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Stu and Diane Williams Head Baseball Coach endowment was inspired by life鈥檚 lessons.
Illustration by Dan Williams
Stu Williams 鈥70 wears a 2015 baseball national championship ring with 鈥淲TE鈥 etched on the inside. His wife, Diane, wears a ring from the same winning year, fashioned into a pendant worn on a chain around her neck.
The Williamses, longtime baseball boosters who recently created 小优视频ampa鈥檚 first head coaching endowment, say the 鈥淲TE鈥 represents their favorite Spartan baseball memory.
WTE? That stands for Worst Team Ever.
Make no mistake, the WTE won the national championship. Plus, they beat the Philadelphia Phillies in a spring training exhibition. They were hardly slackers. But between beating the pros and taking home the NCAA Div. II trophy, they learned a few things.
Like humility. And accountability.
The Williamses say the 2015 season and team helped form their opinion of head Coach Joe Urso 鈥92, someone they say makes a true difference in people鈥檚 lives.
鈥淛oe really helps mold players into not just athletes, but really good, quality men,鈥 Diane Williams said.
Urso cares about his players, looking out for them beyond the playing field, the Williamses said. Stu Williams also has observed how Urso doesn鈥檛 interfere with or second-guess other coaches on his staff 鈥 he respects their expertise.
Stu Williams rose in his career to executive leadership in banking, and he sees parallels between his and Urso鈥檚 management styles.
鈥淔irst of all,鈥 Stu Williams said, 鈥渢hey have to like you and trust you. And you make the successes their successes, not your successes. That鈥檚 what I saw in business, and it鈥檚 what he does with these guys, too.鈥
Stu Williams also admires how Urso motivates his players with both on-the-spot encouragement and, when needed, a patient build toward a long-range goal. Throw in some reverse psychology, and you鈥檝e got the 2015 season.
The Spartans were hot early that year. They were 13-1 when they beat the Phillies, 6-2, in early March. Stu Williams remembers the seventh-inning grand slam by Giovanny Alfonzo, and after that win, he said, 鈥淭hese kids all thought they were great.鈥
But Spartan play then got spotty, and at a low point a month later, they dropped a three-game series to conference rival Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale. Urso was embarrassed, Stu Williams remembers, and he had some choice words for his players, including calling them the 鈥渨orst team ever.鈥
That stung. But it worked 鈥 the Spartans became determined to prove their coach wrong. They finished the regular season with only two more losses and redeemed themselves against Nova Southeastern in the first round of the NCAA South Regional, winning 8-1. Then, they won the tournament in extra innings against Florida Tech.
After that, they swept the NCAA national tourney.
鈥淲hen they won, they all got in the middle of the field and chanted, 鈥榃orst! Team! Ever! Worst! Team! Ever!鈥欌 Stu Williams said.
The way the WTE players humbled themselves that year, worked together and rallied when it mattered is just one example of why the Williamses think supporting Urso and what he鈥檚 built is so important. They already had created a baseball scholarship, but recently, 鈥渨e got to talking about how a coach or a professor can impact so many people,鈥 Diane Williams said.
The Stu and Diane Williams Head Baseball Coach endowment represents an exceptional level of stability and loyalty that the Williamses said should send a message to potential recruits and attract high-level players. It will help fund the Spartan baseball program in perpetuity.
鈥淲e decided to do something that impacts a lot of people,鈥 Diane Williams said, 鈥渁nd it also creates a legacy, even beyond Joe.鈥
If you would like to learn more about creating an endowment at the University, contact Schezy Barbas at (813) 258-7480 or sbarbas@ut.edu.
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