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The Gazette KCRG
Posted September 24, 2010
Football coaches connect with parents

He sat on a stool in the corner and looked over the room.

“We played well enough to beat West,” Cedar Rapids Prairie football coach Craig Jelinek said. “But we didn’t play well enough to beat West and Prairie.”

It had that pick-up-your-team-after-a-tough-loss vibe to it, and Prairie’s 29-22 defeat last Friday to Iowa City West was about as tough as it gets. But Jelinek wasn’t delivering a message to players. Middle-aged men and women listened intently to every word.

“At least the kids really came out ready to play,” a woman told Jelinek. “They played hard.”

“Yes, they did,” the coach concurred.

Since he took over at Prairie in 1989, Jelinek has set aside Tuesday nights for what you could call parent-coach conferences. Parents of Hawks players can go to his classroom at Prairie to ask questions, watch video of the last game and get his thoughts on the next game.

Cedar Rapids Washington does a similar thing with its weekly Washington Gridders meetings, which have been around since 2002. Parents and supporters may join Coach Tony Lombardi for lunch at the Starlite Room on First Avenue NE and get his thoughts on everything Warrior.

There were 13 parents at this week’s Prairie session that began at 7:30 p.m. and lasted past 9. There were 14 who attended Thursday afternoon’s Gridders, where former longtime Warriors baseball coach Pinky Primrose earned a free Starlite Superburger for winning last week’s college football pick ’ems contest.

“The behind-the-scenes stuff of what’s going on with the program is what I like,” said Barry Norden, a Washington supporter. “The Xs and Os, the injuries we might not know about. You get a little bit of everything.”

“I like going back through each play to see what’s right, what’s wrong and how my son did,” said Connie Van Winkle, whose son, Jacob, is a starting fullback and linebacker for Prairie. “You can ask Coach any question, and he’ll answer it.”

Jelinek is blunt with his answers. When one parent asked why a particular kid wasn’t playing more, the coach said it was because others were better, adding the young man in question wasn’t the same player he was at a younger age.

Of another player, Jelinek lightheartedly said, “He can step in a pile of dung and come out smelling like a rose.”

“I started doing this for two reasons,” Jelinek said. “One, to educate people as to what happened in a game. And, two, to extinguish criticism that comes from ignorance. There is so much ignorance that goes on in the stands.”

“I think it’s good,” Lombardi said. “This is a way to keep people in the loop. To let them know what we’re doing, why we’re doing it. It is open communication. It offers supporters access to our program, me and our philosophies.”

Jelinek and Lombardi certainly go heavy on strategy when they discuss games and diagram plays on blackboards. Jelinek constantly rewound video to explain why plays did or didn’t work.

Their openness was fascinating.

“Coach has been really good about giving us information,” Bob Van Winkle said. “He doesn’t have to do this. It turns it into about a 14-hour-day for him, if you think about it.”

“I admit my fallibility, and I think that disarms parents,” Jelinek said. “I am very, brutally honest with them.”

So is Lombardi. He bemoaned the bad hands of some of his receivers, adding “they couldn’t catch a cold if they were standing naked outside in the middle of winter.”

“From a fan perspective, it’s hard watching warm-ups,” a parent told him.

“It’s hard watching them on the sideline, too,” Lombardi added.

Jelinek said his coaching peers say he’s crazy for doing his parent-coach conferences, but he doesn’t care. Neither does Lombardi.

“This is a way for parents to get to know me,” Jelinek said. “To tell them ‘Hey, I am going to make mistakes, but I’m going to work as hard as I can.”

One Response to Football coaches connect with parents

  1. Good for Coach Jelinek! Craig Jelinek is my brother and I am very proud of him and the program he has developed at Praire High School. I have never seen a coach more dedicated then he is. I truly cares about his players and students. He offers these meetings to football parents, as well as anyone else that wants to attend to get the facts and clear up any questions and if that calls for “brutally honesty” then so be it. He is a teacher/coach 24/7, but first and foremost he human being. Parents who set in the stands and past judgement and say unkind things about Coach Jelinek should be ashamed of themselves, because those are usually are the one who don’t attend the Tuesday meetings. So word to the, should I say the un-wise, go to the meetings listen to the Coach OR “SHUT-UP”! GO PRAIRIE HAWKS!

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