Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Stocking Stuffer for your Youth Athlete


The best stocking stuffer your child will receive!

Play Like A Champion Today(TM) is offering a discount on its exclusive "Player Handbook." This is a tool for youth sport athletes, ages 8-14, designed to maximize the youth sport experience. The handbook guides athletes in setting goals and understanding the value of practice. It also highlights values such as teamwork, justice and sportsmanship. The handbook includes journal pages for your athlete to track his/her progress throughout a sport season. This handbook will facilitate your athlete's growth: physically, mentally, and spiritually through sport. Normally priced at $5, we are offering the Handbook through December 31, 2009 for $4, including shipping and handling.

Order your Player Handbook today by emailing plc@nd.edu with your address or through our office (574)631-9981.

Merry Christmas from PLC to you!

Connecting Spirituality within Sport: The PLC High School Athlete Retreat

Notre Dame High School in St. Louis, MO in partnership with Play Like A Champion Today(TM)is conducting retreats for their student athletes. Athletic Director, Ed Behr, and Campus Minister, Liz Miller, have united to conduct retreats at the beginning of each athletic season: fall, winter and spring. I had the pleasure to be a part of their winter retreat. Athletes took a break from studying for finals and came together to pray, to reflect upon who they are as people and as teammates and to set goals on who they want to become throughout the sport season. The athletes also heard testimony from a former collegiate soccer player on how he became more fully Christian through his sport experience, despite ever present pressures.

"Thus, I do not run aimlessly; I do not fight as if I were shadowboxing." 1 Cor. 9:26). The retreat served as a break from the business of a high school athlete's life filled with school work, exams, practice, games and other commitments. It offered a time and a space to reflect upon God's role in sport and how God is forming these young athletes to become disciples not only on their team, but in the world.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Play Like A Champion Today Featured on the Notre Dame Homepage


Play Like A Champion Today™ is being featured on the University of Notre Dame homepage this week and into the rest of December. PLC will be one of the videos featured on the carousel at the top of the page. PLC coaches and trainers will recognize brief excerpts from the workshop video that we present to our youth coaches.

Check it out at www.nd.edu!

Monday, December 7, 2009

Tim Donaghy: Rogue NBA Referee? 60 Minutes Interview Tells the Tale

PLC is developing an Officials Workshop for our partners to use in the 2010-2011 school year that will be unveiled at the 2010 Sports Leadership Conference. This is why I found Tim Donaghy’s interview so interesting last night. If you missed the 60 Minutes interview with Tim Donaghy, then check it out at www.cbsnew.com or view below. Donaghy is the infamous NBA referee who bet on professional basketball games, many of which he was officiating. The story portrayed a remorseful man who suffered from a severe gambling addiction that eventually got him into trouble with the mob, put him in jail, and tore apart his family.

A central theme of the interview focused on the integrity of NBA referees and officials in general. Both the FBI and the NBA did not find that his bets influenced the way he called his games. On the other hand, Donaghy claimed that he was able to win 80% of his bets exactly because of the inside information he was given by his fellow officials. He claimed in the interview that he knew of personal likes and dislikes of each official that would ultimately influence the outcome of the game. In other words, he made fair calls while benefitting from the unfair calls of his fellow officials.

Are officials influenced by personal opinions of teams, players, and coaches?
Two primary goals of the official are to protect the integrity of the game and ensure the safety of the players. Favoring (or disfavoring) a team because of personal opinions insults the integrity of the game. Just as coaches and players complete for the love of the game, so should officials officiate for the love of the game. There is no place for officials to make calls based on their personal opinions of the players or team.

At the same time, officials are human. As a former official, I seldom had players or coaches that I disliked a lot. Sure there were many who disliked me and never showed any sense of courtesy, but all that comes with the job. I can, however, remember a number of times when I would officiate a game with friends or even fellow officials who were participants. Sometimes they became the biggest critics! Occasionally I would make a call (the right call), knowing well that people would be upset by it. I may have felt guilty afterwards, not because of the call but because of the repercussions. I cannot imagine making a call (or not making a call) to teach a player or a coach a lesson.

Is Donaghy a “rogue official” as the NBA claims?

I hope so. In the interview, Donaghy made a number of accusations against the NBA. I hope that money does not play into the NBA’s influence on officials. At the same time, there were a lot of game 7’s last year. I also hope that the games I watch on TV are fair. I have had my fair share of yelling at the refs through the television – I just hope that it is caused by human error or my own ignorance and not personal vendettas.

What are your thoughts? Do you think he was impartial when he officiated games on which he placed some money? Can any referee truly call a game without any influence by personal likes and dislikes of teams, players and coaches?



Watch CBS News Videos Online



Watch CBS News Videos Online

Monday, November 23, 2009

PLC Welcomes New Partner, St. Hugo of the Hills


Play Like A Champion Today(TM) is proud to announce its newest partner, St. Hugo of the Hills in Bloomfield Hills in the Archdiocese of Detroit. Program Founder, Clark Power, traveled with Kristin Sheehan to Detroit on November 17, 2009 to conduct St. Hugo's first coach workship. Pictured are PLC friend and St. Hugo Parent, Connie Beckett, St. Hugo Principal, Sr. Margaret VanVelzen and Clark Power. St. Hugo's is our first Detroit area partner. We are looking forward to spreading the PLC message to St. Hugo coaches, parents and athletes. We believe the surrounding parishes in Detroit will feel the "PLC difference" when they witness the St. Hugo community in their sporting environment as the sport seasons go on for St. Hugo's. For additional pictures from the workshop, please check the PLC facebook St. Hugo photo album,
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Play-Like-a-Champion-TodayTM-Sport-Education-Program/79760084958

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Pope Benedict XVI Talks Sports!

Last weekend the Vatican held a two-day seminar titled, “Sports, Education and Faith: For a New Stage in the Catholic Sports Movement” in Rome. On the occasion of the event, hosted by the sport section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, Pope Benedict XVI offered his thoughts on sports and young people today. Here are a few highlights:


“In fact, when they are directed to the integral development of the person and are managed by qualified and competent personnel, sports initiatives reveal themselves as propitious occasions in which priests, religious and laity can become true and proper educators and teachers of life of young people.”

He briefly speaks out against the use of performance-enhancing
drugs. He challenges the Church to “continue to support sports for young people” for its positive aspects like stimulating “competitiveness, courage and tenacity;” pointing out, however, that the Church must educate young people through sports to avoid “all tendencies that…are dangerous to the organism, as is the case of doping.”

“In a coordinated formative action, Catholic leaders, technicians and operators must be considered experienced guides for adolescents, helping them to develop their own competitive potentialities without neglecting the human qualities and Christian virtues which make the person completely mature.”

“In this perspective, I find it very useful that this third Seminar of the "Church and sport" section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity focus its attention on the specific mission and the Catholic identity of sports associations, of schools and of oratories managed by the Church.”

Some reflection questions:

  • How does your sports program contribute to the “integral development of the person?”

  • Does your school or league have a plan to effectively discuss with athletes the physical and ethical implications of performance-enhancing drugs? How would you describe this plan?

  • Are your coaches “experienced guides for adolescents?” Could they use some additional formation and professional development? If so, in what areas?

  • Does your school’s athletic program have strong Catholic identity?

Dr. Clark Power, Play Like A Champion Today founder and director, presented at the inaugural meeting of this group within the Pontifical Council for the Laity in Rome in 2005. Since that time he created one of the only Catholic-focused, Sports as Ministry programs in the world. If you and your school are considering taking these words and putting them into action, please contact Play Like a Champion (plc@nd.edu) for more information about how we can help you develop a program that will contribute to your community’s “human and spiritual growth.”


Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Elizabeth Lambert’s Apology - Does Sport Reveal Character?


Elizabeth Lambert kicked, punched, and even pulled a BYU player to the ground by her poneytail. Cameras caught it all, and even though Lambert received only a yellow card, she was suspended for the game. Later the University of New Mexico suspended her indefinitely. Predictably Lambert apologized. She excused her bad behavior as due to the intensity of game: I let my emotions get the best of me in a heated situation. This is in no way indicative of my character or the soccer player I am." Really? Lambert’s comment appears to fly in the face of conventional wisdom embodied in Heywood Broun’s famous saying (often attributed to John Wooden), “Sports do not build character, they reveal it.” It is discouraging enough to concede that sports don’t build character, but are we also willing to accept Lambert’s denial that they don’t reveal it either?

Lambert didn’t just blow up once during the game, nor was there an indication that she was acting in retaliation. If the “heat” of a close game can excuse her whole pattern of behavior, then one wonders whether character has anything to do with sports. Perhaps athletes’ behavior is, as Lambert’s statement implies, situation specific. Once our emotional arousal gets too high, it is very difficult to maintain control. But isn’t character all about self-control? Even those with the strongest characters have lapses of self-control but these are generally momentary.

Lambert believes that she is a better person and a better soccer player than her actions revealed. Perhaps she simply had a tough game. Although it may be true that we are all better people than our actions at any one time may reveal, character has no meaning except in relationship to our behavior. What was objectionable about Lambert’s play was a whole pattern of bad actions throughout an entire game. Lambert’s play wasn’t simply “outside the lines” or “unsportsmanlike,” it was violent and could well have resulted in a serious injury.

We are left with a puzzle. If Lambert is right and her actions were not indicative of her character, then should we throw out the concept of character as meaningless? If Lambert is wrong and her actions reveal her character, should we blame her for being a bad person? Perhaps we can keep the concept of character without unduly condemning Lambert. It is easy to well up with righteousness indignation when others’ act in blatantly offensive ways. It is even easier to come down on others for failing to own up to their faults. It is far more difficult, however, to acknowledge that Lambert’s behavior and subsequent denial that it had anything to do with her character reflects something about a toxic sports culture of our own making. Does anyone believe that Lambert didn’t resorted to dirty play until the BYU game? How long has Lambert been pushing, punching, and pulling hair? When did it start and what did her coaches and teammates say and do when it started? How did Lambert rise to the level of a starting D-1 player without others along the way intervening? Isn’t it a bit hypocritical for the University of New Mexico to suspend Lambert indefinitely for playing the way she had been playing before the bad publicity came? Why not punish the coaches and other players?

Character development is a complicated process. It involves emotional control as well an understanding of the right way to behave and a commitment to behave that way. Most importantly character grows out of community. Who I am as an individual player depends very much upon who we are as a team. Until the sports community makes a commitment to creating a culture that takes character-building as seriously as it takes it winning, we should be the ones who are ashamed.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Building and Crossing the Bridge

I would like to share with you what Play Like A Champion Today(TM) partner, Fort Worth Christian Football League (FWCFL) is doing with their program. In their weekly program, they offer a faith perspective. This is one of their recent postings: Building and Crossing the Bridge

"Did you ever want to be an architect? Ever physically build something with your hands or make something that you thought was perfect or near perfect?

Well, you are a builder – you are an architect. In fact, all of us are. We are building a community right here, at this football game today. Look around you. There are other builders sitting right next to you. Now, look across the field. There are builders sitting there, too. We are something so beautiful, so wonderful…so blessed. We are like people with the same faith in God, with the same dreams for happiness and success for our children.

Through the FWCYFL, friendships and trust are being nurtured between boys from different schools. That same building process is being established with parents, and other family members, too.

Recently, at a soccer game, members from the same FWCYFL football team found themselves on opposing sides. When the football team members came together after the soccer game ended, it was “great game – high fives and see you tomorrows.” Their Christian attitude and respect for each other spoke volumes to other team members and the adults who watched. There was no mention of scores – who won or who lost.

For adults who witnessed this event, it brought smiles. It was an understanding of what God wants for us. He wants us to share and build friendships. He wants us to build bridges and cross them. Whether they are bridges across street, across town or across cultures, he wants us to build a community. After all, he sent us his only son, a carpenter, to show us how to build."

FWCFL Directors and PLC trainers, Frank Poeschel, Jim Breen and Brian Burkham, have built an exemplary program. This weekend, their season concludes with a "Faith and Fire" celebration and award ceremony. Watch our blog for a report on this end of season event!

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

The Berenstain Bears “Play a Good Game”

A friend of the program recently gave us a book from the Berenstain Bears series called The Berenstain Bears Play a Good Game. The book tells the story of Brother and Sister Bear’s experience playing soccer against the “bullies of Bear County,” the Steamrollers. Papa Bear, who coaches his children’s team, reassures his players that “its not whether you win or lose that counts, but how you play the game!” The opposing coach, Two-Ton Grizzly, tells his team that “it isn’t how you play the game that counts, but whether you win or lose!”

The book covers almost all the issues in youth sports today:
· Overemphasis on winning (in the wrong way)
· The challenges of playing fair against a cheating team
· The challenges of parents coaching their children
· Rowdy parent and grandparents in the stands
· Bad calls by the referees (and angry coaches)
· Coaches yelling at coaches! Spectators yelling at spectators!

How did they resolve the conflicts? Who won the game? You’ll have to find out for yourself! It is a great little book for young kids ages 4-7. It even has discussion questions that you can talk about with your children and activities to get out and do!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

PLC Chicago River Cruise


To begin the ND vs. USC game weekend, the Notre Dame Clubs of Los Angeles and Chicago enjoyed a Kick-Off party on the Chicago River underwritten by the generosity of Chicago Line Cruises, http://www.chicagoline.com/
Despite chilly temperatures and stormy skies, the event was a hit. Approximately 70 Los Angeles area friends bundled up to enjoy food, drinks, and pre-game merriment with fellow ND supporters from Chicago and South Bend while enjoying the historic as well as state of the art Chicago architecture lining the Chicago River.
Play Like A Champion Today™ thanks all who braved the Chicago winds that evening to support our cause. Pictured is Bob and Kevin Byrne, hosts of the Los Angeles Notre Dame club trip. For additional pictures of the event, go to the Play Like A Champion Today™ facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/pages/Play-Like-a-Champion-Today-Sport-Education-Program/79760084958