Wednesday, January 19
There are tougher jobs, but ...
 
By Ray Ratto
Special to ESPN.com

 April Heinrichs was doubtless thrilled to learn that she had been hired to be the new coach of the U.S. women's soccer team.

Then again, after a few months in the job, she might be more interested in second prize -- a cable bill two months overdue, tied to a spear and thrown through her calf.

April Heinrichs
April Heinrichs inherits a great job at a tricky time.

Heinrichs, the 35-year-old coach at the University of Virginia and one of the early stars of the sport in the U.S., was stamped, certified and praised by the official American soccer hierarchy Sunday (and formally christened on Tuesday), which in many soccer circles is the equivalent of a 10-day suspension.

Has she earned the promotion? Sure. Why not? Has she earned the grief that is going to come with it. No, not by a long shot. Could she be in a worse position to begin her fab new gig? Yes, but it would require a bear cave, a whistle, and a hat made of honey.

Then again, as that well-known Confucian philosopher Super Chicken once said, "You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred."

Heinrichs was named after the greatest moment in U.S. women's soccer history, and after about six more of the worst.

First, the up side. She inherits the defending World Cup championship side, which sure beats juggling plutonium balls for a living.

But now, the down. And you may want to sit down for this.

1. She replaces the popular and successful Tony DiCicco, who quit the job "to spend more time with my family," which meant that he couldn't stomach any more meddling and low-balling from the U.S. Soccer masterminds.

2. She inherits a messy labor situation, in which the women who won the World Cup and made pots of money for the sport ran into the traditional response to requests for raises -- "Maybe when Boris Yeltsin sobers up."

3. She got the job instead of the more popular choice, Lauren Gregg, which means that every move she makes will be compared to Gregg's invisible hand, and as we all know from our reading, there is no less successful coach than one who is compared to a spectre.

4. She is the choice of the less popular U.S. Soccer officials, of whom the nicest thing that can be said is that most Americans don't know who they are. The worst thing that can be said is, those Americans who do know who they are, aren't impressed.

5. She has nowhere to go but sideways.

Phil Bengtson ran into the impossible-standards problem trying to replace Vince Lombardi in Green Bay. Kid Gleason ran into the dissatisfied-players theory with the Black Sox. Lots of coaches have been hired by unpopular owners/general managers/athletic directors, often instead of more popular choices.

  Then again, as that well-known Confucian philosopher Super Chicken once said, 'You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred.'  ”

Bengtson failed spectacularly. Gleason succeeded until his boys decided to start losing instead. Most unpopular coaching choices failed, and quickly, because if you're looking hard enough for reasons to dislike a coach, you will almost certainly find them in time.

All this lands on the underprotected head of April Heinrichs, whose principal crimes coming into the job seem to be not being either DiCicco or Gregg, and not being able to promise the players the raises they so clearly deserve. These are tough things to overcome, at least not without thousands of dollars of expensive surgery and a history of Lotto victories.

A lesser person would have seen these pitfalls and decided to take a pass on the whole gruesome mess. Heinrichs, on the other hand, realizes that you only get to say no once, and the only thing worse than being asked to reinvent the wheel is watching someone else be asked.

Besides, she surely figures, "I have the best players in the world, the most developed program, and I can buffalo my way through the rest." She surely figures this because every male coach ever confronted with a similar situation thought exactly the same way.

Coaching, you see, isn't a gender-specific thought process. They all think they're the smartest people on earth, they all know that any problem can be overcome, and they all are sure than even the most stubborn player can be won over with a little carrot and a little stick.

In other words, April Heinrichs actually did know, as did Fred, that job was dangerous when she took it, and she took it fully expecting to triumph, even in the face of such a litany of annoyances.

Her confidence is admirable. Of course, if you see her one day at practice walking with a limp, you'll know that either some officious U.S. Soccer functionary just ruined her day, or the cable bill just arrived.

Ray Ratto of the San Francisco Examiner is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.
 


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