While I was not the best teammate I could have been I could certainly recognize a good one, then and now (easier to be a critic.)
My friend Matt was a good football player but only an ok -- at best -- basketball player. But he worked like a dog, came to every practice or camp, never complained, did what was asked, and was a heck of lot of fun. Come senior year our coach contemplated cutting him and replacing him with a better player, but a worse person. He knew he had a good team coming in to the year and was trying to make a name for himself with other local coaches. But despite overcoaching like this he had the good sense to come to me and another top player to mention the possibility.
We made it clear that this would be a bad idea and he reconsidered. Girls might have hidden this story from him but, being boys, we ran directly to Matt to taunt him and insist he thank us -- he did gleefully.
Matt made the team. He was a great practice player Saturday morning when we were all exhausted from Friday night play (and then playhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFx6gm0QKZ0). And the cheerleaders loved him. They literally squealed when he came in the last minutes of a blow out game and struggled to get the ball up the court. He must have set some record for 10 second backcourt violations. We would almost fall off the bench laughing -- and he would laugh even harder at himself after the game. Even with Matt our school team had the best record it had had in twenty years.
At the end of the year banquet our coach awarded Matt "The Most Dedicated Teammate" award. We laughed, of course, because we were teenagers and happy to tease him about not getting real playing time. That is what such awards are for we joked. Matt's Dad, however, took it a bit more seriously.
"Loser's award," he grumbled as he stalked off with that grumpy white male thing of his generation.
Fortunately, Matt had the wherewithal (and then some) to laugh off his own father. Indeed, almost every time we get together we laugh hysterically about the "loser's award" remark.
You see, Matt, the "loser" best teammate, became easily the most successful person I know, financially, professionally and personally. Hundreds of people and clients depend on him daily for their livelihood. He is a wonderful father and husband that helps out all members of his large, extended Irish family. He has done more for our old "friends" in times of trouble than the government -- and where we came from that's saying something. He is the one friend I call when I really need help. He always answers. He serves on local hospital boards, gives thousands to charities, takes people places they otherwise wouldn't go. There aren't many English professors sitting behind Jimmy Howard at Wing's playoff game.
I like to think I benefit from his generosity because I am a friend. But whether or not that is true that "friendship" began because he knew how to be a teammate. Work on being a good teammate. You can always do that. It is like defense in basketball. Everyone can do it. Just work at it. It wins games of all sorts.
[That's it, Soph. Last post. It has been a lot fun watching you and the girls play. My thanks, in particular, to All World -- who knows how to be a team mate and then some. And thanks to Cookie for being a pro even when I am not sure there should be pro's. I hope he doesn't mind how exposed he is now to googlers, but this blog will stay up for the duration. Next year? Who knows? But goodbye to Cookie's Purple U12 blog]