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Bates speak at Leadership Council
(reproduced with permission of
Bob Montgomery)
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Three times a year, the Bristol Sports Hall of Fame holds a
Leadership Council Breakfast at Nuchie’s. It’s a gathering of the
juniors from Bristol’s three high schools who are selected for their
potential in being team captains and leaders their senior seasons in
their sports.
On Tuesday, the first of three was held for the juniors of Bristol
Central, Bristol Eastern and St. Paul and keynote speaker was Jim
Bates Jr., former Bristol Eastern and Trinity College multi-sport
standout.
When he graduated Eastern he was the city’s all-time point-producer
in basketball. He went on to star and captain both the basketball
and baseball teams in college, earning All-New England honors in the
two sports. He was inducted into the Bristol Sports Hall of Fame in
recent years, as well as the New England Basketball Hall of Fame in
2009.
With leadership being the topic, Jim Bates presented an outstanding
program for those in attendance, one also enjoyed by the adults in
attendance, school leaders and Hall of Fame directors.
“What is one of the challenges you have in being a captain?” he
asked the students.
The answer was: Getting their respect.
“How do you get their respect?” he continued.
He went on to talk about the late John Wooden, famed UCLA men’s
basketball coach. Coach Wooden said one’s reputation is what others
perceive you to be. Your character is what you are and what really
matters is what you have inside.
He went on to talk about Geno Auriemma, coach of the UConn women’s
team, and how he was different with his team this year than in
previous years.
“He had to treat them as being a younger, inexperienced team,” said
Bates. “He knew his old style would not be beneficial to this team.”
He also asked the juniors: “Are you building up or tearing down the
team?”
Following Bates’ talk, his son, Michael, made his presentation. He’s
the coordinator of Connecticut Initiatives for the Institute for
International Sport, which holds the World Scholar Athlete Games and
World Peace Summit. The 2011 games will be held at the University of
Hartford in late June to early July, an effort for young people from
around the country and the world to get to know one another and to
compete with and against, work with and develop friendships with one
another in understanding each other’s world.
“Speakers include General [Colin] Powell, [former] vice-president Al
Gore and Greg Mortenson [author of the book, “Three Cups of Tea”],”
Michael Bates told those in attendance, and added “there will be 21
sports and eight arts. They will practice for a week and then
perform.”
The sports will be in the form of a round-robin and the arts will
include choir and symphony presentations, as well artists displaying
their drawings and paintings.
During these presentations. I sat at a table with juniors Lauren
Dorea, Debra Konopaske, Alino Te and Jacob Eschner of Bristol
Central; Kaylee Cifone, Connor Fitzsimons and Mitch Wheelock of
Eastern; and Mike Petit of St. Paul, as a Hall of Fame director.
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