Ventures Winter 2019-2020 | Page 13

FROM GROUND FLOOR TO CHAMPIONSHIPS BUILDING THE PROGRAM In addition to developing a multi-sport athletic program, Adams also served as the school’s first men’s basketball head coach and the head men’s and women’s tennis coach. The graduate of York (Pa.) College knew that he couldn’t do it all by himself, so he relied on the assistance of the college’s long-time (since 1988) athletic consultant Dick Watts. Watts was a former athletic director and coach who had built an entire collegiate athletic program. Nearly 30 years earlier, Dick Watts had taken the reins of a fledgling athletic operation at the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC). Watts was also the first head men’s lacrosse coach at UMBC, heading the Retriever program for 26 years. Adams and Watts placed a great emphasis on the basics of the building process. “Dick’s favorite phrase was ’you have to crawl before you walk, and walk before you run’,” said Adams. “His philosophy was to take the right steps at the right time. He was a great mentor for me. “The other two people who kept me together day-to-day were Carol Zimmerman and administrative assistant Fran Fidler. They were the even keel for me, because I was going in a hundred directions. Scott Duncan, who worked as our assistant facilities person, assistant men’s basketball coach, head men’s and women’s tennis coach, and sports information director, was RIGHT: Dick Watts brought his experience building athletic programs and was instrumental in growing Stevenson’s athletics program and mentoring staff and coaches.  also very important.” LIFT - OFF As the 1994-1995 academic year began, Villa Julie made its first appearance as an NCAA Division III institution. The Mustang program included six men’s and five women’s teams. On the men’s side, Stevenson fielded teams in basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, and tennis. The Mustang women competed in field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, tennis, and indoor track and field. Women’s basketball came on board for the 1995-1996 campaign. “We started a program with five players,” said Chris Ramer, the school’s women’s basketball coach from 1995 to 2011. “We had no (on-campus) place for the kids to stay, so my recruiting base was players who could commute. But small steps breed success, and we did what we had to do to be successful.” But the existing facilities at the Greenspring campus were limited. With no gymnasium on campus, the men’s and women’s basketball teams had to utilize middle school and high school facilities until an on-campus gym was constructed in 1999. The outdoor sports were also affected. The field hockey, men’s and women’s soccer, and men’s and women’s lacrosse teams had to share the same grass field. “There was one field for every field sport,” said MC McFadden, who came to Villa Julie in 1996 to coach the women’s lacrosse team and is now an Assistant Athletic Director and Head Strength and Conditioning Coach at Stevenson. “Can you imagine that in this day and age? The half-field line (for men’s and women’s lacrosse) isn’t even in the same place, and I can remember yelling at the guys to stay off my end of the field.” With no gymnasium yet on the campus, teams couldn’t even go inside to practice. STEVENSON.EDU | 11