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Author: David Shama

David Shama is a former sports editor and columnist with local publications. His writing and reporting experiences include covering the Minnesota Vikings, Minnesota Twins, Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Gophers. Shama’s career experiences also include sports marketing. He is the former Marketing Director of the Minnesota North Stars of the NHL. He is also the former Marketing Director of the United States Tennis Association’s Northern Section. A native of Minneapolis, Shama has been part of the community his entire life. He is a graduate of the University of Minnesota where he majored in journalism. He also has a Master’s degree in education from the University of St. Thomas. He was a member of the Governor’s NBA’s Task Force to help create interest in bringing pro basketball to town in the 1980s.

First Stolski Coaching Job a Classic

Posted on August 12, 2011October 9, 2011 by David Shama

For Stolski the journey started in 1962, fresh out of Macalester at age 22 and with no high school head coaching experience.  He told a funny but true story about his first job in Kensington, Minnesota, a small town of only a few hundred people.

He drove a “junker car” to the interview in Kensington wearing a powder blue suit first worn in 1956 for his junior prom.  He was married, had two kids, needed a job and preferred to start his football career as a head coach, not an assistant.

Nothing had ever prepared Stolski, the city kid, for what he experienced in Kensington.  The first person he saw in the school building was dressed in a suit.  Stolski assumed the guy was the superintendent, the man he was to interview with.  No, the suit was worn by the janitor.  Then this gentleman appears with patches all over his jeans and an extension cord coming out of his pants.

Meet the superintendent.  The man who would hire Stolski had a heating pad attached to that extension cord and was soothing his hemorrhoids.

The superintendent asked him if he wanted to see the football field.  “The grass was up to my armpit,” Stolski recalled.  “He said, ‘We mow it in the fall.’ ”

The field didn’t look 100 yards long to the young coach.  “We never measured it,” said the superintendent who Stolski now includes among the best leaders he’s ever known.

The Kensington football team hadn’t scored a touchdown ─ never mind won a game ─ in five years.  The school played eight-man football and there were 21 kids in the senior class.

“I had never seen eight-man football,” Stolski said.  “Three kids came to the first practice.  There were no goal posts up.”

In his first season Kensington lost the first three games on the schedule.  Then Kensington won 56-0 over Brandon, setting off a celebration that included tearing down the goal posts and free hamburgers at a diner.

Stolski went 3-5 the first year at Kensington, 7-1 the next.  He moved on to Slayton for one season, to Princeton for six and Park Center for four where he started the football program and coached future Twins catcher Tim Laudner.  Then Brainerd called and he liked the idea of pursuing not only his passion for football but also his recreational loves of hunting and fishing.

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Time to Retire When He Can’t Help Kids

Posted on August 12, 2011October 9, 2011 by David Shama

Stolski has been in Brainerd since 1975.  He and his wife Sharron have four children and 17 grandchildren.  He’s a legend in Brainerd and known across the state in prep athletics for his work on behalf of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association.  He’s the organization’s executive director and keeps a busy year-round calendar with those duties and coaching the Warriors.

He used to teach high school English and his communications skills have much to do with his success as a leader.  He won’t hesitate to write a note of praise to someone, or send a letter to the parents of his football players.  He often speaks to groups and gave a moving eulogy two years ago at the funeral of Don Swanson, a close friend and former high school football coach at Patrick Henry High School.

Stolski is inspired by former teachers and coaches like Swanson, and the late Tom Mahoney from Fairmont who he describes as his “most influential” mentor during his professional life.   He can’t offer praise quickly enough, too, to his own football assistants who “have been with me forever and are so valuable.”

But the man who first influenced Stolski was his dad, John Stolski, a working class man who labored during the week at a southeast Minneapolis grain elevator and on weekends as a bouncer at a bar.  He taught his son life lessons including the importance of treating people with respect.  “He was the wisest man I ever knew,” Stolski said.

Stolski played park board football in Minneapolis and knew at an early age, even before his football careers at Patrick Henry and Macalester, that he wanted to coach.  He didn’t have the athleticism to go far as a player, but thought he could help others achieve their potential.  “When you choose a life in coaching, you choose to try to make a difference with the people you touch,” Stolski said.

At 72 the commitment to coach is still there.  On Monday he plans to tell his players ─ young enough to be his great grandsons ─ that he has as “much fire in his belly” as he did way back in 1962 while driving up to Kensington.

How will he know when it’s time to retire from coaching?  “I will coach as long as I think we’re still doing good things for kids,” he answered.  “When we’re not doing good by kids, I will walk away.”

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Knee Recovery Limits Mauer Power

Posted on August 9, 2011November 27, 2011 by David Shama

Joe Mauer has one home run in 207 at bats this season.  The lack of power has become a source of frequent criticism about the Twins’ left-handed hitting catcher.

His grandfather, Jake Mauer, has provided baseball counsel to the Twins’ $184 million man since Joe was a toddler.  The older Mauer told Sports Headliners the left knee Joe had surgery on during the past offseason still isn’t right and the usual physical abuses of catching doesn’t help the power hitting either.

“Well, he’s banged up.  He’s only 80 percent right now,” Jake Mauer said.  “He still has trouble with his left knee.  When he hits off the back foot he cannot put all his weight on it (the knee).  He has to distribute his weight to the front foot, and therefore (hits) all ground balls, all easy plays.  No power because you hit off your back foot.”

Mauer has never experienced such a power outage with the Twins.  His previous season low was in 2004 when he hit six home runs in 107 at bats.

Mauer has played in part or most of eight seasons with the Twins.  He’s not a home run hitter, only twice achieving double figures in home runs, with 13 in 2006 and 28 in 2009.

His grandfather believes the home runs will come with more frequency next season.  “Oh, yeah,” Jake said. “He’ll get back next year, probably.  He’ll have the whole winter to relax.  No operation, no nothing.”

Many of Mauer’s hits this year are to left field, as they were during that 2009 season when he hit home runs that just cleared the left field fence at the Metrodome.  That season Mauer won the American League batting title with a .365 average and was the AL MVP.

Mauer has played 11 games at first base without an error this season but his grandfather said Joe has no plans to give up catching.  “He enjoys it (first base),” Jake said. “He thinks it’s fun. As a longevity (move), no.  He wants to be a catcher.”

The Twins fell 10 games behind first place Detroit last weekend, ending hopes in the minds of many fans for a Minnesota Central Division title.   How does Joe feel about the club?

“He still thinks he’s gotta chance,” Jake said.  “What the hell else can he say?  I think he’s saying that because he thinks no matter how low you can get, he always wants to climb up to be a winner. And he’ll never give up, and he still thinks the team is going to do it.”

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