We’d often hold the Monday pre-practice chalk sessions in a classroom
near the field, and I relished walking into the room full of expectant players
to explain our game plan for the week. Though I was only an unproven
assistant to Los Angeles football coaching legends Ron Price and Earl Smith,
their often permissive approach required me to be the resident hard-ass, and
for whatever reason, the disciplinary role seemed to suit me well. I often
think back to that crazy environment, and recall fondly how many of those kids
literally craved the rigid discipline.
One particular Monday in 1990, we held the meeting in an old
vocational woodworking shop…filled with mothballed tarp-covered machines like
old lathes and drill presses that were holdovers from the days when the LA
Unified School District prepared at least some kids for the inevitability of a
job or career that didn’t automatically presume a college education. The room
just looked tired, and it had also become the destination to store several
items that were no longer or seldom in use. For some reason on this day there
was an old upright piano in the room, and as the team made up of tough
inner-city kids sauntered in for the afternoon meeting,
I walked over to the piano, pulled up a folded chair, and lifted the lid to
expose the keys.
As expected the piano needed to be tuned, but I remember
being struck by how good it sounded. Though the kids were merciless with their
caustic but admittedly humorous caps when I began, they pretty much quieted
down the more I played…if nothing else probably somewhat surprised by what they
were seeing and hearing. As I continued working through my limited unimpressive
repertoire, my defensive mentor Earl Smith strolled over and stood by the right
side of the piano. Coach Smith still seemed like a giant of a man to me, and
though well-into his 60s at the time, as a former UCLA tight end he still
possessed a rare combination of athletic prowess, good looks and a smoothness
that most people only dream about. As I segued into a rendition of “Smoke Gets
in Your Eyes,” Coach Smith caught me, and the entire room off guard when he
began to sing the lyrics with a deep velvet tone that would have made Nat
King Cole blush…and Johnny Hartman smile. As I struggled to accompany Earl
continued to croon, and as the two football coaches worked through the classic
number, I had a hard time actually playing because Earl sounded so darn good.
Quite uncharacteristically the kids were almost silent, no doubt astonished at
the surprising spectacle that was unfolding in this otherwise conventional
football setting.
I didn’t know it until that day, but coach Smith had
actually sung quite a bit as a youngster…and even put some time in with Johnny
Mathis as I recall the story. As we wrapped up the tune the room broke into
thunderous applause (and some additional insults…not the least of which was an
Ebony and Ivory reference that still cracks me up). Always the educator, Coach
Smith used the setting as a teachable moment, and as the applause and laughter
died down, he reverted to his coaching role quickly with some profanity laden
admonition that went something like… “let that be a lesson to all you
narrow-minded dumbass jocks…just because you’re an athlete…it doesn’t mean you
can’t learn to do other things.” Well, to be honest, I don’t have the talent or
the words to adequately convey the magic of that moment. In all honesty, Coach
Smith’s impromptu and memorable rendition of that Platters’ classic was unlike
anything I’d experienced up until that time…or for that matter…any time since.
When I was a kid, I HATED taking piano lessons,
but my unrelenting union electrician and WWII vet dad forced me to sit
there every day and practice for at least 30 minutes. Under the supervision of
my mother’s watchful eye, I’d work through scales, exercises and various pieces
for a torturous thirty minutes. Often, the excruciating practice sessions were
made worse by the fact that the piano was in the front of the house…and I could
usually hear my friends playing football out in the street. Some days there’d
even be the added agony of some kid like Billy Horning coming to the door and
asking if I could come out and join the game, only to be told that I wouldn’t
be out until I was done “practicing piano” (you can imagine the reception I
received when I finally made it to the huddle). On those especially painful
days I could sulk with the best of ‘em, and I recall my father would say
something like “someday you’ll be glad you’re the guy that can play
football…and play the piano.” Well, the football player thing never worked out
very well (search this blog for UCLA…it was ugly), but for a few years in the
early 90s, Fairfax High’s football team was undefeated in the Coastal
Conference and we contented each year for the coveted Los Angeles city title.
As it turns out we were awfully good on the gridiron, and thanks to my dad (and
Coach Smith), we weren’t bad on the woodshop piano either. Dad was right
again.
Have a great weekend and if you can, try to take the time to
do something fun. If you need some evidence that there is indeed a god, college
football begins in earnest this Saturday so there is no longer any reason to be
a skeptic. Come to think of it, there may even be a good Michael Feinstein
Sinatra Legacy special on PBS you can take in after a game.