Reflections Magazine Issue #73 - Winter 2011 | Page 15

Athletics Feature 1995: Coach Bauer with discus National Champion Carl Brown. 1986: Tim (right) with All-American Wade Perry and National Champion Martha Hans Palmer. continued from page 14 . . . As the results show, that strategy has paid large dividends for his program. And pulling out potential in his athletes has been Bauer’s specialty. Carl Brown was a 6-foot-5, 250-pound physical specimen who had decent performances at Jackson Community College in shot put and discus. However, Brown came from a very tough background and thought he was going to “do his own thing” when he came to Siena Heights. Brown’s first week at Siena Heights was almost his last. “One day I said (to Brown), ‘Here is what you’re doing today in practice,’” Bauer said. “He said, ‘I don’t want to do that today,’ right in front of the team. That was it. I was explosive. And I wouldn’t back down, and the kids knew that. … After that, he figured it out, and ever since it was a great relationship.” “There’s something about Siena Heights . . . I’ve been here more than I’ve been at my home . . . something that holds us here. It’s the Siena Heights aura.” Brown went on to receive not only NAIA AllAmerican honors, but after graduating became a U.S. throwing national champion and Olympic qualifier, just missing a berth on the U.S. team. There are dozens of very similar success stories in Bauer’s program. He said watching hurdler Martha Hans Palmer win Siena’s first individual national championship was one of his proudest coaching moments. However, he said he still has a hard time dealing with disappointing performances by his team. “When we have a bad weekend of running or throwing, my weekend sucks,” he said. “The kids don’t understand that. It shouldn’t go that way, but that’s just the way a coach is. You put stress on yourself because you worry about your kids.” Seeing his athletes achieve more than what they thought they could is what motivates him as a coach. “It’s just so much fun for the kid and their family to think that they could do that,” Bauer said. “Not everyone is going to be an All-American. If you’re not, you’re still going to have a great experience. Be somebody. A hungry dog hunts best. If you’re hungry, you’re going to go for it.” More than a Coach Surprising Bauer fact: