Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Hidden Job Seekers: Why Career Growth Happens Before You Apply (June 2, 2026)

Convention season often gets framed around one question:

“Who’s looking for a job?”

But after years around athletic communications conventions, I’ve realized the better question is often:

“Who’s quietly trying to figure out what comes next?”

Not every attendee walks into a convention with a résumé in hand or an active application open on their laptop. In fact, many of the professionals walking through hotel lobbies, sitting in breakout sessions, or reconnecting over coffee are not technically “job seekers” at all.

At least not yet.

They are the hidden job seekers.

They are the professionals who still care deeply about their institutions, their student-athletes, and the work they do every day. They are respected colleagues, reliable communicators, and trusted leaders within their departments. On paper, everything may even look stable.

But internally, they are evaluating questions that do not always get discussed openly in this profession:

Can I keep doing this here?

Am I growing?

Is this pace sustainable?

Do I still feel valued?

What kind of leadership environment am I working under?

What would my life look like somewhere healthier?

Those questions do not always lead to immediate career moves. Sometimes they lead to renewed purpose where someone already is. Sometimes they lead to setting better boundaries. Sometimes they lead to a shift in perspective. And yes, sometimes they eventually lead to a new opportunity.

But the important part is this:

Career growth often begins long before someone applies for a job.

The Quiet Evaluation Process

Mid-level athletic communicators often live in a unique professional space. They are experienced enough to understand the realities of the industry, but still ambitious enough to want growth, mentorship, and alignment.

That combination can create internal tension.

Burnout is real in athletic communications. So is emotional fatigue. The pressure to constantly produce, adapt, travel, create, manage crises, and support others can slowly wear down even the most passionate professionals.

At the same time, many communicators begin to recognize leadership ceilings within their current environments. Some realize there may not be a pathway upward. Others discover that advancement may come with sacrifices they are no longer willing to make personally or professionally.

There are also professionals quietly assessing institutional fit.

Not every department operates the same way. Not every culture values communication staff equally. Not every leader invests in mentorship, professional development, or healthy work-life balance.

Conventions become one of the few places where people can observe those differences in real time.

Not through a job posting.

Not through a carefully curated website.

But through conversation.

Convention as Perspective, Not Placement

For years, conventions were viewed primarily as networking opportunities tied directly to employment. That still exists to some extent, but the modern convention experience often serves a different purpose.

Perspective.

Sometimes the most important conversation you have at a convention is not about getting hired. It is about hearing someone describe a healthier leadership environment. It is learning how another department structures workloads. It is discovering that there are supervisors who genuinely invest in mentorship and trust their staff.

It is realizing that constant exhaustion should not be normalized as professional commitment.

Many attendees arrive at conventions carrying uncertainty they have not fully verbalized yet. They may not be actively searching for another job, but they are actively searching for clarity.

And clarity matters.

Because once someone sees what healthy leadership, sustainable expectations, and intentional growth look like elsewhere, it changes how they evaluate their own environment moving forward.

Listening More Than Pitching

One of the mistakes professionals make at conventions is approaching every interaction like a formal interview.

Sometimes the better approach is simply to listen.

Listen to how leaders talk about their people.

Listen to how staff members describe their culture.

Listen to whether people sound energized or depleted.

Listen for whether collaboration, trust, and mentorship appear to exist naturally or only in mission statements.

Not every valuable convention conversation needs to end with a business card exchange or a future interview. Some conversations simply provide insight that helps professionals better understand what they want — or what they no longer want — in their careers.

That awareness is valuable.

Especially for professionals who have spent years prioritizing everyone else’s goals while quietly neglecting their own development.

Growth Is Not Disloyalty

There can sometimes be guilt attached to professional exploration in athletics.

People worry that asking hard questions about their future means they are ungrateful. They fear being perceived as disloyal if they consider other possibilities. But growth and reflection are not betrayals of commitment.

Healthy professionals evaluate their environments.

Healthy leaders encourage development.

And healthy organizations understand that ambition is not the enemy of loyalty.

The reality is that many athletic communicators are not searching for a title as much as they are searching for alignment.

Alignment between values and leadership.

Alignment between effort and support.

Alignment between career ambition and personal sustainability.

That search is legitimate.

The Most Important Question

At some point during convention week, many professionals will likely have a quiet moment to themselves between sessions, dinners, or conversations.

And in that moment, the most important question may not be:

“What job can I get?”

Instead, it may simply be:

“What kind of career and life am I trying to build?”

That question changes everything.

Because the hidden job seekers are often not chasing desperation. They are chasing clarity, growth, and healthier versions of professional success.

And sometimes, that journey begins long before an application is ever submitted.

Monday, June 1, 2026

You’re Always Interviewing at Convention — Even Without a Résumé in Hand (June 1, 2026)

For many in college athletics, the annual College Sports Communicators convention has long represented more than a professional gathering. It is part learning environment, part reunion, part networking opportunity, and for some, a career-changing week.

I attended my first convention in 1999. At the time, the convention afforded me an opportunity to meet people, grow professionally, and ultimately secure employment. In many ways, the profession looked different then. Open positions were discussed more openly, resumes were exchanged more frequently, and the path toward employment often felt more direct.

Today, the landscape has evolved.

The convention still creates opportunity, but often in quieter and less immediate ways. Most career movement no longer begins with someone handing over a resume at a registration table. Instead, opportunities are often shaped through conversations, consistency, reputation, and trust built over time.

That reality is important to understand for those attending this week in Las Vegas — especially for professionals who may not consider themselves active job seekers.

Because conventions are often passive job markets.

Many attendees are not formally applying for jobs, yet they are still positioning themselves for future growth, visibility, and opportunity whether they realize it or not. Conversations in hallways, breakout sessions, mentorship spaces, social gatherings, and even brief introductions can leave lasting impressions that resurface months or years later.

Professional presence matters.

Not in the sense of constantly trying to impress people, but in how individuals carry themselves, engage with others, and contribute to conversations. People remember those who are thoughtful, prepared, curious, dependable, and authentic. In a profession built heavily on communication and relationships, reputation travels long after the convention ends.

Curiosity also travels farther than self-promotion.

Some of the most memorable people at conventions are not the loudest voices in the room. They are the individuals asking thoughtful questions, listening intentionally, and showing genuine interest in the experiences of others. Hiring managers and administrators often remember meaningful conversations far more than rehearsed elevator pitches.

A person who asks:
“What challenges are you seeing in your department right now?”
or
“What skills do you think young professionals need to develop over the next five years?”
often leaves a stronger impression than someone solely focused on talking about themselves.

That is because relationship-building is fundamentally different from networking.

Networking often becomes transactional — collecting business cards, making introductions, or trying to maximize visibility in a short window of time. Relationship-building, however, is rooted in consistency, trust, follow-up, and genuine professional investment in others.

The people who benefit most from convention are often not the ones aggressively searching for the next opportunity. They are the ones building credibility before opportunities ever open.

Over the years, countless opportunities in college athletics have quietly emerged from convention interactions that initially seemed insignificant:

  • A hallway conversation that later became a recommendation.
  • A shared meal that turned into a mentorship.
  • A breakout session discussion that eventually led to collaboration.
  • A simple follow-up message months later that reopened a connection at exactly the right time.

Most career movement in this industry happens long before a position is officially posted.

That is why conventions still matter.

Not simply because jobs exist, but because relationships exist.

As another annual convention begins this week, perhaps the greatest reminder is this:
You do not have to attend with a resume in hand to position yourself for future opportunity.

Sometimes the most valuable thing you can bring to convention is professionalism, curiosity, consistency, and the willingness to invest in people long before you need something in return.

This week begins a series of reflections focused on professionals who may not be actively job-seeking, but who are intentionally preparing themselves for future movement, growth, and visibility within college athletics and sports communications.

Because in this profession, the conversations that shape your future are often happening long before you realize they matter.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Focus Is Freedom: Building a Career With Purpose Instead of Noise (May 29, 2026)

One of the biggest misconceptions in athletic communications — and honestly, in professional life overall — is the belief that success belongs to the loudest person in the room or the busiest person in the office.

For years, I thought growth meant adding more.

More responsibilities.

More projects.

More platforms.

More content.

More availability.

More visibility.

The profession often reinforces that mindset. In college athletics, there is always another task waiting. Another graphic to design. Another social media trend to monitor. Another recap to write before the bus leaves the parking lot. Another student-athlete feature that deserves attention. Another email notification competing for mental space.

The work matters. The people matter. The stories matter.

But somewhere along the way, many of us begin measuring our value by how exhausted we are.

What I continue learning — both personally and professionally — is that focus creates freedom.

Not freedom from responsibility, but freedom from unnecessary noise.

There is a difference between being engaged and being consumed.

The best work I have produced in athletic communications rarely came during the moments where I tried to do everything simultaneously. It came during the moments where I slowed down enough to think intentionally. The meaningful student-athlete features came from conversations without distractions. The strongest writing came from uninterrupted focus. The best mentoring moments happened when listening mattered more than multitasking.

Ironically, narrowing your focus often expands your impact.

In athletics communications, it can feel counterproductive to step away from constant movement. The environment moves fast, and there is pressure to always respond, always post, always create, and always be available. But purpose-driven work requires clarity. If every task feels equally urgent, eventually nothing receives your best effort.

Focus allows you to prioritize what actually moves programs, people, and relationships forward.

That may mean protecting time for storytelling instead of endlessly reacting online.

That may mean mentoring a student assistant through career questions instead of rushing to the next notification.

That may mean choosing depth over volume.

And honestly, that is not always easy.

There are still moments where I catch myself drifting toward unnecessary distractions disguised as productivity. There are still times where the temptation to “do more” overshadows the discipline to “do what matters most.” But experience continues teaching me that sustainable growth is not built through constant chaos.

It is built through intentional habits.

Intentional conversations.

Intentional leadership.

Intentional rest.

The older I get in this profession, the more I appreciate alignment over activity. I would rather produce meaningful work that connects with people than create endless noise that disappears within hours. I would rather invest in mentoring relationships that last years than chase temporary validation through constant visibility.

Because careers are not built overnight.

They are built through consistency, trust, and purpose.

And purpose requires focus.

As Mental Health Awareness Month comes to a close, I also want to reiterate something important: support should never become seasonal. Conversations surrounding burnout, anxiety, exhaustion, identity, and balance in athletics should continue long after the calendar changes. This blog has become an outlet for me to process experiences, reflect on lessons, and hopefully encourage others navigating similar challenges within athletic communications and higher education. More importantly, it continues giving me opportunities to listen, learn, and grow — both personally and professionally.

Sometimes growth starts with adding more knowledge.

Sometimes it starts with removing more noise.

And sometimes, focus itself becomes freedom.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Protecting the Work That Matters: Lessons I’ve Learned in Athletic Communications (May 28, 2026)

In athletic communications, “yes” is often the default setting.

Yes to the extra feature.
Yes to the last-minute graphic.
Yes to another layer of coverage.
Yes to one more responsibility because it might help, or because no one else is available.

Early in a career, that instinct can feel like progress. Being dependable, visible, and responsive is part of building trust in a program. But over time, there’s a quieter lesson that tends to separate constant output from meaningful impact: the best work often comes from the discipline of saying “no” to the wrong things.

Not everything that is urgent is important. And not everything that is asked of you is aligned with the work that actually moves a program forward.

The cost of saying yes too often

There are seasons in athletic communications where the workload is inherently reactive. Game days compress time. Coaches need updates immediately. Media requests stack on top of internal demands. In that environment, saying yes feels like survival.

But there’s a hidden cost that builds gradually. The first thing to erode isn’t effort—it’s clarity. When everything becomes equally important, nothing truly is. You begin producing more content, but with less intention. You respond faster, but think less deeply. You stay busy, but not necessarily effective.

And perhaps most importantly, you lose the margin required for the work that actually differentiates a program: long-form storytelling, athlete development narratives, and strategic communication planning.

The turning point: choosing depth over volume

A shift happens when you start recognizing that some of the most valuable contributions in athletic communications are not immediate.

A season recap that actually captures identity, not just results.
A feature that reveals something about a student-athlete beyond their stat line.
A strategic content series that builds continuity instead of reacting to isolated moments.

Those things require time. And time rarely appears on its own—it has to be protected.

There were moments in my own career where the most important decision wasn’t what to add, but what to decline. Not in a dismissive way, but in a clarifying one: If I take this on, what does it take away from something else that matters more?

Saying no to an extra, low-impact project didn’t reduce output—it improved it. The work that remained became more intentional, more polished, and more aligned with long-term program identity.

Mentorship requires margin

One of the most overlooked consequences of overcommitment in this field is the loss of relational bandwidth.

Mentorship—whether with student-workers, graduate assistants, or younger professionals—does not happen in passing. It requires presence. It requires time to explain not just what to do, but why it matters. It requires space to let others make mistakes and learn from them without urgency dictating the pace of correction.

When every hour is consumed by output, mentorship gets reduced to transactional instruction: “Do this, send that, fix this.”

But when you protect your energy by saying no to unnecessary tasks, you create room for something more durable. You can sit with a student and walk through a feature story rewrite. You can explain how to structure a narrative arc instead of just formatting a post. You can invest in developing judgment, not just execution.

That is where long-term program capacity is built—not in the volume of content produced, but in the number of people who understand how to produce it well.

Energy is a strategic resource

There’s a tendency in athletic communications to treat energy as infinite. But creative work is not linear. It is cumulative. The quality of a feature story, a season recap, or a strategic campaign often reflects the mental bandwidth available when it was created.

When energy is fragmented across too many low-value tasks, the ceiling on higher-value work lowers. You can still perform—but you rarely elevate.

Saying no becomes less about restriction and more about allocation. It is the process of directing your best cognitive and creative energy toward the work that compounds over time: storytelling systems, communication strategy, and institutional memory.

What actually moves programs forward

If you strip athletic communications down to its most essential purpose, it is not just content creation—it is meaning-making.

Results are reported everywhere. Scores are instantaneous. But identity is built slowly, through consistent narrative framing and intentional storytelling.

Programs move forward when:

  • Athletes are understood beyond performance metrics

  • Seasons are contextualized, not just summarized

  • Institutional culture is documented and communicated clearly

  • Younger staff are developed into independent thinkers

  • Communication strategy is proactive, not purely reactive

None of those outcomes are accelerated by saying yes to everything. In fact, they are often delayed by it.

The discipline of intentional refusal

Saying no in this context is not about disengagement. It is about prioritization with awareness of long-term impact.

It sounds like:

  • “I can’t take that on right now without compromising existing commitments.”

  • “That’s a good idea, but it doesn’t align with our current communication priorities.”

  • “If we add this, what are we willing to scale back?”

Those are not defensive responses. They are strategic ones.

And over time, they reshape how your work is perceived—not as someone who simply completes tasks, but as someone who protects standards.

Closing thought

The shift from activity to impact in athletic communications is rarely dramatic. It happens in small decisions repeated over time: choosing depth over volume, clarity over urgency, and long-term storytelling over short-term noise.

The irony is that saying “no” to more things often results in your work being seen—and remembered—more clearly.

Because the goal was never to do everything.

It was to do the right things well enough that they last beyond the moment they were created.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

From Busy to Impactful: Why Focus Matters More Than Hustle in Sports Media (May 27, 2026)

In college athletics, it is easy to confuse movement with progress.

There is always another graphic to create, another game recap to write, another social media trend to chase, another stat pack to prepare, another feature story waiting for attention. The work never fully stops. For sports communicators, athletic departments often reward visibility of effort — the appearance of constant activity — because everyone can see the hustle.

But activity alone does not always create impact.

That realization becomes clearer the longer you work in athletics communications.

There have been seasons where the day started with updating statistics before breakfast, transitioned into writing previews and recaps, continued through social media scheduling, and ended late at night editing photos or brainstorming content ideas for the next morning. Add mentoring students, helping game operations, troubleshooting livestream issues, and handling unexpected requests, and suddenly “productive” days become nothing more than surviving a checklist.

The difficult part is that many of those tasks are important. The problem is not effort. The problem is fragmentation.

When your attention is constantly divided, creativity suffers first.

Feature writing becomes rushed instead of thoughtful. Social media turns reactive instead of strategic. Statistics become a task to finish rather than a tool to tell stories. Mentoring conversations become shorter because there is always another notification waiting. Even strong ideas lose depth when they are interrupted every few minutes by another demand.

The hidden cost is not just exhaustion.

It is diminished quality.

Some of the best storytelling in athletics comes from slowing down enough to notice details others miss — the reserve player balancing academics and practice, the coach quietly supporting athletes behind the scenes, the senior reflecting on four years of growth, or the student assistant learning confidence through responsibility. Those stories require focus, patience, and presence. They cannot be fully developed while multitasking through five unrelated responsibilities.

The same applies to leadership.

Mentoring students in athletics communications is not simply assigning tasks. It is teaching purpose. It is helping students understand why storytelling matters, why accuracy matters, and why communication carries responsibility. Those lessons rarely happen during moments of chaos. They happen during intentional conversations where attention is undivided.

That is why meaningful productivity often begins with subtraction.

Removing unnecessary distractions creates room for better work.

Saying no to every trend does not mean falling behind. Delegating responsibilities is not weakness. Defining roles clearly is not limiting creativity. In many cases, those decisions protect the mission of the department and allow people to operate with greater clarity.

The strongest athletic communications teams are not always the busiest teams. They are usually the most aligned teams.

They understand priorities.

They know the difference between urgent and important.

They create systems that allow people to focus deeply instead of constantly reacting.

That mindset also connects directly to mental health — something especially important to recognize during Mental Health Awareness Month. Constant pressure to produce more content, cover more events, and remain perpetually available can quietly normalize burnout in athletics. Many communicators feel guilty slowing down because the culture often celebrates overextension.

But sustainable excellence requires boundaries.

Focus is not laziness.

Rest is not a lack of ambition.

Delegation is not avoidance.

Sometimes the most productive decision is closing extra tabs, silencing notifications, stepping away from unnecessary noise, and giving full attention to the work that truly matters.

Because the goal is not to do everything.

The goal is to do meaningful work well.

And in athletics communications, the stories worth telling deserve that level of attention.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Hidden Cost of Doing Too Much in Athletic Communications (May 26, 2026)

In college athletics, attention has become one of the most valuable — and most depleted — resources.


Sports communicators, sports information directors, creative teams, and digital content creators are expected to do more than ever before. A single day can include writing recaps, designing graphics, editing video, managing social media, coordinating interviews, producing live stats, traveling with teams, updating websites, responding to media requests, and handling last-minute emergencies before the first pitch or kickoff even begins.

The modern athletics communicator is no longer simply a storyteller. They are often a photographer, editor, marketer, strategist, analyst, brand manager, recruiter support staff member, and event operator all at once.

And while versatility is valuable, scattered attention comes with a cost.

When Everything Matters, Nothing Gets Full Attention

The pressure to constantly produce content can create a cycle where professionals feel they must say yes to every request, every project, and every opportunity. Over time, that fragmented focus impacts creativity, relationships, and overall performance.

Creativity suffers first.

Great storytelling requires observation, emotional connection, research, intentionality, and reflection. But creativity struggles in environments where every task is urgent and every notification demands immediate attention. Instead of producing meaningful stories that elevate student-athletes and programs, communicators can become trapped in survival mode — creating content simply to keep up with the pace.

In athletics communications, the difference between good and impactful often comes down to focus.

The best stories are rarely rushed. They are developed with purpose. They capture humanity, emotion, adversity, leadership, and growth. That level of storytelling requires mental space.

The Relationship Impact

Scattered attention also affects relationships throughout athletic departments.

When professionals are stretched too thin, communication becomes transactional rather than relational. Coaches may feel unheard. Student-athletes may feel overlooked. Creative teams may become disconnected from shared goals because everyone is operating reactively instead of collaboratively.

Strong athletic departments are built on alignment and trust.

That trust grows when staff members are fully present in conversations, intentional in collaboration, and clear in communication. Constant multitasking often creates the illusion of productivity while quietly weakening the quality of professional relationships.

Presence matters.

A five-minute conversation with complete attention is often more valuable than an hour spent distracted by emails, notifications, and competing priorities.

Performance Declines When Focus Disappears

There is a misconception in athletics that being overwhelmed is proof of commitment.

It is not.

Burnout does not improve performance. Chronic stress does not enhance creativity. Exhaustion does not produce better leadership.

When attention is scattered across too many responsibilities, mistakes increase. Deadlines become harder to manage. Energy declines. Decision-making suffers. Professionals begin reacting instead of leading.

In college athletics, where communication often shapes public perception, recruiting visibility, donor engagement, and institutional branding, that decline in focus can have long-term consequences.

The reality is simple: focused energy produces stronger outcomes.

Mental Health Matters in Athletics Communications

As May recognizes Mental Health Awareness Month, it is important to acknowledge the emotional and mental demands placed on communications professionals within athletics.

While student-athlete mental health has rightfully become a larger conversation across college sports, the mental health of administrators, communicators, creatives, and support staff deserves attention as well.

Many sports communicators operate in environments where:

  • Workdays rarely end at 5 p.m.
  • Weekends are not truly weekends
  • Travel is extensive
  • Public criticism is immediate and visible
  • Staffing limitations increase workload
  • The expectation to always be available feels constant

Over time, that environment can create emotional fatigue and mental exhaustion.

Mental health is not separate from performance. It directly impacts creativity, communication, leadership, and overall well-being.

Departments that value sustainable excellence must also value healthy boundaries, manageable workloads, and supportive workplace cultures.

Rest is not weakness. Boundaries are not laziness. Focus is not selfishness.

They are necessary for long-term effectiveness.

The Power of Saying No

One of the most difficult — and most important — professional skills in athletics communications is learning when to say no.

Not every idea needs immediate execution. Not every request aligns with departmental goals. Not every opportunity deserves equal energy.

Saying no is not about avoiding responsibility. It is about protecting purpose.

When professionals say yes to everything, they often unintentionally dilute the quality of the work that matters most. Strategic focus requires understanding which projects advance the mission and which simply create noise.

The strongest brands in college athletics are rarely built through random activity. They are built through intentional consistency.

Sometimes saying no to one task means saying yes to better storytelling, stronger strategy, healthier collaboration, or personal well-being.

Delegation Is Leadership, Not Weakness

Many communicators struggle with delegation because they care deeply about quality. They want to ensure things are done correctly, efficiently, and professionally.

But attempting to do everything alone eventually limits both personal growth and organizational growth.

Delegation creates trust. It develops younger staff members, graduate assistants, interns, and student workers. It allows teams to operate more efficiently while expanding creative capacity.

Effective leaders do not simply assign tasks. They define responsibilities through purpose and mission.

When roles are clearly defined:

  • Staff members understand expectations
  • Teams avoid duplication of effort
  • Communication improves
  • Accountability increases
  • Creativity becomes more intentional
  • Individuals can specialize and grow

Not everyone on a communications staff needs to do everything.

Some excel in writing. Others thrive in photography, social strategy, video production, graphic design, media relations, or long-form storytelling. The best departments recognize those strengths and build systems that maximize them.

Clear mission-driven delegation helps people move from being overwhelmed generalists to empowered contributors.

Intentional Focus Creates Better Storytelling

The most impactful athletics storytelling still comes from depth, not volume.

It comes from understanding people. Listening carefully. Observing details. Building relationships. Identifying meaningful moments others overlook.

Focused attention allows communicators to tell stories that resonate beyond scores and statistics.

In an era dominated by constant content production, intentional focus may be one of the greatest competitive advantages an athletics department can have.

Not because it creates more content.

Because it creates better content.

And perhaps more importantly, it creates healthier professionals, stronger teams, and more sustainable careers within college athletics.


Monday, May 25, 2026

Brotherhood, Service and Sacrifice – Remembering Ron Winchester (May 25, 2026)

As many of you know, I started my career as a sports information intern at the Naval Academy Athletic Association from August 1999 through June 2000. The impact that experience had on me extended far beyond the sports information office, press row or game day responsibilities. It was a place that reinforced the connection between athletics, leadership, accountability and service.

During my time at Navy, I had the opportunity to work with many outstanding student-athletes. One of them was Ron Winchester.

In 2004, Ron passed away while serving in Iraq as a United States Marine Corps officer. Since his passing, Memorial Day has always given me an opportunity to reflect on him, the example he set and the lasting impact he continues to have on those who knew him.

There are certain stories in athletics that extend far beyond wins, losses, statistics or championships.

They become reminders of character. Leadership. Brotherhood. Service.

The story of Ron Winchester is one of those stories.

A standout offensive tackle for Navy football, Winchester was remembered by teammates and coaches not only as a fierce competitor, but as someone whose personality brought people together. Former teammates described him as loyal, energetic, tough and deeply committed to the people around him.

After graduating from the Naval Academy in 2001, Winchester became a United States Marine Corps officer. In September 2004, during his second deployment in Iraq, 1st Lt. Ronald D. Winchester was killed in action in Al Anbar province while leading Marines under his command. He was 25 years old.

In athletic communications, we spend much of our time telling stories about competition and achievement. But sometimes the most important stories are the ones that remind us what athletics can help shape in a person long after the final game ends.

Leadership.

Accountability.

Commitment to something larger than yourself.

Reading through tributes from former teammates and fellow Marines, one theme consistently appears: people trusted Ron Winchester. They followed him because of how he lived, not because of what title he held.

That matters.

College athletics often talks about preparing student-athletes for life. Winchester’s story reflects the highest level of that responsibility. The lessons learned inside locker rooms, weight rooms, team meetings and practices carried into military service, where leadership carried life-and-death consequences.

One of the most powerful parts of the remembrance written by fellow Marine and former teammate Ed Malinowski was his description of Winchester “leading from the front.”

That phrase stays with you.

Not because it sounds inspirational, but because it reflects the kind of person teammates respected long before military honors or public recognition entered the picture.

In athletic communications, we often preserve history through archives, record books, photography, statistics and storytelling. But the true legacy of someone like Ron Winchester lives in the people who still remember him decades later — teammates, classmates, fellow Marines, coaches and family members who continue telling stories about his energy, loyalty and courage.

That is impact.

Not temporary visibility.

Not social media impressions.

Impact.

As Memorial Day approaches each year, stories like Winchester’s remind us that behind every military tribute is a person who once sat in classrooms, practiced with teammates, laughed with friends and carried dreams for the future.

For those of us who work in athletics, there is value in remembering that the people whose stories we tell today may someday impact lives far beyond the fields and courts where they competed.

Some become coaches.

Some become mentors.

Some become leaders in their communities.

And some, like Ron Winchester, become heroes remembered for a lifetime.

May we never forget the sacrifice made by 1st Lt. Ronald D. Winchester and so many others who gave everything in service to their country.