17 INCHES

Hat tip card802

In Nashville, Tennessee, during the first week of January, 1996, more than 4,000 baseball coaches descended upon the Opryland Hotel for the 52nd annual ABCA convention.

In 1996, Coach Scolinos was 78 years old and five years retired from a college coaching career that began in 1948. He shuffled to the stage to an impressive standing ovation, wearing dark polyester pants, a light blue shirt, and a string around his neck from which home plate hung – a full-sized, stark-white home plate.

After speaking for twenty five minutes, not once mentioning the prop hanging around his neck, Coach Scolinos appeared to notice the snickering among some of the coaches. Even those who knew Coach Scolinos had to wonder exactly where he was going with this, or if he had simply forgotten about home plate since he’d gotten on stage.

Then, finally…
“You’re probably all wondering why I’m wearing home plate around my neck. Or maybe you think I escaped from Camarillo State Hospital,” he said, his voice growing irascible. I laughed along with the others, acknowledging the possibility. “No,” he continued, “I may be old, but I’m not crazy. The reason I stand before you today is to share with you baseball people what I’ve learned in my life, what I’ve learned about home plate in my 78 years.”

Several hands went up when Scolinos asked how many Little League coaches were in the room. “Do you know how wide home plate is in Little League?”

After a pause, someone offered, “Seventeen inches?” more of a question than answer.

“That’s right,” he said. “How about in Babe Ruth’s day? Any Babe Ruth coaches in the house?”

Another long pause.

“Seventeen inches?” came a guess from another reluctant coach.

“That’s right,” said Scolinos. “Now, how many high school coaches do we have in the room?” Hundreds of hands shot up, as the pattern began to appear.

“How wide is home plate in high school baseball?”

“Seventeen inches,” they said, sounding more confident.

“You’re right!” Scolinos barked. “And you college coaches, how wide is home plate in college?”

“Seventeen inches!” we said, in unison.

“Any Minor League coaches here? How wide is home plate in pro ball?”

“Seventeen inches!”

“RIGHT! And in the Major Leagues, how wide is home plate in the Major Leagues?”

“Seventeen inches!”

“SEV-EN-TEEN INCHES!” he confirmed, his voice bellowing off the walls. “And what do they do with a Big League pitcher who can’t throw the ball over seventeen inches?” Pause. “They send him to Pocatello!” he hollered, drawing raucous laughter.

“What they don’t do is this: they don’t say, ‘Ah, that’s okay, Jimmy. You can’t hit a seventeen-inch target? We’ll make it eighteen inches, or nineteen inches. We’ll make it twenty inches so you have a better chance of hitting it. If you can’t hit that, let us know so we can make it wider still, say twenty- five inches.’”Pause.

“Coaches…”

Pause.

“…what do we do when our best player shows up late to practice? When our team rules forbid facial hair and a guy shows up unshaven? What if he gets caught drinking? Do we hold him accountable? Or do we change the rules to fit him. Do we widen home plate?

The chuckles gradually faded as four thousand coaches grew quiet, the fog lifting as the old coach’s message began to unfold. He turned the plate toward himself and, using a Sharpie, began to draw something. When he turned it toward the crowd, point up, a house was revealed, complete with a freshly drawn door and two windows. “This is the problem in our homes today. With our marriages, with the way we parent our kids. With our discipline. We don’t teach accountability to our kids, and there is no consequence for failing to meet standards. We simply, widen the plate!”

Pause.

Then, to the point at the top of the house he added a small American flag. “This is the problem in our schools today. The quality of our education is going downhill fast and teachers have been stripped of the tools they need to be successful, and to educate and discipline our young people. We are allowing others to widen home plate! Where is that getting us?”

Silence.

He replaced the flag with a Cross.

“And this is the problem in the Church, where powerful people in positions of authority have taken advantage of young children, only to have such an atrocity swept under the rug for years. Our church leaders are widening home plate for themselves! And we allow it.”

“And the same is true with our government. Our so called representatives make rules for us that don’t apply to themselves. They take bribes from lobbyists and foreign countries. They no longer serve us. And we allow them to widen home plate and we see our country falling into a dark abyss while we watch.” I was amazed. At a baseball convention where I expected to learn something about curveballs and bunting and how to run better practices, I had learned something far more valuable. From an old man with home plate strung around his neck, I had learned something about life, about myself, about my own weaknesses and about my responsibilities as a leader. I had to hold myself and others accountable to that, which I knew to be right, lest our families, our faith, and our society continue down an undesirable path.

“If I am lucky,” Coach Scolinos concluded, “you will remember one thing from this old coach today. It is this: if we fail to hold ourselves to a higher standard, a standard of what we know to be right; if we fail to hold our spouses and our children to the same standards, if we are unwilling or unable to provide a consequence when they do not meet the standard; and if our schools and churches and our government fail to hold themselves accountable to those they serve, there is but one thing to look forward to ..”

With that, he held home plate in front of his chest, turned it around, and revealed its dark black backside. “…dark days ahead.”

Coach Scolinos died in 2009 at the age of 91, but not before touching the lives of hundreds of players and coaches, including mine. Meeting him at my first ABCA convention kept me returning year after year, looking for similar wisdom and inspiration from other coaches. He is the best clinic speaker the ABCA has ever known because he was so much more than a baseball coach.

His message was clear: “Coaches, keep your players-no matter how good they are-your own children, your churches, your government, and most of all, keep yourself, ALL, at seventeen inches.


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17 Comments
taodnt
taodnt
  Administrator
October 6, 2016 4:20 pm

(Are you in all week? Don’t quit your day job.)

I’m 64 3/4’s years young. I have heard similar messages from others, famous and not so famous. It is never too late in life to get a good lesson taught to you, in any form. Yes, I wish I had heard this story sooner but I cannot go back in time. This is the first I have heard of Coach Scolinos. Reading the tale makes me wish that I had known him.

Many of us have heard the old cliche “sports (or athletics) build character”. There is another not so well known cliche that I have found demonstrated throughout my athletic career, and that is “sports reveals character”.

Coach Scolinos demonstrated his character. 4000 baseball coaches mentally looked in the mirror to see what condition their character was in. I have encountered many that do the right thing, but also enough of those that think themselves above the team, above the coach, above the rules. Dealing with them just makes life difficult.

Admin, thank you for posting this.

OD

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Administrator
October 6, 2016 4:33 pm

My trouser snake!

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Administrator
October 6, 2016 9:21 pm

FM already thinks I’m a closet gay for asking Stuck to post a pic of the python, but yes, I had to look a and see if the Austrian stallion had thrown his cock in the ring, so to speak.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
October 6, 2016 3:56 pm

This story is from 20 years ago. If Coach Scolinos gave this talk today he’d have to talk about making the plate 80″ wide to accommodate all the weird shit going on.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  Trapped in Portlandia
October 6, 2016 6:05 pm

In Canada he’d have been dragged in front of a “Human Rights Tribunal” for hate crimes…

nkit
nkit
October 6, 2016 4:43 pm

Excellent find card802…enjoyed it much….

PeteH
PeteH
October 6, 2016 5:43 pm

Trouble is, in my mind, it’s too late. There is no standard to be held to. The kids play Little league, where everyone gets a trophy, win or lose… that is, if anyone is even allowed to keep score. We teach them of God at home, only to have the public school system ban Him from even being spoken about (speaking about Allah is OK though). We tell them that America is an exceptional country, only to have our government “leaders” insist that life would be better if America were more like Sweden or Australia. We tell them that marriage is between a man or a woman, only to have the Supreme Court say “Nope; ain’t so.” Heck; our “president” has even “redefined” that! Tell me; what standard are we to hold ourselves to that won’t result in us being fed to the lions?

GilbertS
GilbertS
  PeteH
October 8, 2016 10:46 am

That’s OK.
Take a longer view. America is one nation. There were a lot of em’ before America. There will be a lot of em’ after America. And all of them have the same problems and the same eventual end awaiting them. The only difference is you live in this failing nation. You can go nuts trying to polish the furniture on the Titanic, or you could just get used to it and start looking for an empty lifeboat or hatch cover. The Romans probably lamented the same stuff a few thousand years ago.

“Oh, did you hear about the latest outrage? The senators are passing laws that don’t apply to them! And it’s so digusting what happened last week when that centurion went out and stabbed that man at the vomitorium just for reaching under his cape! He tossed a dagger next to the body and claimed it was all in self defense! He’s been placed on paid vacation, too, while they “investigate.” Oh, and what about the dinarius-did you hear it’s being inflated? It seems they got caught dilluting it with bronze! And I hear they’re even talking about allowing Goths to serve in the Army! We’re headed for a collapse, I’ll tell ya!”

Gay Veteran
Gay Veteran
  PeteH
October 8, 2016 3:53 pm

not that long ago marriage was between a man and a woman…….of the same race

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
October 6, 2016 6:14 pm

This is also a fact of life in engineering: in nearly every instance, there is ONE correct answer (although there may be multiple paths to attaining that answer, or multiple ways to implement equipment / designs / services to achieve it). But so many people these days want to guess, half-ass and believe their way to some / an /any answer, and then create some excuse, justification or reverse logic that validates it.
But reality does not cooperate; there are REASONS (often several) that a given answer is correct, and another not; and all the verbose self-serving nonsense you can generate will not make a false answer true. THIS is why engineers are rarely social beings; there’s only so much nonsense you can tolerate before you scream:
“NO! Building a bridge out of cardboard is a REALLY BAD IDEA, and making it out of particle board just because it’s cheap isn’t any better! Building a device that will short-circuit and disintegrate in six months because capacitors from JunkCorp are cheap this month is insanity! Why on earth would you LOWER quality specs and ship 50% water to customers? If they want to dilute it to 50% they can do it much cheaper on-site, and save on the shipping!”
As you might imagine, we don’t get invited to parties often.

DaBirds (Tin foil, the new Gucci)
DaBirds (Tin foil, the new Gucci)
October 6, 2016 9:36 pm

17 inches, what a terrific metafor for testing the calibration of our moral compasses.
Thanks Card802

starfcker the deplorable
starfcker the deplorable
October 6, 2016 9:45 pm

A guy that works for me is divorced with one son, now in sixth grade. His ex is a liberal nutjob, all in on the bernie sanders thing. Trump is the devil to her. I eat lunch with this guy every day, the school has some sort of email system where if one parent emails the teacher, the other parent gets a copy. He’s always showing me hilarious emails of his ex, raging at the teachers, usually about math stuff. I thought he had advanced past her ability to help the kid with his homework. Nope. Common core. Yesterday he got an email from his ex wife asking him what Trump’s position on common core was. Bernie who?

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
October 6, 2016 11:55 pm

I have seen Stucky’s dingaling and can testerfy that it is indeed around 17 inches long. But it ain’t like one uh them buck negros yer see from time ter time with a big ol meaty foot and uh half tube steak. Hell no. Stucky’s weiner is like some kinder alien snake that is about as round as yer pinky but stretches down ter his gangly knees and whips back and forth when he walks. He cain’t use uh wall urinal cuz when he vacates his bladder it’s like one uh them wiggly water snakes squirtin urine all over the place. Good gawd, why in shitballs uh mercy are yer bringin up Stucky’s highly bizarre penis inter an inspuhrational talk by some gawd dammed t ball coach? Admenstruater, sometimes I doubt yer sincerity in all this shit. Yer got uh gawd dammed 7 foot tall goon keepin this 2 bit interweb bullshit alive, and yer gonner make fun uh his extremely skinny and long pecker? Unless Stucky found uh man sized praying mantis ter bone he’s got ter be uh virgin, so good gawd uh mighty let’s not dwell on his genital malformations and make him feel even worse than he has got ter feel about that weird ass piece uh spaghetti he coils inter his hanes briefs ever night.

Stucky
Stucky
  Billah's wife
October 7, 2016 7:35 am

Fuck you, BW. Getchyer facts straight. I’m a Fruit-Of-The-Loom guy.

Thank yeew.

GilbertS
GilbertS
October 8, 2016 10:48 am

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GilbertS
GilbertS
October 8, 2016 10:52 am

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