Monday, November 16, 2015

Kennesaw State’s Player First Kind of Coach



By Morgana Kennedy
Nov. 15, 2015


Head Coach Tory Acheson posing for the camera in his office at Kennesaw State University on Monday, Nov. 9, 2015.  (Photo Credit: Morgana Kennedy)

KENNESAW, Ga. – Kennesaw State women’s softball coach has become very popular with the team through his “player first” coaching style.

Tory Acheson, known by his players as Coach Tory, officially became head coach for the Owls in April 2015. Acheson began coaching softball when he was in high school and continued on to the college level. Before coming to KSU, he coached at Tennessee Technological University for 16 years, Acheson said.  

“I’ve been coaching all of my adult life,” Acheson said. “It’s not something I got into thinking of coaching as a profession. It’s something that just found me.”

While at TTU, Acheson had 25 wins in 13 of his 14 seasons and averaged 36 wins per season. He acted as the interim coach during the 2015 campaign for the Owls. He led the team to a 32-19 record and finished third in the Atlantic Sun Conference.

The winning season came just months after Acheson’s wife passed away. He has one son who is working on an advanced degree in Florida, so he has thrown his heart into coaching this team, he said.
When he first began helping with a team in high school he met the woman who would become his wife. They did not know each other before he started helping with the softball team. They fell in love and got married two years after graduating, Acheson said.

They coached together throughout his career. They were married for 34 years.

Acheson has changed his coaching style over the years and credits his positive relationship with the girls on the team and the assistant coaches to empathy.

“My coaching career is the really the tale of two different stories, almost like two different personalities,” Acheson said. “When I was a young coach I was a very much a hard driving, screaming, yelling old school military type of coach, and as I’ve gotten older I’ve become much more of a laid back and player friendly kind of coach.”

This approach has earned Acheson respect among players and other coaches, assistant coach Cathleen Fritts said. She has known Acheson since she was a child and was recruited by him for TTU, she said.

“It’s like coming to work with a family member, you know, someone you’re close with and comfortable with,” Fritts said.

The women on the team are free to come to Acheson with any concerns, even those that are not related to softball, Fritts said. He has an open door policy.

Though Acheson has demonstrated an ability to effectively coach, he was not a great player, he said. He played baseball for many years, but describes himself as a mediocre player. 

“My whole athletic career I was just a very average athlete, but I was a really hard worker and was just interested in learning about the games that I played,” Acheson said.

Connecting with the players became the most rewarding part of sports, Acheson said. He enjoys watching his players grow, and the true payoff comes when a player has a breakthrough moment and really achieves something, he said.

Acheson views his success as being directly connected to his players. But, he admits that softball doesn’t yield professional success for players in most cases. Professional softball is not a very popular sport, and most athletes have to supplement their income in other ways if they continue on to the professional level, Acheson said.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Sports Blogging

By Morgana Kennedy

Chapter six discusses blogging. Blogging is a great way to put your work online, and to show future employers that you have writing skills. It is important to find a unique perspective or your own voice.

There are many types of "voices" in blogs. Some bloggers give opinions about teams, leagues and players. Others post more like fans, making excuses for poor plays or calls in a game. According to the book critics argue that many sports blogs are not worth reading.

Despite the negative comments blogs are here to stay. Even ESPN and CBSSports.com regularly glog major league baseball, National Football League, National Basketball Association and National Hockey League games. Colleges have started to get in on the blog phenomenon as well. Some colleges post live updates on  blogs during a game. Some just have recaps.

Blog writing is just starting to evolve. It is similar to sports writing in the early 1920s. Game stories read like short stories. Individual blog posts can vary though. It's important to be balanced. Mix the positive with the negative. Blogs won't be popular if they are mostly negative.

People who write blogs are often careless with their grammar or editing. They write the way they speak, which is O.K. for opinion blogs, but they should still follow AP style and watch for mistakes. It is hard to be viewed as a serious writer if your blog is filled with errors.

Make sure you report what happened during the game. Be sure to credit the sources you get the information from. Deliver quality information.

Blogs are like a sidebar. They are places where sports writers can expand on their game stories, according to the book. Add audio clips, links, and video to make it more interesting. There are no set rules to blogging. The writer just needs to try to capture the audience and keep them coming back. 

Tuesday, November 3, 2015