Sports writer - Grant writer

Author: Kat (Page 16 of 89)

What Life Lessons The Boston Red Sox Mutiny Can Teach Us

Fenway Park and a Boston Red Sox banner for the ballpark's 100 anniversary.New England is watching their beloved Boston Red Sox fall to a level of organizational failure not seen in quite a while. Players pitted against teammates, players forming factions against their manager, players not seeing the need to give any effort – every other day gives fans a new example of the reported mutiny in the dugout.

Whether these allegations and incidents are true or exaggerated, they can provide everyone with some key life and career lessons. Like the higher education administrator and student affairs professional that I am, I had to write a blog post with those lessons. Read on, so you don’t make the same mistakes the Red Sox did.

If you have a problem with your supervisor, address it with management appropriately.

Yahoo! Sports reported Tuesday afternoon that Adrian Gonzalez text messaged Red Sox brass to tell them that he and others had issues with manager Bobby Valentine. The text ended up being the impetus for a meeting between the disgruntled players and management.

Text messaging is a useful form of communication. But when it comes to business, text message is not the most appropriate medium in which to tell your management that you are having severe issues with your supervisor. Discreet conversations initiated by a more personal medium – such as in person, or if you are away, on the phone – are a far better way to lodge such a complaint. Older generations (who are usually the ones in management roles) don’t view text messages with them same validity as other forms of conversation, because they can be sent without much thought.

How about we don’t take photos we wouldn’t want other people to see?

In that same Yahoo! Sports article, second baseman Dustin Pedroia allegedly took a photo mocking a napping Bobby Valentine and made a snide remark about his napping habits, which was texted among players. Now that the possible existence of such a photo has made it to the media, Pedroia has backtracked and claims it never existed.

What happened to Pedroia happens to thousands of Americans every day. You don’t possibly know where that photo of you faux-stripping/completely trashed/hanging off someone’s arm you aren’t supposed to be/making a politically incorrect joke came from! But you posed for the photo, and you texted it to your friends. So yes, you do know where it came from.

How about we, collectively, as a populace, decide that taking photos that could be used against you probably isn’t a good idea? Dustin Pedroia can be our spokesperson. Don’t take photos you don’t want to come back to haunt you. Easy enough, right? And if you must take that photo, keep it on your own darn phone for you – and you only – to look back at.

The conversation has been had – let’s not broadcast it to everyone.

Valentine has been criticized (most recently by the Boston Herald’s John Tomase) for opening his mouth and divulging details of otherwise private conversations between himself and players. He tells the media what he’s talked to other players about, even though some players (like outfielder Carl Crawford) allege that they thought such conversations were held in confidence.

If you have a honest one-on-one conversation with a co-worker or supervisor, be discreet if you feel the need to tell others about it. Many times, it’s no one else’s business but the two people who took part in the conversation, especially if it is about an injury, illness or job performance.

Personal branding is important, but don’t let it seem to distract from your full-time job.

Valentine has been criticized for seemingly continuing to pursue his own interests – being über accommodating to the media (which he once was a member of) and appearing in all sorts of commercials. (Awkward Dunkin Donuts spots chatting iced coffee with centerfielder Jacoby Ellsbury, anyone?) Especially in the preseason, it made it appear that Valentine was a tad too invested in keeping up the “Bobby V” brand he had built up in non-coaching years, and maybe he was not completely invested in the Sox.

While branding yourself and having outside interests besides your full-time gig is highly recommended these days, make sure you give everything you have your hands in the appropriate amount of effort. You don’t want to ever be in a spot where your supervisor calls you out because it seems like you aren’t giving enough effort at your full-time job because you’re spending all of your time on outside interests. In this current economy, personal branding is important – but so is the gig that you’ve committed to full-time.

No matter the culture at work, limit your on-the-job drinking.

Even though your company has a Friday beer cart (which is an idea I am behind 100%), you should probably not pull a John Lackey and double fist in your workplace (even if it’s a light beer.) Just trust me on that one.

Mario and Luigi Do Rhythmic Gymnastics At A Minor League Baseball Game

I love minor league baseball.

At Thursday night’s Lowell Spinners vs. Brooklyn Cyclones game at LaLacheur Park, two of the Spinners’ mascots – iconic video game characters Mario and Luigi – decided to try out an Olympic sport: rhythmic gymnastics.

This is not the first time the two attempted a ribbon routine. They did so at the last game I attended in Lowell, which was on the night of the Opening Ceremonies. But this time, I had a good angle and a charged iPhone. The result? Video of this expression of artistic majesty…or just interesting in-game entertainment.

Thank goodness no mushrooms got in the way.

Train Thoughts: Jordyn Wieber, The Arbitrary Nature of Gymnastics and The Biased Nature of Media Coverage

Train Thoughts are long sports related rambles I write on my commute into my full-time job. They aren’t the most concise pieces of writing I’ll ever write, but hey, at least I’m writing.

Jordyn Wieber’s failure to make the Olympic women’s gymnastics all-around has dominated the last 24 hours or so of Olympic gymnastics coverage. The reigning World All-Around champion had the fourth best All-Around score of Sunday’s meet, but had two US teammates finish above her (Boston’s Aly Raisman in second and recent phenom Gabrielle Douglas in third,) bouncing her out due to an two gymnast per country rule.

Said rule also came to the detriment of the Russian team, who also had to drop a high ranking All-Around gymnast (Anastasia Grishina.) A version of this rule has been around for a while – before it was two gymnasts, it was three, and it was in place to keep one country from dominating competition too much (Russia and China, the rulemakers were looking in your direction.)

The rule may not pass the smell test, but it is not unique to gymnastics. Countries are limited to a certain amount of participants in a variety of events – U.S. swimming has a boatload of strong swimmers who leave their international counterparts in the water, but they’re left home because they’re only third in their own country. Such rules work against countries with an embarssament of athletic riches, but for nations who don’t have the economic climates to produce such a bounty. Continue reading

Why Treat Lacrosse Like The Circus?

This past Saturday, Major League Lacrosse took its talents…well, its All Star Game to Palm Beach, Florida, a market where the eleven year old pro lacrosse league doesn’t have a franchise. The Old School square edged the Young Guns, 18-17, in front of a crowd several thousand less than the last three All Star Games. The league’s official box score announces a crowd of 4,841 for Saturday night’s tilt, while Inside Lacrosse’s Quint Kessenich claims that the game had a crowd of 7,800.

Both attendances are less than the last three MLL All-Star Games, which were held in cities with established teams: Boston and Denver. The Mile High City’s 2009 game had a reported attendance of 10,123. Boston’s two consecutive All-Star Games in 2010 and 2011 both drew crowds over 11,000 (2010 had 11,771 and 2011 had 11,186.)

Kessenich wrote a post-All Star Game column for IL (which, in full disclosure, I freelance for on occasion) in which he recommends that the MLL take the faltering Hamilton Nationals franchise and make it a traveling team for 2013, playing its games throughout the country. This traveling lacrosse show would include a stop in Florida, since Saturday’s All Star Game “showed” that the area is ready for a team.

Major League Lacrosse has done this before: once in the league’s first year, and in 2010 with the traveling “Machine,” the former Chicago franchise that competed without a home field. Add to those two experiments this year’s All Star Game, and you’ll see that the league continues to fall back on “the traveling circus” approach. They believe showcasing their product in potential markets is a good way to evaluate if a city is viable for eventual expansion. To a point, it is: you get to try out a venue and start community awareness, thus minimizing the risk of just setting up shop in an untested area.

But traveling around the country to hold one-off lacrosse events will never appeal to one of the biggest reasons why sports fans are sports fans: having a team to root for. That will put the league behind the curve in terms of creating brand loyalty not just to their league, but to the sport.

You buy a ticket for the circus when it comes to town once a year, but you don’t root for any particular clown. You aren’t brand loyal to the circus. If the Big Apple Circus has a better ticket deal than Ringing Brothers, you probably are going to go to the less expensive event. You aren’t performer loyal. You aren’t buying jerseys of a ringmaster and tracking their every performance online. And once the circus is gone, that’s it – you won’t go to the event’s online store to buy more merchandise, and there are no more events to buy tickets for until next year.

If Major League Lacrosse keeps experimenting with one off events in cities with no allegiance to the league, lacrosse becomes more of an annual event instead of a habit, which is not an outlook that will make the league more consistent money. Trying on potential cities for size will not create brand loyalty. Picking a city and taking a chance will, because it creates more touchpoints for fans to interact with the league in a more concentrated amount of time. In that same vein, rewarding current league cities with an All-Star event will enhance brand loyalty. Treating lacrosse like a circus won’t.

Kat Vsnaps, Day 3: iPhones Aren’t Celtics Fans.

In today’s Vsnap, I am glad to find out my iPhone isn’t the only non-Celtics fan iPhone out there.

I stumble a bit as I try to record this one in only two takes (because that’s all I had time for.) My thoughts were kind of all over the place because I hadn’t yet had coffee. Not as good as I could have done, but this project is a learning process, so it’s not going to be perfect. I’m just happy I made it to day three without giving up!

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