Saturday, October 30, 2010

Leadership and the Art of Mentoring





There is an old adage in business, Managers do things right, Leaders do the right things. Leadership is the difference between mediocre and great. Management breaks the stone, leadership sculpts the statue. Management takes muscle, leadership takes character. Jim Collins stated in his famous book, Good to Great, that good is the enemy of great. In a nutshell, if you settle for good, you'll never achieve great. And right now my friends, the Mountaineers are not even good. And the expectation is for them to be great.

I stated in my last post on 10/24/10 "Looking for a Reason to Burn a Couch" that, "The Mountaineers can not afford to stumble on any of the remaining games". Well, they stumbled and lost the next two. Both on national television, and one at home during Homecoming in front of thousands of alumni, a big no no. I also stated that, " The Mountaineers are a good team. They are going to have a good record." I now have to eat those words.

Bill Stewart is in a different situation than his two most recent predecessors. Don Nehlen took over an underachieving program, and turned it into a winner. Rich Rodriguez took over a winning program, and turned it into a top ten program. Stewart has inherited thirty years of building expectations, expectations for a championship. That is the reality of the situation. Losing two games in a row to unranked teams is not acceptable. Nehlen could get away with it, the expectation was not the same back then. Rodriguez could have done it his first two years, but after that he raised the bar and made it unacceptable. WVU fans still haven't forgiven him for the loss to Pitt that cost the Mountaineers a shot at the National Championship. It was obvious that his head was already in Michigan. Coach Stewart may have bitten off more that he can chew when he took this job. The man is in a lot of hot water. And I am not sure he will survive it. Connecticut beat West Virginia with their third string quarterback, which is unbelievable. The Mountaineers have been embarrassed on national television twice in seven days. The frustration level with Stewart has reached a new high, and Alumni are calling for Stewart's head.

Let's face facts, he's not the sexiest coach to have leading your team. He often has a confused
or frustrated expression when pacing the sideline. He kind of resembles Luthor Van Dam, Jerry Van Dykes character from the old TV series Coach. As a matter of fact, when I googled Luthor Van Dam images, guess who's picture popped up? Coach Stewart often looks lost, doesn't enunciate very well, and can come off as, dare I say it, kind of a hillbillyish. WVU already has an image problem that they constantly fight, see my first blog post. We all would have preferred a more dashing character for a head coach. But we got Bill, and until now, we have supported him. And he has given us some reasons to do so. He has a winning record as head coach, and has had some big wins. However, I think these two losses have eclipsed all that.

Back to leadership, I see a flaw here. It appears to me that after the loss to LSU, Offensive Coordinator Jeff Mullen and Coach Stewart lost faith in Geno Smith. They are not letting this kid be himself. It seems they are trying to mold him into something different. They began calling more running plays, and against Uconn, they had Smith rushing in several plays. This kid is a throwing QB, let him throw. He needs to get his confidence back. He is not Pat White, so don't push him in that direction. When you get thrown from a horse, you have to get right back on the horse. You don't go back over and ride the pony. After LSU, they put Smith back on the pony.

Geno Smith is at a dangerous point in his development. Young people are very impressionable. They seek approval and recognition from their mentors. They are molded on the feedback of others. We all learn from the wisdom of others, but there can be a cost. When you shape yourself to the desires and wishes of others, you can lose yourself. You can begin to doubt your judgement, and lose faith in your your choices and your own insight. A good mentor teaches what he or she knows. But they also allow the student to develop on their own. There should be more direction at the beginning, and less at the end. The mentor has to let the little bird fly. They may not fly well at first, but they will eventually soar. There comes a point when the student has to stop asking questions, and start making decisions. And the mentor needs to encourage this. This is the point where self confidence and assurance are born. It appears that Geno Smith is not being mentored this way, and that scares me. He was dynamic before the LSU loss. Now he seems to try to force plays, there is no confidence in his actions. I believe he is lost and struggling with who he is.

Athletic Director Oliver Luck has a big decision ahead of him. Keep Stewart, or let him go. It's a tough one right now, but may be a no-brainer by the end of the season. Stewart let the Big East, a terrible football conference, slip right through his fingers this year. Wonder what Evil Spock would do?



Thursday, October 14, 2010

Looking for a Reason to Burn a Couch



Couch burning, what a concept. The media admonished WVU for it years ago. But instead of panicking, stopping it, and apologizing, we made it our own. Only Mountaineers would be so brash. I mentioned couch burning in a Facebook post a couple months back. A good friend of mine, who is a lawyer here in Alexandria, commented that, " You blog about hillbillies on TV being an unfair depiction, but couch burning is acceptably representative?" "Yes, it is." I replied. "It's a time honored tradition. Hillbillies don't burn couches, Mountaineers do." One of my fraternity brothers then chimed in, "Hillbillies relax on their couches on their front porch. Mountaineers burn them." My lawyer friend attended William and Mary. She probably pictures WVU football fans as a collection of half naked, drunken hillbillies running around acting like savages. I actually picture her team's fans as a collection of blazer and khaki wearing preps, sipping tea and yelling expletives such as "Bully", "Balderdash", and "Ruffians" during the game. And when the quarterback throws a touchdown, some slick haired senior in an oxford shirt with a sweater tied around his shoulders yells, "Good show old man!". Actually, her perception of WVU is closer to the truth than my perception of William and Mary. In reality, I am sure the experiences are similar, just on a different scale.

I don't think any couches will be burning this football season. It's just not going to happen. The Mountaineers are a good team. They are going to have good record. But the awful truth is that the Mountaineers are in no position for glory this year. I watched the last two games. WVU beat UNLV 49 to 10, which they should have. WVU beat South Florida 20-6, which they should have. Yes, I know South Florida has beaten WVU in the recent years. But they just do not have the offensive weapons that they had before. They are in a transitional year. No one is burning a couch after those wins. And look at the rest of our schedule: Syracuse, Connecticut, Cincinnati, Louisville, Pittsburgh, and Rutgers. Not a ranked team among them. The only two that have winning records are Syracuse and Rutgers, both at 4-2.

Yeah, it's ugly. The Big East is so weak this year that it is dragging WVU down like an anchor. There is one sad truth about the 2010 football season for West Virginia. The Mountaineers entire season is being defined by their one loss to LSU. And thank God LSU is winning. They are currently ranked 9th in the BCS. WVU is currently ranked 20th. Where as the Big East is the anchor that drags us down, LSU is the buoy that keeps us afloat. When WVU and LSU played, it was a close game. And LSU's high ranking is the only thing right now that gives WVU any credibility. The Mountaineers would be riding high if they had won that one. But hindsight is 20/20.


The Mountaineers can not afford to stumble on any of the remaining games. And Cincinnati makes me nervous. I feel that they are the most dangerous team left on WVU's schedule. At least it's a home game. Pitt is not a guaranteed win either. The game is in Pittsburgh, and our arch rival will be fired up to play us. They will want to send Wannstedt out with a bang. I think he is done at Pitt. And he should be.

WVU needs to win the Big East, which they should. The Big East Championship would send them to a BCS bowl game, where they will face stiff competition. If they can dominate through the rest of this schedule, it will be a fun New Years. But we still wont burn a couch. We need to turn to another team for that this year. Give me a reason Huggy Bear!