Tuesday, April 27, 2021

In 1984, Mulkey's writing was gold


      For five months in 1984, Kim Mulkey was on our team -- the Shreveport Journal sports department. 
     Just as in every phase of her life, she was very good at what she did. She could have been a sportswriter.
     (Don't laugh. It is a noble profession. And don't you forget it. Somebody has to do it. 
      Her spectacular four-year basketball career at Louisiana Tech finished -- with a fourth consecutive women's Final Four appearance -- Kim was entering the next phase: Trying to make the United States women's basketball team for the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
      She made it ... and helped her team win the gold medal. 
      And during the journey -- the tryouts, the team selections, the practices, the exhibition games, the trip to LA, the Opening Ceremony, the time in the Olympic Village, and the Olympic competition itself, she told the story ... in the Shreveport Journal
     In 14 segments, beginning April 19, "Kim Mulkey's Olympic Diary" appeared on the Journal sports pages. 
     Here is the promo for the start of the series:
     Kim had played for U.S. teams in international games for three years and had been one of college basketball's best women's players during that time. So she was a natural for the tryouts. 
     She was a natural for the Journal, too.
     The idea was generated -- as were many stories in the paper in those late 1970s/1980s years -- by the paper's editor, Stanley Tiner. 
     We took it from there ... and so did Kim.
     Believe me, it took some effort on her part. She had to write out, or type, her stories, and then make a call to the Journal sports department and, as I recall, dictate her words to us. On our end, it meant typing it into our computers and preparing it for the next day's editions.
     We had the easy part. Kim could write. She needed very little help, maybe a little editing here and there. Of course, her stories were excellent ... good reads, in newspaper terms.
      She was, after all, a summa cum laude college student; the sportswriters at the Journal were not.
     So it was time-consuming for Kim, between her basketball tryouts and travels.
      As I recall, her pay was a few million dollars short of what she's made as the women's head basketball coach at Baylor (and now LSU), or even a few thousand dollars short as an assistant coach for 15 years at Louisiana Tech.
     I think she did it for the good of the country ... and the Journal. It was a free ride.
     It was a pleasure to team up with her, and I remember that Journal readers enjoyed her stories. By then, she had been the "darling" of Louisiana Tech women's basketball fans for four years, the little point guard with the pigtails. The  big winner, the champion.
     Truth is, she had fans, too, in the Journal sports department (see Jerry Byrd's column) and also The Times, where our friend Jim McLain covered the Lady Techsters' story for many years.

     So her stories were gold for us, and the U.S. team -- coached by Pat Head Summitt, by then not quite the legend she would become at the University of Tennessee -- earned its gold by beating South Korea in the title game (remember, Russian athletes boycotted the LA Games in '84).
      Kim wasn't the only Louisiana Tech player to mine that gold. So did center/forward Janice Lawrence.
       (Lawrence was the Final Four's "Most Outstanding Player" when Tech and Mulkey won a second consecutive national championship in 1982. The Lady Techsters lost to Southern California, led by Cheryl Miller, in the 1983 championship game, 69-67, and 1984 semifinals, 62-57.)
     Here is how Kim ended her final "Olympic Diary" story, which ran in the Journal on August 8, the afternoon after the previous night's gold-medal game and ceremony:
       You probably know the rest. A lot of her dreams have come true ... and now, at LSU, there are more dreams and more goals. 
       The Journal is no more, having folded in 1991. Kim Mulkey's story rolls on ... and it's been a golden adventure.






Sunday, April 25, 2021

A victory for Louisiana ... and LSU

         Kim Mulkey: LSU women's basketball coach.

       LSU athletics needed some positive, out-of-sight news, don't you think?

       Think that will do for positive?

       It is about as big a splash LSU could make right now, and you can expect LSU women's basketball to be playing for national championships soon enough ... at least that's what Mulkey's career indicates.

      To review her record would take too much space (see LSU's news release below). Just call it "outstanding." She's about as big a winner as there is in our sports world. Put her right there with Nick Saban, Pat Summitt, Gene Auriemma ... just to name a few in college athletics.

     Much is being made, of course, that Kim is coming "home." For those of us with Louisiana Tech ties, that's not exactly how we see it. LSU wasn't her college home; Louisiana Tech is.

       So there might be Tech faithful out there who are as thrilled about this move as LSU people are. There are people like me, though, with split loyalties. So it's OK.

       Famously, or infamously, in 2000, Kim could have been the Louisiana Tech women's head basketball coach, the natural successor to Leon Barmore -- the coach she played for, and then was his 15-year assistant. 

     Tech, at that point, was the longtime women's powerhouse in Louisiana (and one of the nation's powers). And Kim had helped make it so.

      But she couldn't come to contract terms with Tech. The recall here is that she wanted a multi-year deal; Tech was only doing one-year deals. It didn't please Kim, and she bolted instead to Baylor ... and another La. Tech connection.

      At Baylor, she succeeded Sonja Hogg, who had been the original Tech women's coach and built the program, which hit greater heights once she hired Barmore as top assistant (and later co-head coach).

     Sonja was the Baylor head coach for six years, but -- without Barmore at her side -- wasn't nearly as successful in terms of wins-losses. But she was instrumental and supportive in helping bring Mulkey to Baylor.

      Mulkey at times over the years publicly has voiced her displeasure/bitterness about the Tech  contract flap. That did not sit well with some Tech folks ... but only temporarily because -- no matter what -- Kim is a beloved figure at Louisiana Tech. And because people realize that over many years, Kim can be quite outspoken about what's on her mind. 

      She's taken criticism for some of that, and she's had to explain herself. But here is what I assure you: She also is beloved at Baylor, and the prediction is she soon will be beloved at LSU.

      Speaking of predictions -- and I am not making this up -- about two months ago when LSU women's team was going through another middling season, I told a friend (can't remember who it was) that LSU would be making a women's basketball coaching change at the end of the season and that Kim Mulkey would be the next LSU coach.

      Honestly, I said that. Of course, it was pure speculation, wishful thinking. But Kim's ties to Louisiana and LSU (where her son, Kramer Robertson, played baseball -- shortstop -- en route to a pro contract -- St. Louis Cardinals' organization) were good reasons.

       One of my friends, a former basketball coach -- state-championship high school coach and, for a brief time, a college assistant -- did not believe Mulkey would take the LSU job. He told me that Saturday, and also stated what he has said often: That LSU does not really care about basketball.

      I have never agreed with that. Sorry, coach. 

      The men's program isn't always a big winner, but there is a history of four Final Four appearances and some of the greatest college players in the game (Bob Pettit, Pistol Pete Maravich, Shaquille O'Neal for starters). In many of Dale Brown's 25 years as head coach, the Tigers were NCAA Tournament entries.

    And the women's program made five Final Fours in a row in 2004-08 ... under three different head coaches.

     LSU's men's program right now is under much scrutiny and controversy since coach Will Wade's "strong-ass offer" comment became public and the reports of his having provided payment for 11 players to come play at LSU.

      (Add the Les Miles off-the-field crap and the reports of LSU football players' sexual assaults/transgressions, and athletic department cover-ups, and it's embarrassing. Inexcusable.)

      Hello, NCAA and FBI investigations ... ongoing. Cannot understand how LSU has stuck by him.

      So my suggestion to some friends is that Mulkey could coach the women's team and the men's team. Thank you. Kim could do it.

      As for LSU being serious about basketball, I think we have our answer, at least for the women's team. Money talks.

     When the powers-that-be decide that the men's program should abide by NCAA rules -- or what the rules are supposed to be -- and makes a move on Wade, that will mean it, too, is headed in the right direction again. 

      Mulkey -- and Wade, while he's there, if he's there -- have much work to do to bring in players to refresh their programs. The lenient transfer rules these days should make that easier than in past years.

      Would not be a big surprise at all if Mulkey builds this program in a hurry. No doubt about it, she knows how to win.

---

https://lsusports.net/news/2021/4/25/athletics-hall-of-famer-kim-mulkey-named-lsu-womens-basketball-head-coach.aspx?fbclid=IwAR1Xllqor2NT36z1aV3geUhJYCghBlBTTN7vwUYNkmVG6bhhNKhyVRwkXdU