I had the uplifting experience of hearing Lou Holtz
speak Wednesday night.
Holtz is a man who comes from humble beginnings (Follansbee, W.
Va.) who has stared adversity in the face and come away a better
man both on and off the football team. He takes great pleasure in
sharing his experiences and eloquently advancing the power of
positive thinking.
He appeared at the Bristol Central High School, courtesy of the
Bristol Sports Hall of Fame, which surely is one of the oldest
and best of its kind in the state.
Holtz, who turned 70 in January, interjected his unique sense of
humor, some of it self-deprecating, and kept the audience in
stitches. He finished the evening with a magic trick, tearing
apart a copy of USA Today that incredibly became whole again
right there in his hands. He did the same trick Saturday on TV in
his latest endeavor as ESPN analyst.
He bluntly mentioned several times that he was not lecturing or
preaching in fact, he refused to stand behind the lectern
but he admonished the young athletes in the crowd, of
which there were many, about the relationship between talent,
motivation and attitude.
He stressed the meaning of teamwork, indicating that individuals
cannot possibly win football games. He used the euphemism,
Whats Important Now, to illustrate how an
athlete should put him or herself in a positive frame of mind.
Among those in the audience were new Central Connecticut State
University womens basketball coach Beryl Piper and an
attentive group of young ladies soon to wear the Devils
blue.
I just hope they listened, Piper said.
Holtzs message was sincere, thorough and totally honest (he
let us know ahead of time when he embellished one story).
Holtz has written five books, including New York Times
bestseller, Winning Every Day, published in 1999.
Quick to point out that he wasnt the best of students, he
quipped, I may be the only person to have written more
books than Ive read.
One local sportsperson who shall remain nameless crossed paths
with Holtz at one of his collegiate stops and referred to him as
Lou Bolts. Indeed, Holtz will be remembered for taking difficult
jobs, rebuilding programs and seeking other challenges. He is the
only football coach in NCAA annals to guide six different
programs to bowl games and four to final top-20 rankings.
His favorite resuscitation act must have been South Carolina. He
ended his first retirement from coaching in 1999 to take over the
1-10 Gamecocks. He led them to an 8-4 record in 2000, a season
culminated with a win over prohibitive favorite Ohio State in the
Outback Bowl.
He coached at Notre Dame from 1986-96, when he walked away from a
lifetime contract for reasons he never disclosed. His beloved
wife, Beth, had been diagnosed with throat cancer at the time,
yet is doing well.
Holtz looked at his watch and told the assemblage that hed
like to talk all night but had to leave.
Im dog tired, he said. And Beth and I
have this thing where we think about each other every night at 10
oclock.
Thats the kind of man Lou Holtz is, and the Bristol Hall of
Fame deserves a lot of credit for making such a wonderful speaker
available to local fans and student-athletes. Id like to
toss out special kudos to Dave Mills, former Bristol Eastern
coach who provided a stirring introduction and concluding
remarks, and longtime Bristol sportsman Bob Kalat, who was nice
enough to offer me an opportunity that I will remember and
cherish always.
The BSHOF presented a check to Bristol Hospital in the name of
Beth Holtz as a token of their esteem for the coachs time.
But the most important facet was expressed by Piper, who wondered
if the young athletes took Holtzs messages to heart. Far
too often kids will fidget and fail to pay heed. Those who
didnt will recall Holtzs words sometime in the future
and wish that they did.