marshawn Lynch, Charles Barkley before him – and all the athletes in between who feel they are not role models, I remain disappointed. No, you are not the role model for my kids. Yes, my wife and I should be and hopefully are. But it is naïve and irresponsible to pretend you are not at minimum an influencer of children everywhere who watch you play and want to be like you. It comes with the millions of dollars, the fans and the fame. They may not know you, but they know you can play and play well.

Show some decency, respect yourself and others with your actions. Athletes demand respect all the time, then do little to earn it with actions such as these. Don’t ask us to embrace you and cheer for you, then pretend to poop out the football.

Similarly, these companies and ad agencies hold the power to do a delicate balance of creative marketing and societal responsibility.

Run your child death ad at 10pm on a Tuesday night, Nationwide. Otherwise, you are anything but on my side. If my kid is awake and watching, that one is on me.

But they knew the reaction the ad would draw, they knew it would spike Twitter trends, Google searches. They knew the value of the ad would increase significantly with that kind of ad, in that moment and the kind of reaction it would garner.

There is no great call to arms coming here. Not this time. I don’t have a solution for something the majority of us do not see as a problem.

I just have disappointment.

My only hope is my daughter remembers the high fives and not the commercials.

Maybe someday, I will too.

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