Saturday, December 9, 2017

Thank you, Don Shula

Last week I saw a recent photo of Don Shula and Dan Marino together and I started reflecting on Shula’s influence on me, so I decided to write this tribute to him.  Often people reflect on a person’s influence on them after they’ve passed, but I figured, why wait?  Shula’s 87, and who knows, maybe through the magic of the internet, Shula will read this, and it’d be nice to be able to thank him for the 25-year career I’ve had in sports (so far).

To start, since I was a kid, I’ve always loved sports.  I wasn’t exactly blessed with athleticism, so college athletics was never a consideration, but I always wanted to be a part of sports.  I was a Miami Dolphins fan while growing up, which was not easy in the early-1970s, despite their being the best team in football, because the only televised NFL games in the New York market were Jets and Giants games plus whomever was playing on Monday Night Football, which I didn’t get to see as I was 7 years old during the Dolphins 1972 undefeated season and was asleep by the 9pm kickoff.  But I had a Larry Csonka sweatshirt, a Dolphins helmet and a Dolphins belt buckle (it was the 70s, after all).

I had remained loyal to the Fins even though the late-70s weren’t so great, but the early to mid-80s were incredible, with the Killer B defense and then Dan Marino and two Super Bowl appearances.

When I entered college, I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I began as a business major.  I made a new friend early in my freshman year in Jim Simmons, because he was also a Dolphins fan.  So Jim and I started going to the annual Dolphins/Jets game at Giants Stadium together.  We also began flying down to Miami once every fall for a game, starting in 1986, the team’s last season at the Orange Bowl.

One season in the late-80s, when the Dolphins were no longer a playoff team, Jim read the Dolphins media guide and discovered that when the Dolphins played on the road, Coach Shula would have the team leave Miami on Saturday morning so they could head to the stadium for an acclimation walk-though practice in the afternoon.  That was all we needed to hear; Jim and I decided to head to Giants Stadium the Saturday before a Jets/Dolphins game to see if we could get in to meet some players.  We figured the odds weren’t good, but we hoped to at least get a glimpse of our heroes in aqua and orange.

We had no idea when the team would arrive, but assumed that they’d fly out of Miami around 9am, which meant a practice sometime around noon.  Jim and I arrived at the stadium at 10am, just to make sure we didn’t miss the Dolphins.  We hung out in the empty parking lot outside the stadium for hours, tossing a football, comparing items we’d brought to have signed, and walking around to see if any of the security guards had any information about if and when the team would arrive.  No one would confirm that the team was coming, however.

After a couple of hours, an old station wagon with New York license plates pulled into the lot.  A middle-aged nun stepped-out from the driver’s seat and walked over toward us.  She introduced herself as Sister Virginia and asked if we were there to meet the Dolphins.  Yes, our jerseys gave us away, but why would a nun from New York be there and how did she know anything about football?

Sr. Virginia explained to us that she was a friend of Shula’s from his days in Baltimore, where she was a nun at the church in his neighborhood, where he attended weekly mass.  She said she drove down from her home in Syracuse, that the team would be arriving momentarily, and that she could bring us in with her.

We were gobsmacked.  Absolutely stunned.  And when the team arrived, a man stepped off the bus and approached the gate through which the team buses had just passed.  The man, Sr. Virginia told us, was Stu Weinstein, the Dolphins head of security.  Stu recognized our new friend and she said that Jim and I were with her.  We proceeded down the ramp and joined the players – our heroes – on a walk into the stadium.  As the players turned toward the locker room, we followed Sr. Virginia through the tunnel and out to the field.  Just like that, we were standing in the west end zone of Giants Stadium.

The team began to emerge about 15 minutes later in warm-up suits.  When Shula came out of the tunnel, he waved hello to Sr. Virginia and proceeded with the team.  Most of the team walked to the far end of the field to walk-through some special teams drills while Dan Marino and Mark Clayton played catch on our end, with Clayton catching passes in the end zone right in front of us while Marino threw from about the 30 yard line.  Clayton had fun, chatting up the dozen or so people watching in the back of the end zone, including us.

After practice, Shula stopped to talk to Sr. Virginia and she was so kind to introduce us to coach, who posed for photos with us.  I was so surreal.  We walked out of the stadium, to the buses, where players would soon emerge with a few signing autographs. 

Coach Shula and I at Giants Stadium
I was hooked.  I wanted to be a part of this all the time.  Being around sports, even if I couldn’t play, was intoxicating.  I couldn’t believe that Coach Shula allowed us into a closed practice session, even if it was just a walk-through.  Shula apparently had a deep appreciation for Dolphins fans outside of Miami.  

Sr. Virginia told us that she traveled to see the Dolphins in New England, Buffalo and New Jersey every year and we were welcome to meet her in the lot any Saturday before a game.

By the end of my second year of college, I’d joined the school’s radio station and their concert committee.  I was hanging out more and more with communication students and enjoying every second of it.  I decided I’d begin my junior year as a communication major, where I’d hoped to have a career in sports production for television.  I figured that would be my only way into a sports career.  Remember, this was long before colleges had sports management programs or teams had internships. 

The next year, Jim and I decided to drive up to Boston to see the Dolphins play the New England Patriots.  We booked a room at the same hotel in which the Dolphins would be staying and headed to Sullivan Stadium for Saturday practice.  And sure enough, Sr. Virginia was there to greet us and we got to see another practice.

This continued for a year or two as Jim and I added Buffalo to our annual travel itinerary.  And every time we’d get into practice on Saturday, see players in the hotel Saturday night and cheer for the team on Sundays.  One weekend, I brought a camcorder to Buffalo and shot the footage you see below:


Then one day on a Saturday in New England, it began raining hard at practice and Dan Marino decided to head to the locker room.  As I turned to seek shelter under an overhang, Mark Clayton said, “Where do you think you’re going?”  I replied, “Under the tarp.”  Clayton then said, “No you’re not.  I need someone to throw with, get over here,” and I proceeded to play catch with one of the Dolphins greatest receivers in the pouring rain for a half hour.  I remember it like it was yesterday though it was about 30 years ago.

Later, at the hotel, a guy I’d recognized from the walk-through practices approached and asked if I had a car, which I did.  He introduced himself as Dave Hack, the director of video for the team.  He shot every game and every practice and broke down the video that the coaches used to prepare for games.  He wanted to go out to dinner at a TGI Friday’s a half a mile away but didn’t wish to walk in the downpour.  He offered to buy us dinner if we drove him to Friday’s. 

At dinner, Dave explained to us how he and his assistant, Will, shot the games and had been doing so for almost 20 years.  After some great conversation over dinner, Dave asked Jim and I if we would be willing to help he and Will get their gear to their shooting locations before the game.  He’d give us game credentials and a parking pass, we’d meet him at the locker room two hours before kick, we could watch the game with he and Will or from our ticketed seats, and we’d have to return to their locations (Dave was the midfield shooter and Will shot from the end zone angle) at the two minute warning in the fourth quarter.  Oh, and we could eat in the press box, too.

We were more than elated to help.  And because we didn’t want to get into any trouble, we didn’t go anywhere near the field, though it was pretty cool being by the locker room when the team arrived.

Happy with our assistance, Dave told Jim and I to let him know which games we’d be attending and we’d never have to purchase tickets or pay for parking again.  He’d also get us a room at the team hotel at the team rate – usually half price.  But this was still just the beginning.

By 1990, Jim and I decided to attend Dolphins May minicamp and the team’s annual award banquet on the eve of minicamp.  We booked a hotel room and contacted Dave, who said he’d get us unto the banquet for free if I could do him another favor.  Given that I’d graduated from William Paterson having studied radio and TV production, Dave asked if I could fill in for Will as his second shooter at minicamp as Will had to attend a family wedding.  All I had to do was show up for minicamp practices at 8am, go out onto the lift with Dave at the St. Thomas University practice field, shoot the line-play camera for the 11-on-11 plays for the morning and afternoon practices and enjoy lunch with the team for three days.

Offer happily accepted.

Shooting minicamp with Dave Hack (seated)
St. Thomas was a bit underwhelming as the NFL teams didn’t exactly have modern training facilities like they do now.  The “weight room” was a tarp-covered area between 2 buildings and fenced-in for security.  Since it was early May, guys were working-out in 90-degree heat with little more than a fan blowing the humid South Florida air around.  I had fun chatting with Tony Nathan, a former player who was now an assistant coach, taking pictures, watching giant men eat copious amounts of food at lunch and shooting pro football players at work on the practice field from a spot that most fans would dream of.  Best of all, at 30 feet in the air, there was actually a light breeze.  It was a phenomenal experience.

At the end of the weekend, I flew home determined to have a career in sports.  It wound up taking a few years – I had no network of professional contacts in the New York market and had no idea how to get into the field – but eventually I did.  

Reggie Roby warms up in Washington
Later in the 1990 season, the playoffs, to be exact, the Dolphins headed up to Buffalo for a postseason matchup in the snow against the Bills. Because it was snowing throughout the game, the Dolphins team photographer, Dave Cross, asked me if I'd be willing to stay with him throughout the game on the sideline, holding whichever of his two cameras he wasn't using, to keep it dry.  I spent the next 7 years watching from the sideline alongside Dave Cross any time the Dolphins were in the northeast.  And I was welcome to bring my camera to take pictures, which I happily did.

But before my own sports career consumed my Sundays, I had another meeting with Coach Shula. 

Sometime in the early 90s, I was sitting up in the hotel room in Buffalo when the phone rang.  Team security director Stu Weinstein was on the other end looking for Dave, who had gone to dinner with a friend.  By now, Stu knew who I was and explained that the videotape machine in one of the meeting rooms wasn’t working right and Dave needed to fix it immediately.  I asked if he wanted me to take a look at it and told me to come down.

Stu escorted me into the meeting room where Don Shula held court with Offensive Coordinator Gary Stevens and quarterbacks Dan Marino, Scott Mitchell and either Doug Pederson or Scott Secules, I can’t remember.  Shula took a look at me and said, “Who the f*ck are you?”  I introduced myself as a friend of Dave’s.  Shula replied, “Where the f*ck is Dave?”  Out to dinner, I told him, but I could take a look at his tape deck and, hopefully, clear the tape heads by shuttling the tape forward and back, which sometimes works.  I tried.  And failed.  And Shula was not happy.  Today’s generation might say he spoke abusively to me or bullied me, but I told coach I’d wait in the lobby for Dave and send him right in.  Best I could do, right?

I understood where Shula was coming from.  Buffalo was the conference’s best team in the early 90s and the Dolphins/Bills games were often epic battles.  Shula needed to win.  Coaches were tough.  Life is tough.  And you’ve got to have thick skin to work in sports.  You've always got to give the best effort you can, at all times.  Games are unpredictable, and you have to be flexible and ready for anything.  I learned a lot from coach in my few interactions, even if I was never employed by the team. 

Most of all, I learned that you have to have honesty and integrity, something coach always spoke about – winning within the rules.  Shula retired in 1995 as the NFL’s winningest coach of all-time, a title he still holds today.  Shula began coaching when teams played just 14 games per season.  In fact, his first 14 seasons were 14-game schedules, robbing him of the opportunity to win 28 more games, by today’s scheduling standards.  But no one has caught him yet. 

The closest active coach is Bill Belichik, who is 125 wins back.  He’d have to average 12.5 wins per season for the next decade to catch Shula, but Belichik’s never won with a quarterback not named Tom Brady (who's now 40 and can't play forever) while Shula won with Unitas, Morrall, Griese, Marino and even David Woodley.  And then there’s the fact that Belichik oversaw the team through “Spygate” and “deflategate,” so he’ll never be as great as Shula, in my mind.

The lessons I’ve learned from Shula are lessons I’ve carried with me throughout my career.  I’ve managed to work 5½ seasons for the New Jersey Devils, running their game presentation and performing their video production as the NHL's first full-time video editor, before landing at the Meadowlands Sports Complex in video production for Giants Stadium and Izod Center.  After Giants Stadium closed and Izod’s last tenant, the New Jersey Nets, left, I was “RIF’d” and have been freelancing in sports production ever since, on top of my current full-time job.


In all, I’ve worked over 350 NFL games, many as a DJ, many directing the in-house video production crew and many as an audio engineer, and I’ve enjoyed every second of it.  I’ve also done over 400 MLS, USL, NASL and international soccer matches, 700 NBA games, 600 NHL games, 200 college basketball games, 80 college football games and hundreds of other concerts, sports and entertainment events.  I’ve got a Super Bowl, a PGA Championship and U.S. Open, 2 NBA Finals, and 4 Stanley Cup Finals under my belt, and each has been an absolute thrill.  I’ve been truly blessed with a great career.

As a result of my career, I haven’t been to a game in Miami in about 15 years.  I don’t watch many Dolphins games on TV either because I work almost every Sunday in the fall.  And, of course, the whole organization hasn’t been the same since the Robbie family sold the team or since Shula retired.  Dave retired about a decade years ago, though I enjoyed seeing him every year when I worked Jets games, and we still exchange emails occasionally.  I can’t thank him enough for being a friend and mentor, as well. 

And it’s Dave’s willingness to be an influence on me that’s driven me to help those trying to break into the field.  I teach 4 classes in Sport Management at Rutgers and mentor students in my full-time gig, creating content and renovating the TV studios at County College of Morris – two jobs I enjoy very much.  And just this past spring, two of my former students were hired by the Dolphins, so I guess, in a way, it's come fill circle and I've been able, in a small way, to give back to the Dolphins.

So thank you, Coach, for being a true role model, someone a college kid trying to break into sports could really look up to and learn from.  I’ll always appreciate it.