Sacred Ground: Indiana Hoops

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Sacred Ground: Indiana Hoops

Trying out – Getting on the Roster

Pouring through the history of Indiana Hoops, I’m hearing considerable chatter in my deepest nerve cells. This subconscious chatter pertains to recurring thoughts and images such as: why are your writing about Indiana Hoops? There’s nothing more to say! It no longer exists and is a potential fable anyway. Indiana basketball is in some minds an over glorified sports fantasy created, permeated and continued by Hollywood and the media. Does Indiana basketball really rise above hoops in nearby states such as Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Kentucky or Illinois? Bobby Knight? Puhhleese! What about all the thousands of “cut” players in Indiana? What effect has all this competition produced? I seriously doubt most of these Indiana hoopsters and their parents cut by IU feel that Indiana basketball is all that great.

out for anything again (even debate) or worse, turn to drugs and menacing maladaptive behavior?

The Real Hoosiers: the Milan Indians. Courtesy milan54.org.

The fictional Hoosiers team. Courtesy milan54.org.

The reality is that player cuts exist within all levels of competitive hoops. Many well informed sports psychologists sense that being cut creates more social angst than it’s worth. With young people sports can affect many more students negatively than positively (albeit the subject is poorly studied). Try driving home with a car full of girls after cheerleading tryouts when five made it and one didn’t. Why are we doing this to ourselves? Is sport and its associated competition responsible in part for some of our cultural mishaps? Do young people that “get cut” thereby develop a miserable outlook on life, lose confidence and decide to not attend college, or try

Alternatively, does sport enhance the mind and body? Build character at all levels and bring out competitive fires one never realized they possessed? Or do perhaps “cuts” at a young age help one learn to deal with adversity, find inner strength and move on? We know a few answers from youth sports. Everyone in sports fails at some level. One either misses a free throw at a crucial time, knocks a golf ball out of bounds when they absolutely shouldn’t or disqualifies with an early start to a swim relay. That’s life and that’s life within sports. I never believed in cuts and as a youth hoop coach, never cut one kid. I made certain that all student athletes found a place to play, even if it was the Y, pick up ball or summer league. Many kids didn’t play in games but practiced with the TEAM. They just wanted to play; and how was I or anyone else to know that this kid might turn into something (remember MJ being cut as a sophomore in a small town and being ashamed to inform his parents)! My coached kids played somewhere, somehow. It isn’t that way in many places because many coaches, schools, administrators etc., just don’t get it. Life generally isn’t like the movie, “Hoosiers” where the star coach and player walk away with heroics and dates. Some of Hoosiers frankly isn’t true either–but I still enjoyed the film. Indiana basketball is perceived to be all about the good within the sport. A bit of digging however, reveals that the state of Indiana was a fairly turbulent place to play basketball because of race issues for many years. We’ve all moved on–it’s history–and thankfully we have the great game


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