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Nor Cal Spring Showcase- NCAA certified event April 24-26 at Jamtown

2015 Nor Cal Spring Showcase-NCAA certified event-April 24-26 (Friday to Sunday) at the new Jamtown facility in Oakland.

The 4th annual Nor Cal Spring Showcase will be held Friday (6-10 pm)
Saturday (9 am-9 pm) Sunday (9 am-4 pm) April 24-26, 2015 at Jamtown in
Oakland.

The event will be NCAA certified allowing Division I
coaches to attend. Fifty teams from California and others areas will
participate.

Every team will play four games. For more
information contact event director Gerry Freitas at 408-998-1327 or via
email: gerryfreitas@hotmail.com.


This post was edited on 1/30 8:39 AM by hoop review

Socal's Racism at the Coaching Level....

From the Socal Blog.....



: : : : : : : : : : : : : I need advice. My daughter is on a very
successful team. She comes home upset and tells me about all the racist
comments her coach makes. She says most laugh it off. Do we ignore it?
:
: : : : : : : : : : : : No one is their right mind would ignore any
form of racism be it in basketball or any other walks of life. You
should discuss this with the coach and or AD and elevate further if
necessary..
: : : : : : : : : : : The fact that you are asking the
question sheds light on you, the coach and your daughter. Your next move
will determine if that light is good or bad. Choose wisely.
: : :
: : : : : : : If you complain, the coach will get in trouble and your
daughter will be ostracized by the rest of the players. The culture in
girls basketball is that coaches can do whatever they want, break any
rules, yell, scream and make racist comments, but if a parent or player
complain they are "snitches", overbearing, looking for more playing
time, etc. The best thing is to find a way to transfer to another
school next year. Doing anything else can ruin your child's high school
experience.
: : : : : : : : : Your advice is to run? Are you kidding
me? Man the hell up and address the issue. The parent will look bad
to the child in the long run if he/she doesn't . She brought it to the
parents attention for a reason.
: : : : : : : : : Rat him out and get a new coach.
: : : : : : Rat the clown out and teach your kid a life lesson that's clowns don't control her!
:
: : : : Last year one of our coaches threatened some of our players
with physical threats. Our coach was so abusive several parents
complained to each other but never to the head coach or to
administration. Kids were coming home crying and threatening to quit.
To keep the parents from complaining the kids bonded together and vowed
to keep the behind the scenes stuff away from the parents. My child
talked to me about all year. At the end of the season I requested three
meetings with the head coach and each time I was declined. I finally
went to the district and complained. Funny thing was that some parents
were upset that I mentioned their kids names. The coach did not come
back but he was names athletic director. I think it is scary that the
district would allow a teacher to treat our student athletes this way.
Most schools will do nothing
: : : : You're right. Most school will do nothing. Especially if the team is a winning team
:
: : Regardless of what the school or district does or doesn't do you
still have the responsibility of being a parent. Part of that job is
protecting your child. If you do nothing for fear of retaliation then
you should turn in your parent card immediately!
: : I agree that
we should advocate and protect our children. I've seen a couple
occassions where the coach was abusive, not racially, but verbally. It
was elevated to the coach by the players and the parents, who denied an
issue and basically said the kid was a liar and had mental problems. As
the abuse continued, a few parents met with the athletic director who
appeared to be compassionate, concerned and understanding and said that
he would discuss the situation with the coach. Said that the coach, who
was also a teacher was a "good person" and "couldn't imagine" anything
elevating to this position. After a couple of weeks, the verbal insults
slightly minimized and the season ended. Found out that the AD and coach
we're drinking buddies when pictures were posted of the two of them
hanging out on Facebook. The AD basically played the parents, promising
to remedy the situation which in the end was BS. The player transferred
to another school and the coach is still coaching. So, much for
elevating.
: : Another situation, a coach had verbally abused a
player for two years with insults and constant harrassment. The parents
elevated to the AD multiple times and the principal, who they had a long
relationship because of other kids in the school. The AD and principal
totally backed the coach. Oh, the coach had a winning season and was
favored to go far in CIF. The parents hired an attorney and started
legal action against the school. The district intervened and sided with
the AD and coach. The parents transferred the kid to another school,
where she completed her high school education and finished her high
school basketball career.
: : Certainly not saying to give up. We
should fight for our kids and protect them against these bullies. (YES
BULLIES!!) However, be prepared for a long fight which you may or may
not lose. Good lessons for those kids who are on the receiving end. Both
the kids I know who went through this are stronger for it and have
better relationships with their parents. Self-advocation is a good skill
our children need to learn. Many life lessons here.
: I have a
daughter who graduated from a program where every rule was broken by
this coach. Unfortunately we stayed silent and this coach is still
coaching. Some of these programs make it impossible to do be right
thing. We have regrets for not trying.Blah blah blah. Fight for
your child. You will win in some form. It maybe just the respect of your
child but you will win. That is your life lesson.

Sacred Heart Prep vs East Side Prep

Boys Varsity Basketball WBAL League GameTuesday, 1/27/15 @ Eastside Prep




Final Score
Sacred Heart Prep 85 (15-2, 7-0)
Eastside Prep 57 (11-6, 1-6)




By Quarter
Sacred Heart Prep 29 18 18 20 (85 Total)
Eastside Prep 14 15 17 11 (57 Total)




Sacred Heart Prep
Koch 7 0-0 19, Toig 1 0-0 2, Martella 4 0-1 9, Moses 6 2-3 17, Randall 8 3-4 24, McLean 3 1-2 10, Daschbach 2 0-0 4


Team 31 6-10 85
3 point field goals: Koch 5, Martella, Moses 3, Randall 5, McLean 3
Team Fouls: 14




Eastside Prep
Stamper 4 0-1 10, Casoh 5 2-2 13, East 5 1-2 12, Padilla 1 0-0 2, Riley 1 0-0 2, Southall 8 2-4 18, Beruman 0 0-2 0


Team 24 5-11 57
3 point field goals: Stamper 2, Casoh, East
Team Fouls: 10

DFAL 1st HALF PREDICTIONS

MVP- Hansen (CAMPO)

Coach of he Year- Watson (CAMPO), they lose players and still keeps rolling.

Defensive Player- Hansen (CAMPO)

6th Man- Samra (DV)

1st Team:
Falls (DUB)
Hewitt (ACA)
Knox (DUB)
Fadal (DV)
Clarke (CAMPO)
Lozow (ALH)
Wood (LL)

Best home crowd:
Dublin

Worst Home Crowd:
Alhambra

Best 6th Man:
Dublin

Worst 6th Man:
Alhambra

Best Announcer:
Dougherty Valley/Dublin

Best Gym:
Dublin

Worst Gym:
Las Lomas

Best Snack Bar:
Dublin/Dougherty Valley

Best Cheer:
Dublin

Worst: Cheer:
Alhambra

Best Parents:
Miramonte

Worst Parents:
Campo

Best Parking:
Dublin/Dougherty Valley

Worst Parking:
Las Lomas

Best Admin:
Dublin

Worst Admin:
Las Lomas

Best Sound System:
Dublin

Worst Sound:
Miramonte

Overbearing parents threaten the future of high school Sports

The images are stunning and disturbing, images of parents fighting with other parents, yelling and threatening coaches all while their kids are trying to learn and play sports.[/I]As Target 2 Investigates first reported Wednesday, a new study shows just how this problem is getting worse in high school sports across Wisconsin.[/I]

Jeff Alexander shows us how coaches and athletic directors are dealing with an increase of overbearing parents.[/I]

Let's look once again at the evidence, based on a St. Norbert College survey of high school coaches and athletic directors around the state.

Ninety percent of athletic directors and 83 percent of coaches say the "helicopter parents" -- so called because they're always hovering around their child -- are either a very serious moderately serious or somewhat serious problem in athletics today.

While the study points out most parents are not a problem, 63 percent of AD's and 46 percent of coaches say the number of overbearing parents has increased over the past five years.

And some worry they may be chasing coaches away from sports.

"I think there's definitely been an increase in that type of behavior, atmosphere that we've seen," Otis Chambers said.

Bay Port Athletic Director Otis Chambers says it's hard to attend a sporting event these days without hearing a complaint from at least one frustrated parent. And Chambers says due to social media, it's getting worse.

"When you used to have to get in a car and go talk to somebody you thought about it a little bit longer, you didn't do it or you had to talk face to face with somebody, but now in our era of instant messaging, Twitter, everything else, it's really easy to just fire off an email and complain and not have to back it up," Chambers said.

"Very rarely did I tell a parent how to parent, but I heard a lot of people tell me how to coach sometimes," Ken Golomski said.

Golomski spent 25 years as head football coach at Ashwaubenon, winning four state titles. He believes helicopter parenting is on the rise because because parents are investing more time and money in their child's sports.

"There's more camps and there's more involvement outside the school limits than there used to be -- AAU and elite teams, etc., etc. -- so I think that's kind of fostered the involvement in their child's career, if you want to call it a career, and sometimes they take that slant with it," Golomski said.

"I've had parents say to me, 'Well, my son or my daughters must be good because I paid $500 for them to play in this league this summer and the coach told them they were good.' That coach probably told everybody in that league they were good," Chambers said.

"Eventually there's only so many sports on a field or on a team and you've got to put those best athletes out there," Justinn Heraly said.

Denmark track and field coach Justinn Heraly says parents with unrealistic expectations are the toughest to deal with.

"As coaches, I think across all sports, we try and keep our sports competitive and we want to see the best athletes succeed, and sometimes parents' opinions differ from that of the coaches," Heraly said.

"I'm sure they always have the best interest at heart, but sometimes when you're so close to it the objectivity kind of goes out the window," Golomski said.

And that often leaves the student athlete caught in the middle.

"I think kids understand more where they fit than parents do," Chambers said. "When we talk to kids around here, I'll say, 'Well, your mom or you dad called. Well, that's their opinion.' He'll say to me or she'll say to me, 'That's not my opinion."

Coaches and AD's say the only way to deal with these parents is communication.

"The coaches need to let the parents know what they expect from their son or daughter before the season starts, and that will eliminate a lot of problems," Denmark Athletic Director Bill Miller said.

Chambers, though, worries the growing number of overbearing parents could threaten the future of high school sports.

"People always tell me a big fear in high school athletics is the lack of officials we're going to have in the next 10 years. My big fear is the lack of coaches we're going to have in the next 10 years. It's already very hard to get coaches because of parental involvement, because it's just more difficult for coaches to coach."

Research shows the level of concern about overbearing parents is about the same in big, medium and small school districts around the state.

Overbearing parents

Palma 61 Salinas 41 Final

Palma (D4) takes makes statement and commanding 6-0 lead in MBAL Gab. with 6 to go (closest game was 18 point win). 6-8 Junior Wyatt Maker Jr and still growing (6-11 father played on Villanova team that defeated Patrick Ewing Georgetown for NCAA National Championship) scored 22. Dominated second half of game. Palma core is both young and also has good group of seniors with upside for improvement. They played St Francis relatively tough in one of their 3 losses. Could be a factor in D4 section playoff and Norcal tournament. High upside for next season as well.

Patrick Walsh interview - Serra and DLS

I talked with Serra High School Head Coach Patrick Walsh about many topics. He got the job 14 years ago when he was 26. Before that in 1992 he and his teammates at De La Salle laid the foundation of hard work and commitment to each other that has been passed down from team to team ever since. He now runs Next Level Flag Football on the Peninsula with leagues in six locations in the Bay Area. This is just the first part and I will post more in the coming weeks. If you have time I would welcome your feedback. Thanks for watching.



Patrick Walsh interview - Serra and DLS

Coach Ladouceur supports Patrick Walsh's consolation game decision.

High schools: Serra's Walsh finds support from other coaches

By Mitch Stephens
Updated 9:37 pm, Monday, January 26, 2015


Serra's football team faces Central Coast Section sanctions after coach Patrick Walsh decided not to play in a CCS consolation round playoff game against Milpitas in December.

The last and most important person Serra football coach Patrick Walsh called before making his decision to not send his team to Milpitas High for a consolation playoff game Dec. 5 was his former coach, Bob Ladouceur.

Ladouceur, the former head coach at De La Salle-Concord, is Walsh's mentor and one of the most respected coaches around - not for the 399-25-3 record he compiled on the field. but for his moral compass, one that inspired the book and movie, "When the Game Stands Tall."

Walsh, with the backing of his administration, had all but made up his mind that the safety of his players was more important than possible sanctions, but sought support for his decision. He got it in Ladouceur.

"I didn't think his timing was good, but as long as he had the backing of his administration, then I told him go ahead," Ladouceur said Sunday night. "He had my support."

Following last week's decision from Central Coast Section Commissioner Nancy Lazenby Blaser to ban Serra from the football playoffs for two seasons - among other sanctions - Ladouceur continues to support his former player and assistant coach. So, too, does a large coaching contingent.

Lazenby Blaser, who Monday announced that she will be retiring from her post Oct. 31, ruled that Serra didn't keep its basic and simple commitment to play in a CCS playoff game after warning all those teams in the consolation football tournament that they would face sanctions if they bowed out.

Walsh and his supporters, especially those in the football community, believe that safety concerns, especially in this concussion age, should trump almost all general regulations.

"From the first day of workouts in the spring to the first day you put on a helmet in the summer to every day after you must be vigilant - even under the gun - trying to figure out how to keep your kids safe," Ladouceur said. "It's a fine line to tread. It's the nature of the game.

"Safety is first and foremost in every drill and everything you do as a high school football coach."

That is why Ladouceur gave Walsh his support.

"If his rationale is that the health of his players was in jeopardy, then I completely agree with his rationale," Ladouceur said. "It's hard for all people to understand it. How many people are in his position as a high school coach to make that decision? Until you walk in our shoes, it's hard to make an informed decision or judgment."

Complicating the issue is that Walsh and other coaches were outspoken about the insignificance of consolation games and that Serra and first-round consolation opponent Palma-Salinas agreed to play what was essentially a friendly scrimmage.

Lazenby Blaser countered that the CCS Board of Managers (primarily school principals) agreed on the consolation "trial run" games by a wide margin (29-8-8) in October and there was no provision to allow her to change it. Once a team bows out of the playoffs voluntarily, under CCS rule, it must sit out of the playoffs the next year. Lazenby Blaser thought Serra deserved a two-year penalty.

Walsh's supporters believe a larger picture needs to drawn.

"Hopefully, cooler heads will prevail and they'll come at a compromise," Sacred Heart Cathedral coach Ken Peralta said. "Patrick followed his conscience and made the absolute right decision for him and his team and ultimately, kids as a whole.

"Bottom line, though: Football is not a consolation sport."

Concord coach Brian Hamilton said high school coaches are getting mixed messages.

"They're lessening practice time due to concussions but adding games," he said. "That makes no sense. … Patrick absolutely made the right call."

Said Ladouceur: "If the CIF (state office) accepted the idea and non-champions would move on, then I could maybe understand consolation games. But a trial run makes those games all pretty meaningless."

Serra plans to appeal the sanctions this week.

"I hope they come to some resolution," Ladouceur said. "At this point, who are they punishing? Serra, Patrick or the kids?"

Interesting - my message about Nancy was deleted? Here is her letter!!!

Here is the email she sent without the email addresses (even though they are public). Experience the vitriol...


Dear CCS Executive Committee Members and school Administrators and Athletic Directors from Open teams:

I was disappointed to hear reports on the consolation football games played this past weekend and have some concerns about the two that will be played next weekend based on those reports and the attitudes expressed by some of those involved.

As I communicated to the CCS Executive Committee following the approval of the Football Committee Report, which included the consolation rounds of play this year in the Open Division by the CCS Board of Managers, there was some dissensions and resistance, if not direct statements made by coaches stating they would refuse to participate in the consolation rounds.

Do I care if we have consolation rounds in the Open Division of the Football Playoffs? Not at all, but this was what was presented from the Football Committee, discussed at leagues and voted upon by the CCS Board of Managers. CCS President Mahood and I discussed this at length following my learning of the dissension and agreed that the only way to change the format of the football playoffs for this year, as approved by the full Board of the CCS was to hold a special meeting of the full
Board to vote again on the same proposal that they approved a couple of weeks before. This seemed ridiculous since only two leagues voted in opposition to this format and the information had been discussed thoroughly with the Football Committee and then at the league levels prior to this vote, which included consolation rounds of play in the Open Division for this year.

In spite of some of our school's objections to playing a game that "meant nothing" or concerns about "safety" of their student athletes, the games have been scheduled and will be played as the approved Football format for this year was established by the CCS Board of Managers.

This past weekend with the first round of consolation play, there were several incidents. Some coaches openly told officials they were only playing their sophomores since the game meant nothing. Others deliberately called plays and strategized to avoid contact and as one stated it had plays to avoid unnecessary contact to avoid injuries. In one game the officials reported extra pushing and shoving and a disdain from both coaches about why they had to play the game, etc. In one instance it was reported to be unsafe and the teams could not shake hands following the game because of the negative attitudes and
interaction of the players for this stupid game that meant nothing.

What I find interesting is that football is only considered an unsafe game requiring special plays to be called in order to avoid contact with players when a trophy is not on the line. To state that these games are unsafe and that injuries must be avoided when during the season week in and week out, football games are contested regularly with full-contact plays being called that do not result in a trophy, or a league title or a section title-simply a Win. Many teams never get a trophy, they do not win the league title and do not qualify for CCS Playoffs, but they come out every week and play the game without disdain for it meaning
nothing. But now that consolation rounds cannot result in a CCS Championship for the teams involved, these games, are apparently open to the disdainful attitude of coaches who simply do not want to play football I guess. I get it, no one likes to play in the bracket that is going to lead to a championship, but to hear that it means nothing to the kids playing or the coaches coaching is an interesting reflection of our attitudes I guess.

I cannot tell coaches how to coach their teams and will not get involved in what plays they call or what intensity, importance or lack thereof, they put on any contest, but I can't tell you how disappointed I am that our coaches are close to making a mockery of these games because they disagree with the format of play and because they perceive these games, this year to not mean anything. In my time, yes I am admittedly a dinosaur, a win was a thing to strive for in every competition.

If we model and discuss with kids the disdain we have for a competition meaning nothing because there is no trophy at the end, we may have missed the mark of what high school athletics is all about by the width of the grand canyon.

I am very concerned about the two consolation rounds left to play and the attitude of some of our coaches who may be playing in those contests. Their poor attitudes about the game translated into players disrespectful and unsportsmanlike conduct on the field of play…No surprise there. From what the officials and others have reported, it was, in some cases, less than what should be expected and in at least one case, a situation where the game should maybe have been stopped. Just what the coaches wanted.

Administrators at these schools, please speak to your coaches about this issue if you remain in the playoffs. If you are out, you might talk to your coaches about their attitude this last weekend even if they lost in how they represented your school. Encourage them to accept the format for what was approved and to, if not with enthusiasm, at least without disdain, participate at a reasonable level to make these games somewhat competitive (Or at least not obviously NOT competitive) and fun for the
student athletes involved. To do otherwise is to act like a petulant child that did not get their own way Can we not all be adults and accept the format that was discussed and approved and then continue the discussion after the playoffs as to the wisdom of continuing the consolation rounds next year. Of course next year since they may lead to a trophy in CIF Regional play, and since it appears that is the only thing that motivates our coaches to play, it may not be an issue next year.

I'm just very disappointed, disheartened and embarrassed by the reports I have received. I'm not pointing fingers at anyone specifically, but all of us need to work together on this next weekend's consolation contests. Otherwise, what in the heck are we doing in educationally-based athletics? On days like this, with the reports I received, I really wonder what has happened to us.
Thank you for listening and for taking what action and having what discussions you deem appropriate and helpful with your coaching staff in order to preserve some sort of dignity in the consolation rounds in the sport of football in the CCS.

This post was edited on 1/27 1:26 PM by CCSSucks
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