When you first start in Athletic Communications, teamwork is about your output. You want to be the one who writes the best feature, catches the stat error, or saves the day during a power outage. You want to prove you belong on the "Varsity" roster.
But for those of us with 20+ years of experience, the goalpost shifts. If you are still trying to be the only "scorer" in the office, you aren’t being a great teammate—you’re becoming a bottleneck.
The Pivot: From "I" to "We"
The Veteran’s Pivot is the intentional move from being the primary producer to being the primary facilitator.
In basketball, even the greatest scorers eventually realize they can’t win a championship alone. They start looking for the open man. They start coaching on the floor. In our world, that looks like:
Delegating with Purpose: Not just giving away the "boring" tasks, but giving away the "big" tasks to a young pro so they can build their own portfolio.
Protecting the Culture: A veteran teammate is the one who sets the emotional tone in the office during a high-stress tournament. If you stay calm, the room stays calm.
The "Institutional Memory" Assist: Using your 25 years of context to help a rookie avoid a political landmine or a historical error.
Teamwork as Mentorship
At this stage of my career, my value isn't just in how fast I can type a press release. It’s in my ability to mentor. As I’ve discussed throughout my blog posts, being Strategic means realizing that the strongest team is the one that doesn't fall apart when the leader isn't in the room.
If you are an experienced job seeker—perhaps looking for that AD or Associate AD role—this is what search committees are looking for. They don't just want a "doer"; they want a culture-builder. They want to know: Can you take a group of individuals and turn them into a cohesive unit?
The "SMC" Example
I think back to the jersey retirement last week for Coach Tim Wallace. That event wasn't a one-man show. It required the collaboartion between the PA announcer, the athletic director, myself as the SID to move in sync. As a veteran, my role wasn't to do every job; it was to ensure every piece of the puzzle fit perfectly to honor a man who gave so much to this institution.
Final Thought:
"What was the hardest 'task' you ever had to give up to a student-assistant so they could grow?" *

