Well, it's been a week since one of the great moments of self-control TigerBlog has ever had.
It was at a Brazilian steakhouse in Indianapolis. Have you ever been to one of these restaurants? They keep bringing perfectly cooked meat right to your table and slice it right there for you.
You're given a coaster that has a green side and a red side. If you've had enough, you put it on the red side. If you want more, you put it on the green side. Not that it matters. It's pretty much impossible to turn it down when you see it.
And yet? TigerBlog did not overeat. He didn't under-eat or anything like that. It's just that he tasted all the ones he wanted and then flipped over to red. It wasn't easy or anything but he did it.
TigerBlog was there as part of a celebration dinner at the NCAA men's lacrosse rules committee meetings. The main honoree was Willie Scroggs, the outgoing Secretary-Rules Editor, who was completing 12 years of service.
Scroggs is a Hall of Fame former coach who led North Carolina to three NCAA championships, in 1981, 1982 and 1986. That 1981 championship came at Palmer Stadium, with a crowd of 14,000 in attendance.
You can also add the three titles Scroggs won as a player at Johns Hopkins and the two he won as a Hopkins assistant and that still doesn't come to the number of NCAA championships his wife Karen Shelton won in field hockey as the UNC coach. That would be 10.
Willie Scroggs is someone TB certainly knew about but had never met prior to TB's time on the rules committee. Now he knows him as Willie the person, not just Coach Scroggs, the one who did so much to help grow the sport.
Willie has a dry sense of humor and a warm, welcoming personality. He brought a lot to the meetings, both for his historical perspective and knowledge of the rulebook and for the way he made everyone in the room feel valued.
Like Willie, TigerBlog's time on the committee is ending. His four-year term — the last two of which have been spent as the committee chair — comes to a close officially on August 31. The meetings last week in Indy were his last real opportunity to have an official impact on the rules of the game.
TB came onto the committee at a time where the game had recently undergone major changes, including a shot clock, a goal mouth, continued refinements of the face-off rules. Those changes had done wonders for the pace of play and for consistency, which meant that it was important that the committee in TB's four years not overhaul the book just for the sake of doing so.
That's not to say there weren't major challenges. TB's focus was always on three areas: first and foremost player safety, along with a balance between offense and defense and making the game as easy as possible on the officials. Also, when considering the need to make a change, think about what you'd want the outcome to be if this occurred in overtime of the national championship game.
Probably the biggest change during TB's time was the advent and expansion of video review to men's college lacrosse. There have been growing pains, to be sure, but the basic premise remains the same: be able to make corrections in some specific situations, do not "re-ref" every call and keep the review time to a minimum.
The meetings last week also included, among other items, a change to the way overtime works, going from four-minute sudden-death to 15-minute sudden-death. Oh, and the color of the ball will be evolving to a florescent yellow or green.
What didn't happen was the one rule TB wanted to see changed. If he could have simply waved his hand to make it happen, then the ability to call live-ball timeouts would have vanished from the game. Alas, it wasn't meant to be.
There were massive NCAA structural changes this year as the rules committee was split into two: Division I and Division II/III. Unlike the past, the rules that TB's committee put forth this year will need to be approved by the new Division I oversight committee, as opposed to the former process of the Playing Rules Oversight Panel (which still exists for Division II/III).
Also this year, the Division I rules sub-committee was joined by a current player (in a non-voting capacity). In this case it was Notre Dame's Shawn Lyght, who became the first defenseman to win the Tewaaraton Award. Lyght was also on the team that Princeton defeated 16-9 on Memorial Day to win the NCAA title.
TB had never met Lyght in person prior to saying hello in Charlottesville at the Final Four. He got to spend a good deal of time with him in Indianapolis, and he can say that 1) Lyght is a very impressive person, 2) he brought a great perspective to the meetings and 3) TB never mentioned who won the NCAA final. For that matter, he didn't even wear Princeton stuff to the meetings. And he especially didn't let Lyght see his phone, where his wallpaper is now a picture of TB with the championship trophy.
Once the approval process plays out this summer, that'll be it for TB with this experience. He's not sure that anyone has ever had this opportunity from a background in communications, and he'd like to thank everyone who helped him get on in the first place and then made him feel so welcome from Day 1.
He doesn't want to shortchange anyone, but he does need to offer some thank-yous by name besides Willie: Maryland head coach John Tillman (the chair for TB's first two years), former VMI head coach James Purpura and Grove City head coach Alec Jernstedt (on the committee TB's first three years), Michigan head coach Kevin Conry (no meeting that he is in will ever be boring), Montevallo head coach Jason Lange, and Big East administrator James Green and Gwynedd Mercy administrator Dana Lindstrom (who came onto the committee when TB did). Lindstrom gets a special recognition for being the first-ever chair of the Division II/III committee.
Also, there was Supervisor of Officials Tom Abbott and incoming Secretary-Rules Editor Dave Seidman, as well as Ryan Tressel, Will Hopkins, Greg Johnson and Dante Jones of the NCAA and especially Andy Supergan and Connor Lancashire, the NCAA's liaison's to the rules committee.
It was a great four years. A quick four years, but a great four years.
And, TB likes to think, the rules of the game have been changed for the better in those four years.
For TB? It was one of the great honors of his career.
He'll certainly miss it — the rules, and especially the people.













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