Thursday, April 2, 2026

GetSET2Connect Series - "T" - Teamwork; Part 4: The Veteran’s Pivot – Moving from Scorer to Coach (April 2, 2026)

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?"

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

GetSET2Connect Series - "T" - Teamwork; Part 3: The Power of the "Assist" – Teamwork for the Inexperienced Pro (April 1, 2026)

If you’re a student-assistant or a young professional just starting your journey in an athletic department, it’s easy to feel like you don’t have much to offer the "varsity" team yet. You look at the veterans with 20+ years of experience and think, "What can I possibly contribute?"

Here is a secret from 25 years in the chair: In SID work, the "assist" is just as vital as the goal.

In basketball, a great point guard doesn’t always need to score. They "set the screen" to get a teammate open or deliver the perfect pass that leads to the bucket. In the office, teamwork starts with being the person everyone can count on for the fundamentals.

1. Small-Task Excellence

Before you can write the award-winning season preview, you have to prove you can get the rosters right. Before you manage the social media strategy, you have to show you can handle the "grunt work" of updating a bio or checking a box score for typos.

To the inexperienced pro: There are no small tasks, only small attitudes. When you execute a minor task with 100% accuracy, you aren't just "doing a chore"—you are building trust.

2. "Setting the Screen" for Your Supervisor

A great teammate anticipates where the help is needed. If you see your boss is swamped with a post-game press conference, don’t wait for them to ask you to print the stat sheets. Just do it.

"Setting the screen" means removing obstacles for your teammates so they can succeed. When you make your supervisor’s job easier, you aren't just a "helper"—you are a strategic asset to the department.

3. Reliability is Your Greatest Stat

You might not have the "stats" on your resume yet—no major bowl games or national championships—but the most important stat you can track is your reliability.

  • Do you show up on time?

  • Do you stay until the job is done?

  • Do you follow through on the "boring" details?

Teamwork isn’t always about being the loudest voice in the room; often, it’s about being the most consistent presence in the office.

The Career Builder's Tip:

When you are an inexperienced job seeker, your "teamwork" section on a resume shouldn't just say "Team Player." It should show it. Talk about the time you stepped up to cover a sport that wasn't yours, or how you managed the credential desk so your director could focus on the broadcast. Employers aren't looking for a superstar; they are looking for a teammate who understands the power of the assist.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

GetSET2Connect Series - "T" - Teamwork; Part 2: The Diehard’s Heart – Why Passion is the Ultimate Teamwork Multiplier (March 31, 2026)

In our first post, we looked at the structure of teamwork through the lens of a massive family. Today, we shift from the "how" to the "why." We’re talking about the spirit of the team.

Growing up, my father wasn’t just a spectator; he was a diehard. Whether the score was a blowout or a nail-biter, he was in the stands, leaning forward in his favorite recliner, or glued to the radio until the final whistle. He taught me that being a fan isn't about the wins; it’s about the allegiance.

In the world of Sports Information, we pride ourselves on being "objective" and "professional"—and we should be. But there is a massive difference between being a "clock-puncher" and being a "diehard" for your institution.

The "All-In" Professional

When my father cheered, he wasn't just rooting for a jersey; he was supporting a community. In our profession, teamwork fails the moment we stop caring about the outcome for the student-athletes.

  • The Clock-Puncher: Records the stat, sends the release, and hits the exit.

  • The Diehard Teammate: Sees the senior linebacker’s tears after a heartbreaking loss and writes the story that honors his four-year journey. They stay late—not because they have to, but because the "team" deserves the best coverage possible.

Teamwork is "Emotional Labor"

Real teamwork requires a level of commitment to your colleagues that goes beyond a job description. When the Basketball SID is underwater with a double-header, the "Diehard" teammate doesn't ask, "Is that my responsibility?" They ask, "How can I help the home team win today?"

Teamwork is the byproduct of shared passion. If you don’t care about the "logo" on the shirt, you’ll never truly be a great teammate to the person sitting across the desk from you.

Leadership in Action: Honoring a Legend

I saw this "all-in" spirit in action this past Saturday, March 28. I had the privilege of being part of the team that retired the number of Tim Wallace, the former head baseball coach at Spartanburg Methodist College. My time as his coworker was short, but the impact was meaningful because of the culture he helped build. You can read my full reflections on that experience [Read more].

For the Experienced Job Seeker

When you’re interviewing for a leadership role—like an Assistant AD or a Director—the search committee isn't just looking at your 25 years of service. They are looking for your fire.

Can you inspire a staff of young professionals to be "diehards" for their school? Can you show them that you still have the same "front-row energy" my father had? At the executive level, teamwork is about contagious commitment.

Monday, March 30, 2026

Reflection on Tim Wallace (March 29, 2026)

Photo above by Tim Kimzey




Yesterday, we had the honor of retiring the number of my friend and former colleague, Coach Tim Wallace, at Spartanburg Methodist College.

Our time working together wasn’t long, but his impact on me was lasting—and that’s something I’ve come to understand more clearly in this profession. The longer you’re in college athletics, the more you realize the job is never just about the scoreboard, the stat sheet, or the final recap.

It’s about people.

It’s about the standards you uphold when no one is watching. It’s about how you represent a program, an institution, and the countless individuals who poured into it long before you arrived. It’s about telling stories the right way—honestly, respectfully, and with the understanding that what we do becomes part of someone else’s legacy.

Coach Wallace built something that went far beyond wins. He built relationships. He built expectations. He built a culture that people are still proud to be part of today.

As someone who had the privilege to work alongside him, even briefly, I carry that responsibility with me. My hope—every day—is that I’ve done right by him, by his family, by his former players, and by everyone connected to that program. 

Not just in what I produced, but in how I went about it.

Because in the end, our work isn’t measured solely by what’s said on the scoreboard—it’s measured by the trust we earn, the stories we tell, and the respect we leave behind.

That’s something worth striving for.


GetSET2Connect Series - "T" - Teamwork; Part 1: The Kitchen Table Huddle – Lessons from a Family of 13 (March 30, 2026)

The "T" in the GetSET2Connect model is arguably the most foundational. While "Strategic" and "Engagement" get you in the room, Teamwork is what keeps you there. It is the bridge between individual talent and institutional impact.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

GetSET2Connect Series - "E" - Engagement – Conclusion (March 28, 2026)

As we wrap up the "E" in the GetSET2Connect series, it is clear that Engagement is the bridge between having a strategy and building a lasting legacy. Over the last five posts, we have deconstructed what it truly means to be an engaged professional in the ever-evolving landscape of athletic communications.

Here is a look back at the journey we’ve taken:

  • The Foundation: We defined engagement not as mere activity, but as the active pursuit of growth and the intentionality behind every professional interaction.

  • The Sprint: We looked at the short-term—mastering the daily gameday grind, from Adobe Creative Suite workflows to the immediate demands of NCAA and NAIA media relations.

  • The Endurance: We shifted to the long-term, discussing how to maintain passion and avoid burnout over a 25-year career by staying anchored to your "why."

  • The Pivot: We explored the necessity of flexibility—learning when to shift your focus, whether that’s toward PA announcing, new digital storytelling tools, or leadership roles.

  • The Connection: Finally, we closed the loop. Your engagement acts as a magnet, drawing in mentors and peers who align with your specific goals and allowing you to pour back into the next generation of SIDs.

Engagement is the difference between working in sports and influencing the future of the profession. When you are engaged, you don't just report history; you help shape it.

Let’s Connect:

This series is just the beginning of the conversation. If the GetSET2Connect model resonates with your journey, or if you’re looking to navigate your own career pivots with more intentionality, I’d love to hear from you.

Let’s continue the dialogue and elevate this profession together. Connect with me on LinkedIn:

🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/in/danny-kambel/

#GetSET2Connect #SportsCommunications #SID #AthleticCommunications #Networking #ProfessionalDevelopment #Mentorship #CollegeSports #Leadership

Friday, March 27, 2026

GetSET2Connect Series - "E" - Part 5: Connecting the Dots – The GetSET2Connect Conclusion (March 27, 2026)

In we’ve explored the "E" of GetSET2Connect through the lens of short-term sprints and long-term endurance. Now, we must address the final piece of the puzzle: how your engagement fuels your connections. In the athletic communications industry, your goals are the "why" behind your network. When you are engaged with clear objectives, you stop "networking" and start "connecting."

Intentional networking is only possible when you know where you are going. Whether you are navigating the landscape of NCAA Divisions I, II, and III, or the NAIA, your engagement with specific career goals dictates who you seek out at conventions and whose work you study on gameday. If your goal is to move into PA announcing or to master digital storytelling through tools like the Adobe Creative Suite, those objectives act as a magnet, drawing in the mentors and peers who can help you reach that next level.

Being engaged means being a contributor to the community, not just a consumer. This industry is built on the strength of its people—from those just starting out in post-graduate internships to veterans with 25 years of experience. When you set goals and achieve them, you create value that you can then share with others. This is where the model comes full circle. Your engagement leads to growth, your growth leads to expertise, and your expertise allows you to connect with others in a way that elevates the entire profession.

Don't just work in sports communications—be engaged in its future. Define your goals, embrace the pivot, and let your journey inspire the next generation of SIDs.

Let’s Connect: If you are interested in having a deeper conversation about the GetSET2Connect model and how to apply it to your unique journey, let's connect either via email or on social media, preferably via LinkedIn.