Dan Washburn could probably relate to Doug Barfield and Ray Perkins when he took over as executive director of the Alabama High School Athletic Association.
Herman "Bubba" Scott had pretty much reached legendary status when he decided to step down in 1990 as the head of the AHSAA, a position he had held since the mid 1960s.
Scott directed the AHSAA during a difficult time of social change. The AHSAA and its members dealt with the issue of integration early in his tenure. It was also dealing with the tigress known as Title IX, which saw girls go from competing in "P.E. fun days" to full fledged athletic competition.
He handed Washburn a healthy organization with established playoff formats in football, boys basketball and baseball.
The largest classification played its state football title game at Legion Field, while the smaller ones played at the site of one of the participants. At least a share of the boys state basketball tournament had been held in Tuscaloosa for decades (the University of Alabama started sharing the duties with Auburn in the final few years of Scott's reign and the early part of Washburn's).
The baseball championship series was also held at the site of one of the participants. Only the girls basketball championship was a nomad, bouncing from Birmingham to Decatur and parts in between.
Washburn could have taken the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" route and wouldn't have gotten much criticism.
The AHSAA, under his leadership, didn't take that approach.
It completely revamped the way its championships were held and caught a lot of criticism for it in the initial stages. What it has come up with is now a model for the rest of the nation.
It didn't come easily.
Moving all of the championship games in football to Legion Field seemed like a no-brainer, but critics argued against taking title games away from small communities around the state.
Giving players from towns like Addison and Oneonta to play at a venue where gridiron legends Joe Namath and Bo Jackson once trod seemed to outweigh the draw of having the game in a small community.
It also shortened the trip for visiting teams and exposed the games and the players to far more people. Sure, the games in the past drew fans of other schools, but it is a lot easier of a trip for a high school football fan from Cullman to make a trip to Birmingham than it is to take one to Lineville.
The Super Six has also become somewhat of a high school football coaches convention and has succeeded beyond anyone's expectations. It has also extended the life of Legion Field long after the Alabama Crimson Tide, the SEC Championship Game and Olympic Soccer have left the building.
The biggest resistance came with moving the boys' and girls' basketball games to one site and making it a final four format. The AHSAA met opposition from both Auburn and Tuscaloosa, which didn't want to give up their shares of the boys' tournaments.
There were also naysayers who didn't think combining the boys' and girls' tournaments was a good idea. The biggest fight may have come from those who didn't want to see the boys' tournament trimmed down from eight to four.
To them, it was cutting the chance for a school to experience a state tournament atmosphere in half.
In reality, the opposite turned out to be true thanks to the regional format set up to go along with basketball's final four.
"It actually doubled the state tournament atmosphere," Washburn once told me at the Northwest Regional of the atmosphere experienced at Wallace State Community College, Jacksonville State, South Alabama and Troy on the road to the semifinals and finals in Birmingham.
The biggest accomplishment of moving the boys' and girls' tournaments to Birmingham was the fact that it put the girls on equal footing with the boys. It is an experience that players from Cold Springs, Hanceville, West Point, Vinemont and St. Bernard will tell you they won't soon forget.
Moving state tournaments to one site didn't end with the two largest revenue sports. Baseball, softball, soccer and volleyball are all at venues with top-notch facilities that allow them maximum exposure to their sports that just wasn't there in the past.
There have been other major accomplishments under Washburn's administration such as the North-South All-Star Week competition sponsored by the athletic directors and coaches that have also become a tremendous success.
Washburn clearly took a stable organization and made it one of the best in the nation.
He did a very good job filling Scott's shoes.
When he steps down next summer, he will leave some very big shoes to fill on his own.
รค Scott Turner is the managing editor of The Cullman Times. His column appears in the place of Publisher Ed Darling's column. Darling's column will return next week.
Syndicated Columns
Leaving big shoes to fill
- Syndicated Columns
-
-
Alexander Cockburn: Will Tilikum, the 'Killer Whale', get his day in court?
Remember Tilikum?
-
Steve Flowers: Immigration legislation
The 2011 Legislative Session yielded an avalanche of socially conservative legislation.
-
Mona Charen: 'Racists' for Cain
Do not suppose for a minute that Herman Cain's victory in the Florida straw poll will alter the liberal narrative about the Tea Party and Republicans.
-
David Sirota: Stopping the insanity
Like most people living through this jarring age of economic turbulence and political dysfunction, you can probably recall a moment in the last few months when you thought to yourself that our lawmakers and corporate leaders are all crazy.
-
Michelle Malkin: Solar energy school propaganda 101
The Obama administration's crony green subsidy scandal is erupting like a solar flare in Washington.
-
Susan Estrich: Another new year
No, it's not January yet, or even December.
-
Pat Buchanan: a Geriatric Germany Save Europe?
As Greece lurches on the precipice of default on its sovereign debt, a default that could bring down banks across Europe and precipitate a global financial panic, a consensus is building that there is but one way out.
-
Immigration issue is about the law
Recently, I have been following The Cullman Times’ articles dealing with the issues of illegal workers for agriculture and other manual labor jobs. Most recently in the Sept. 21, issue an editorial dealing with these topics has now spun the issue from the center focus to far left of center.
-
When life hands you lemons
By Rickey Kreps
2011-12 ChairmanCullman Area Chamber of Commerce
I think you’ll agree that Cullman County couldn’t have been handed any more lemons than we were handed on April 27 when multiple tornadoes with winds up to 175 miles per hour ripped a path of destruction 38 miles long across Cullman County. And I think you’ll also agree that in the storm’s aftermath, Cullman County couldn’t have made a bigger pitcher of lemonade. In my role as this year’s chairman of the Cullman Area Chamber of Commerce, I’m extremely proud of the citizens of the City of Cullman, the City of Hanceville and Cullman County. - The Rising is reason for the season
- More Syndicated Columns Headlines
-






