FEBRUARY 6, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A13 NICK, continued from Page A12 in Keizer is a different deal because of the reputation of the city. People think Keizer and they think baseball. If you think things like that don’t matter, they matter halfway around the world.” Nicholas’ career would likely have been much differ- ent if he hadn’t been pressured to come back to Keizer 30 years ago. He was a McNary graduate, but he’d started teaching in St. Helens with- out any desire to leave his new home. “It was a one town com- munity and it was a kick. The fi shing was outstanding, hunt- ing was outstanding and there wasn’t anything you couldn’t do outdoor-wise,” Nicholas said. Then he received four phone calls. Two from his for- mer teacher and coach, Vic Backlund, and two from then- principal Kathleen Hammond asking him to transfer to Mc- Nary. Hammond scared Nicho- “Teaching them that they could work hard was the one thing I knew I could do.” - Craig Nicholas las, then and now, but it was Nicholas’ father who fi nally convinced him to return to the Iris City. “I was talking with him and he reminded me that ‘it was Vic Backlund,’” Nicholas said. Backlund and other teacher- coaches at McNary were the ones who inspired Nicholas to teach. “I watched them and it just looked like fun.” When Nicholas played baseball for Backlund in high school, the thing that im- pressed him most was the sense of purpose. “Every day that we went to practice, we had a plan and we had a reason for everything we did if someone asked us,” Nicholas said. Nicholas took over the freshman baseball squad in his fi rst year back at McNary and lost six games. It made him fear for his job security. “But after that year, we sat down and put together a base- ball manual that detailed how we do it at McNary. If we had questions, the answer was in that book. We weren’t just on the same page, we were on the same sentence,” he said. Not long after he returned to the school, Jerry Lane and John Whelan enlisted him as a wrestling coach. That pair of mentors supplied him with more lessons about what it took to coach well. “Whelan’s philosophy was that you could be mentally tougher than anyone else, and you didn’t give in. He was a bulldog. If you gave in and lost, you were going to get it. If you lost and never gave in that was as good as a win,” he said. He credits Lane, “who didn’t sugarcoat anything,” as the biggest infl uence on his own demeanor. In 1992, Nicholas was an assistant coach in baseball when the team won the state title. The most overwhelming emotion was a sense of relief for himself and, more so, for Backlund. It also changed his perception. “Getting to that game and winning was something I didn’t think you could ever No Job Too Big or Too Small • Additions & Repairs • Dry Rot Repairs • Flooring & Countertops • Roofi ng & Siding • Kitchens & Baths • Doors & Windows • Decks & Fences • Patio & Deck Covers do, but we had a great team that stole something like 180 bases that season and got thrown out twice. We ran wild on everybody,” he said. At the time, Nicholas was also an assistant football coach and took on the junior var- sity squad under Head Coach Gary Swanson, who had come from Roseburg High School. Swanson’s pedigree of milita- ristic preparation simply didn’t mesh well with the existing program, but Nicholas says Swanson is still the best person he’s ever known. When Tom Smythe arrived at McNary, he told Nicholas they’d be state champs in three years. “Everyone thought Smythe was arrogant because he would stand on the sideline with his arms crossed, but that wasn’t it. He was planning his next fi ve plays and fi guring out how to score without embarrassing the other team in the process,” Nicholas said. Three years later, in 1997, the Celtics took the state title with a fi eld goal. “That fi rst time, I thought I was going to have a heart attack,” Nicholas said. But recalling the game also sum- mons up one of his most powerful memories. “I was up in the booth as defensive co- ordinator and we were on the home side. They said there was something like 9,000 Keizer people at the game and they all started stomping and yell- ing, ‘Defense, defense.’ The vibrations rose up through the fl oor and I still get goose- bumps on the back of my neck thinking about it.” The program took a second football title in 2001. The year after Nicholas’ team took the 2009 state title in baseball was one of his low- est. Despite having a number of returning players from that championship team, it never coalesced into a family the way they had the prior year. In his fi nal game, a playoff game, the team was shut out by a second-string pitcher. On the way home, those feelings of having let the city down returned. He even started hav- ing chest pains. The next morning, he wrote his resignation. It wasn’t so much disap- pointment in his kids, but Nicholas felt he’d lost the ability to teach a team the one thing he’s tried to impart to all his students – how to work hard. “On the fi eld or in the classroom, we end up with a lot of kids who either don’t want to work hard or don’t know they can. Teaching them that they could work hard was the one thing I knew I could do,” he said. After hanging up the base- ball cleats, Nicholas continued to coach football with Tom Smythe at Lakeridge High School, but their plans for the program were never fully re- alized. When Isaac Parker was hired as McNary’s new foot- ball coach, he asked Nicholas to return as defensive coor- dinator, but Nicholas still had one more year’s commitment to Smythe, a gentleman’s agreement between the two veterans. In Parker’s second year with the program, he asked again and Nicholas accepted out of a sense of mutual respect. “When I was defensive coach for McNary, we went on a run of six or seven years when South Salem High School hadn’t scored on us. Then they brought in Isaac as offensive coordinator and they got a touchdown on us. I was ticked. The next year they beat us,” Nicholas said. “People al- ways say don’t go back after you leave, it won’t be the same. But, when I left in 2008, we’d had a great group of kids who had bought into the program. Parker had gotten the new kids to do the same thing.” Nicholas taught wellness classes at the school for most of the time he’d taught at Mc- Nary, and runs into former students frequently on visits to the doctor and at the emer- gency room. He’s turned out more than a few emergency medical technicians and nurs- es. Along the way, the students continued to teach him. “They taught me that if you think there’s one way to do it, you’re wrong. There’s all kinds of horror stories. You think everybody’s got the same thing and they don’t,” he said. “They also taught me that there are very, very few bad kids. They have bad home lives or they’re reacting to something else. People do things for a reason, they don’t do it because they want to, it’s some kind of outreach.” He offi cially retired Janu- ary 16, and was on his way to spend “as many days as he wanted” at Disneyland with his wife. After visiting friends in Arizona for the better part of a month, he’s boarding a plane bound for Germany. He’s joining Smythe again to coach the Saarbrucken Hurricanes in the German Football League. “The next seven months of my life is everybody’s dream. Smythe took them to league championship last year and he wants havoc on defense this season,” Nicholas said. “He told me he thinks we’re going to win it all this year. I asked what happens then. Smythe said, ‘They’ll name a country after us.” Nicholas said it was an as- toundingly quick 30-plus year career. But, there’s new music playing for him – probably something with accordion in it – and he’s not ready to quit dancing just yet. 503.393.2875 remodelkeizer.com bowling scores CCB#155626 Mixed Nuts Men’s high games: Dawayne Wiltgen, 246. Men’s high series: Dawayne Wiltgen, 688. Women’s high game: Krystal Hall, 264. Wom- en’s high series: Krystal Hall, 654. Ladies’ Double Women’s high game: Nancy Sharp, 192. Women’s high series: Nancy Sharp, 549. Monday Nite Trio Men’s high games: Brian Kaplan, 267. Men’s high series: Brian Kaplan, 743. 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