Sunday, December 23, 2007

Creighton to Coach at Drake U.

So much for no news happening between semesters…

Check out the official story, Coach Creighton’s words, Drake’s announcement, Wabash reaction, the discussion on D3football.com, and Tom Runge’s thoughts. Wabash AD Vernon Mummert has offered the job to assistant coach Neal Neathery. Press conference video available here. (Subscription required.)

Drake is a school of about 3,000 Des Moines, Iowa. Their football team competes in the in the Pioneer League of Division 1-AA.

In coaching circles, you always want to take a program to “the next level.” That’s a daunting challenge when you’re talking about Wabash football, but Chris Creighton did just that from the moment he stepped on campus. Just check out some of his contributions:

  • 2001 Wabash 8-2
  • 2002 Wabash 12-1, NCAA Division III playoffs
  • 2003 Wabash 7-3
  • 2004 Wabash 6-4
  • 2005 Wabash 11-1, NCAA Division III playoffs
  • 2006 Wabash 8-2
  • 2007 Wabash 11-2, NCAA Division III playoffs

Career Record: 95-24 (.798 winning percentage)


Wabash Record: 63-15 (.807 winning percentage)

Best of luck on your new post, Coach. You leave a program better than you found that found it–and that’s saying a lot.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 18:27:39 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, December 21, 2007

Merry Christmas!

Courtesy of the Ramsay Archives, as close to a Wabash Currier & Ives Christmas card as we can get! To all who browse this humble blog, Merry Christmas wishes to all.

For more information about this image, click here and go to page 3.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 21:18:41 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Meet Rick Warner

It’s true that over the course of this decade, a remarkable number of professors who taught and guided and cajoled us to turn in papers have either retired or moved on. Profs like Peebles, Herring, Fisher, Fischer, Barnes, Stern, O’Rourke, Brooks, Cooley, Davis, McClain, and Thompson, to name a few.

Naturally, we’re left wondering: Are the professors of today as engaging as ours? Do they “get” Wabash? Do they serve the grand tradition of Wabash teaching?

Well, with the news this week of Wabash granting tenure to four professors, I thought I’d cut-and-paste a profile of one of them who I have gotten to know over the past few years. From teaching his first class at Wabash, Rick Warner is one of those profs who really “gets it.” He’s affable, knowledgeable, and helpful to our students. Check out what the Crawfordsville Journal-Review wrote up…

Wabash worth the wait

By Sam King
Posted:
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 11:51 PM EST

Christmas came a little early for Wabash College professor Rick Warner.

Warner is one of four faculty members at the Crawfordsville institution to recently receive tenure status — a lifetime contract to teach at the college. Warner, Michelle Rhoades, Jennifer Abbott and William Turner all earned high marks through the strenuous tenure process covering a six-year span. Perhaps Warner took the oddest path.

Once a chef in Santa Cruz and San Francisco, Calif., Warner spent many of his 10 years in the kitchen working with Mexicans. He likened the togetherness of that group to other multi-people oriented acts such as football teams, fraternities and the Marines.

“I got to know them very well,” Warner said of his co-workers. “They made me fall in love with Mexico.”

Warner now teaches a course on Latin American history at Wabash. Knowing he didn’t want to spend the rest of his life as a chef, Warner went back to school at University of California-Santa Cruz and got his Ph.D.

His venture as a professor began at the University of Utah — a school with a 28,000 enrollment. Warner was passionate about history, but not so much about the lack of discussions in the classroom.

“They just wanted to sit there and listen to me lecture,” he recalls of his time at the Salt Lake City campus.

That wasn’t Warner’s style and so, after one year, he sought openings elsewhere. He was so impressed by Wabash after his interview, he knew Crawfordsville is where he wanted to call home. He spent three years teaching on a visiting status. Six years ago, his tenure line actually began, meaning he taught nine years to receive tenure whereas most spend six at Wabash for consideration.

“I was here teaching two weeks and realized it was the perfect place for me,” Warner said. “It’s good to land someplace you really like. People really want to learn here and there’s lots of interaction.”

It was well worth the wait for Warner, who is active in many activities on campus other than just teaching history. His attempts to correlate with students outside of the classroom made him a near no-brainer when selecting the tenured professors a couple weeks ago.

“Rick is impressive in a number of ways,” said Dean of the College Gary Phillips. “He has a high degree of self reflection. His engagement with the students and support for them is quite high.”

While excellence in teaching is the focal point of the tenure review process, there’s more to it than just teaching. Each faculty member is reviewed during their second, fourth and sixth year, Phillips said.

The first review is teaching, the second a heightened degree of teaching as well as scholarship and contributions such as public service and the sixth year is spent looking for evidence of excellence in teaching and complete confidence and an ongoing commitment and service to the college, Phillips said. During the sixth-year of the review, the professors are asked to submit a portfolio including course assessments, letters of recommendation and syllabi.

Students and past students are interviewed at random privately. Phillips said all the students and alumni take the interviews seriously. Their answers help play a part in who receives tenure status. With some of the focus during the tenure process geared toward involvement, it’s easy to see why Warner was one of the considerations.

Warner travels with the college’s admissions office to recruit future students and is also active in assists with freshman tutorials by teaching a class on cooking.

“A lot of what’s great about Wabash is what happens outside of class,” Warner said. “I like to meet with the students when they’re looking at the school. If it’s a fit for you, it’s kind of glorious, but I don’t think it’s for everybody. There’s a lot of camaraderie here. It’s an enjoyable place to teach. You almost feel sorry for the students they can only be here four years.”

Wabash also offers Warner — and other professors — the chance to take education in firsthand. The immersion trips Wabash offers to students and professors allows students to learn from a perspective other than a book and makes the professors better teachers, Warner said.

“To really know what’s going one, you need to get out and meet people,” he said.

While teaching and extra-curricular activities fill most of Warner’s schedule, he still finds time to get back to cooking, often preparing the meals for his wife and children.

“I find it really relaxing,” Warner said. “After a day of reading books, I like to go home and cut some meat and fire up the grill.”

All that, and he’s a mean cook! Congrats to all those professors who made tenure and help teach the next generation of Wabash men.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 21:27:47 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

CJR: Petty Ready to Retire?

The following article appeared in the Crawfordsville Journal Review yesterday. Coach Petty is one of only two head coaches still around from when we were in school. (The other is Coach Johnson, who has already ceded his head cross country coaching duties to Roger Busch ‘96.)

Petty almost ready to turn over the reins

By Matt Wilson

Posted: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 12:01 AM EST

Mac Petty knows there is going to come a time when the Wabash College basketball program is going to have to be turned over to a younger coach.

Petty, 60, is in his 32nd year at the Little Giant helm and in his 40th year coaching basketball. He said either at the end of this year or next season, he’s going to turn the Little Giant program over to a new coach.

“I just have to think about my wife and understand that I don’t want to be another Joe Paterno or Bobby Bowden,” Petty said. “It needs to be turned over to a younger coach. But there are great guys here. And the first thing I think about is the players.”

Petty knew little about Wabash when he took over the program in 1976-77. He has gradually made his way up the ranks and heads into tonight’s game against Franklin ranked first on Wabash’s all-time list with 431 wins. His career head coaching record is 479-383.

He has had opportunities to move on, but family and his passion for the game of basketball have kept him at Crawfordsville.

In the early 1980s, he was offered the position of associate head coach at the University of Hawaii. At the time his daughter, Susan, was in high school and his son, Matt, was three years younger.

He later was offered to apply for the head coaching job at Appalachian State. He turned in his information, but later called them and said he was no longer interested.

“I didn’t pursue any of those jobs because my family was more important to me,” Petty said.

It didn’t take long for Petty to become noticed and start his coaching career.

During his senior year at the University of Tennessee while he was celebrating a victory with his teammates, a person approached him and asked him what his plans were after college. Petty said he hoped to move on and become a high school coach.

He graduated from Tennessee in 1968. In the 1968-69 basketball season, he was coaching at Loudon High School in Tennessee. Petty was married with his first child when he took over the job at Loudon.

After three years at Loudon, Petty got a call from a former high school teammate asking if he wanted to move up to the college level. Petty left a strong bond he formed with Loudon’s incoming senior class and took an assistant coaching job at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn. After two years as an assistant, he took over the head coaching job and ran the show for three seasons.

Petty led University of the South to the Division III Tournament in his last two seasons at the helm. He formed this bond with the group of seniors that were graduating at the end of what turned out to be his final season at Sewanee. He also was the men’s soccer coach at the college.

Petty grew up in Wooster, Ohio, and always had dreams of moving back to the Midwest. The men’s basketball coach at Rose-Hulman called Petty and informed him Snowy Simpson was leaving Wabash and he should apply for the job.

Petty knew little about Wabash. The only time he had seen the Little Giants play was when both them and Sewanee were in a tournament at Rose-Hulman. Sewanee ended up winning the tournament. Petty called a coach he knew, Bobby Knight, and asked what he knew at Wabash.

“He did some checking and told me he thought the program was a diamond in the rough and if I had the opportunity to take it,” Petty said.

Petty guided the Little Giants to a 9-15 record his first year at Wabash. He since then has guided the Little Giants to five 20-win seasons, including a national championship in 1981-82.

“I have been blessed to stay here this long at an outstanding institution,” Petty said. “The biggest thing is the players. I have a passion for basketball and like to be around it. The game gave me a great experience while I was a player, and I just keep trying to pay it back. I tell people now that I’m more proud of what the players are doing now after college than what they did on the floor. They have become involved with their community or involved with their families and have become successful.”

He has seen the game of basketball drastically change during his time in Crawfordsville. The biggest move came with the implementation of a three-point line and shot clock in 1986. Petty was involved in the decision making for both of those.

“We understood the implications and how those would effect the game,” Petty said. “When I played, basketball was more of a finesse sport and football was a contact sport. Now basketball is more of a contact sport and football is a collision sport.”

Petty has made his name known beyond Wabash.

In his first year at Loudon, Petty became a member of the National Association of Basketball Coaches and this year will attend his 40th Division III National Tournament. He was on the NABC Regional Selection Committee in the early 1980s and also was a chairman for the Midwest Regional All-American Committee.

He now is a congressmen for NABC Division III. He discusses Division III rules with other NABC members, then sends that district information to other Division III coaches around Indiana.

Petty has put in around 11-hour days during his time at Wabash. His normal day starts around 8 a.m., then he doesn’t come home until after practice around 7 p.m. Gamedays can even be busier. In Wabash’s last game — a 60-57 overtime victory over Marian — Petty had to follow coaching that game by going on a recruiting trip to McCutcheon High School.

He said he couldn’t be where he it at without the support of wife Gloria, who he has been married to for 41 years.

“She has been the most outstanding person to go along with this occupation,” Petty said. “She takes the losses sometimes harder than I do, because she knows how much it affects me when we do lose.”

The support of his wife and the community has kept Petty at Wabash. With the Little Giants seven games into the 2007-08 season, the veteran coach is not thinking about when the enjoyable ride is going to end.

The Little Giants have posted some exciting wins already this season against DePauw and Franklin and are currently 5-3.

Caption: Mac Petty, Wabash, calls out a play against DePauw. Petty said he will turn over the program to a new coach at the end of this season or next.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 18:48:09 | Permalink | No Comments »

CJR: Petty Sidebar

The following story also appeared in yesterday’s Crawfordsville Journal Review. Enjoy.

Petty’s personality left lasting impression on former players

By Matt Wilson

Posted: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 12:01 AM EST

Josh Estelle looks back and remembers both the serious and sensitive side to his former college basketball coach Mac Petty.

The 2000 Wabash College graduate remembers the moments that at the time they happened weren’t funny, but looking back he now laughs.

Petty kicked Brian Latham, another 2000 Wabash graduate, out of practice after his behind-the-back pass went out of bounds.

He remembers the enjoyment in 2000 when, in their first year in the North Coast Athletic Conference, the Little Giants defeated Ohio Wesleyan 73-46 in the opening round of the conference tournament at Chadwick Court.

Estelle’s biggest memories of Petty, however, have nothing to do with celebrations or big coaching wins. Estelle remembers Petty more because of his genuine personality. He now lives in New Castle and works at Pfenninger Agency, but said if he ever asked Petty to do something, he’s confident he would do anything he asked him to.

“He truly cared about his players, sometimes to a fault,” Estelle said. “The way he treated people, he was not fake and didn’t put on a show. He was just that genuine of a person.”

Mike Crnkovich, a 1993 Wabash graduate who played forward his freshman year then was a center his final three seasons, had the same sentiments as Estelle. Crnkovich always remembers the life chart Petty drew up for his players. Petty would put an A at one end of the chalkboard and a Z on the other, then would draw a line connecting the two letters. He would then make a little dot on the line. Petty told his players that dot represented playing college basketball for four years.

Crnkovich brought out that life chart again during a recent discussion with his wife. Petty was at Crnkovich’s wedding and was in attendance when he was named to the Wabash College Hall of Fame three years ago.

“Mac is the best teacher of the game of basketball that I’ve had,” Crnkovich said. “If he would tell me to jump, I would ask how high. I would run through a wall for the guy.”

Pete Metzelaars, the starting center for Wabash’s 1982 national championship team who now is the quality control coach for the Indianapolis Colts, remembers Petty’s approach to the game.

“He just brought an enthusiasm and passion for the game,” Metzelaars said. “You don’t coach basketball for 32 years at the same school without having a passion and enthusiasm about the game. And that is one thing he always brought across to us.”

Metzelaars has memories of the long road trips where Wabash had to take two vans. On their way back from a road trip to Anderson, they blew two tires on the same van after they hit the same chuckhole twice.

On another road trip, Metzelaars was driving Petty’s car following the team vans after a game at Rose-Hulman. Driving on a two-lane highway during an ice storm, Metzelaars forgot how slick the roads where when he returned to Crawfordsville. Metzelaars stopped for a red light right around the campus, but Petty’s car slid about 40 feet into the intersection.

“He also had a lot of good catch phrases,” Metzelaars said. “He would always tell us to ‘Get after it’ and ‘Super.’ ”

Estelle remembers his first meeting with Petty. The fall before his senior season at New Castle Chrysler High School, he started visiting schools because he hadn’t been recruited. Estelle and his parents went to visit Petty and he said the Little Giant veteran coach treated him the same way he treated all the un-recruited athletes.

“He was very honest and said we had an x number of spots,” Estelle said.

Petty started recruiting Estelle harder during his senior year. He picked Wabash because he thought “it was the best fit.” During his four years at Wabash, Estelle played in 109 games and remains as the Little Giant career leading scorer with 2,065 points.

Coming from a high school system where there was no main scorer, Estelle credited Petty and his staff for instilling the confidence to use his skills.

“I thought I had a good career for someone who was not really recruited his first year on campus,” Estelle said.

Crnkovich credits Petty for turning him into the basketball player he became. He led the Little Giants in scoring in both 1991-92 and 92-93. Crnkovich’s older brother played football at Wabash, so he also decided to come to Crawfordsville. He played junior-varsity basketball all the way until his senior season at Highland High School.

“In my first three years, we didn’t really have a good team, but he was always teaching,” Crnkovich said. “He made the best out of less-heralded players more than anyone I have seen. He always knew which buttons to push with me and was always well prepared.”

Petty had to change his coaching style while leading Wabash to the national championship in 1982.

In the first three seasons Metzelaars put on a Little Giant uniform, Wabash used a man-to-man defense. Metzelaars’ senior year, the Little Giants started with a 2-3 zone, and the Little Giants stuck with that defense all year.

“He was very similar to my high school coach,” Metzelaars said. “And when I moved up and coached junior varsity ball at Charlotte, I used some of the same stuff we did at Wabash. We kind of had that free-wheeling offense and would always go on a fast break after a made basket or a missed basket.”

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 18:44:56 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Not just Studying Abroad

Time was that if Wabash students wanted to experience off-campus learning, they would go overseas or to NYC or Philly for a semester their junior year. They used Fall Break to rage at Fall Bash (or as freshmen they would catch up on some much-needed sleep in their beds at home). And during Spring Break, they would migrate down to South Padre to do keg stands on the beach trying to impress women from Amherst or UT or IU. They used summers to get well-paying construction jobs or lifeguard at the local pool.

But an increasing number of our students are participating in immersion learning trips. They provide real-world support to classroom or book studies and many times provide a more intense and rich experience than a semester abroad.

For example. Junior Andy Chelton took pictures and video of his trip to Ecuador last summer as part of an immersion learning trip. It’s fast becoming one of the more popular immersion trips, and still gives our guys enough of the summer to intern or earn some money. Check it out.

alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/5omp3c3HpDE

Wabash College Immersion Trips 2007-2008

Dates

Course

Location

Prof. or leader

Oct 10-13

Career Services: New York Networking Trip

New York, NY

Scott Crawford

Feb 29-Mar 8

PoliSci: Politics of the Middle East

Tel Aviv, Israel

Phillip Mikesell

Feb 29-Mar 8

Div1 277; Hist. 350; Hum. 277; Spa 277: Astronomy and the Mayan World View

Villahermosa, Mexico

Dan Rogers

Mar 1-8

Spanish 477-1. Master Novelists of the Hispanic World: Don Quixote and Garcia Marquez

Madrid, Spain

Gilberto Gomez

Mar 1-8

PoliSci 311: Congress and the Presidency

Washington, DC

David Hadley

Mar 1-9

German 202: German Language and Culture

Berlin, Germany

Brian Tucker

May 5-16

Classics 212- Crete, Mycenae, and the Eruption of Santorini

Athens, Greece

Leslie Day

Summer 08

IS 270- Evolution Ecology Module/Teacher Education

Quito, Ecuador

Dan Rogers

You can check out some of the places and experiences our Wabash men have traveled here.

Your generous annual contributions to Wabash make spectacular experiences of concentrated learning like this possible.

It’s just one of the many things that your gifts to Wabash help enrich for our students.

You can make a gift to Wabash in one of three easy ways:

  • By phone: 877-743-4545
  • By mail: Wabash Annual Fund, PO Box 352, Crawfordsville, IN 47933 (Checks payable to Wabash College.)

 

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 20:33:25 | Permalink | No Comments »