Be Like John Thompson

Published September 5, 2008 @ 09:42 in Sports

BallI'm still angry. Last night my rec league softball team lost a semi-final game by a single run. It was as close as a game can get with me as the tying run deserted at third base in the bottom of the last inning.

I'm still angry because one of my players played a horrible game. He killed us defensively all night and in the last inning when we needed four runs to tie, he was the first out in the dumbest base running play I've ever seen. That's when I thought about John Thompson.

John Thompson was coach of the Georgetown Hoyas basketball team. In 1982, his Hoyas were in the NCAA finals against Michael Jordan and the North Carolina Tar Heels. Thanks to Jordan's jumper, North Carolina led 63-62 with 20 seconds to play. Georgetown's Fred Brown dribbled the ball up court and inexplicably threw an errant pass right into the hands of North Carolina's James Worthy.

At that moment, Fred Brown had cost Georgetown the national title. I can imagine how Brown felt. Right after the buzzer went, John Thompson went straight to Fred Brown and hugged him. I often think about that moment and remember it's just a game. I try and be like John Thompson at that moment in 1982.

Fred Brown would never play NBA ball, but he would eventually win an NCAA title with the Hoyas in 1984. I couldn't find footage of the hug, but here's the last 20 seconds of that game that inspired me so.

9 Responses to "Be Like John Thompson"

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Andrew
September 5, 2008 / 11:16

So you're acting like John Thompson by calling the guy out in your blog?

You seem to be pinning the blame on one guy. Teams usually win as teams and lose as individuals. Maybe you should lose as a team.

Toronto Mike
September 5, 2008 / 11:36

Good point.

I guess it was a bitter pill to swallow and I'm no John Thompson.

Kathleen
September 5, 2008 / 12:07

My father went to high school with John Thompson and was on the basketball team with him.

My mother had a run-in with Coach Thompson. Before he went to bigger and better things at Georgetown, he coached the boys at a Catholic grade school in Washington. My mother coached the girls' team, and he didn't like that the girls were cutting into his gym time. :-)

Argie
September 5, 2008 / 13:04

Girls play basketball???

Is that what they call it?

Toronto Mike
September 5, 2008 / 13:14

Can anyone find video of the hug?

LEW
September 5, 2008 / 13:23

I forget the player, but it was on Monday Night Football decades ago when a punt went to a player, he caught it on the one yard line; instead of letting it go into the end zone, he danced around, then got tackled.
Dandy Don "how can a grown man do that"
Your story reminded me of this, one of my favorite calls of all time.

felix
September 5, 2008 / 16:15

I'm just curious as to what the dumbest baserunning play you've ever seen was.

Toronto Mike
September 5, 2008 / 16:23

Keep in mind this was a do-or-die playoff game and we were batting in the bottom of the last inning down by 4 runs.

This player in question led off and managed to reach first base. The next batter hit a little single. This player in question hit 2nd base and decided he was going to head to 3rd.

Our 3rd base coach was yelling at him to stay at 2nd base. The ball was practically in the infield by the time he hit 2nd. This was the easiest out at 3rd I've ever seen - he was out by more than 20 feet.

When you're down by 4, you don't ever risk getting the first out at 3rd. We needed baserunners and we needed to avoid outs. Instead of 1st and 2nd with nobody out, we had a runner on 1st and one out.

This player is not particularly fast and 100 out of 100 times should have stayed at 2nd. We mustered 4 more hits that inning.

It still hurts to think about it.

felix
September 5, 2008 / 16:42

Yikes, that sucks man. It's usually never a good idea to make the first (or third) out at third base at any time. But when you're down 4, you need runners, so I hear ya. But that's the way it goes sometimes, and it can also go the other way.

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