Spring Sports 2018

Page 1

Hall of Behm Calvert track and cross country coach has career full of accolades, and appreciation from athletes he has guided BY ZACH BAKER

Sports Editor zbaker@advertiser-tribune.com

Matt Hammer said Stewart Behm has a tendency to downplay his beginnings as Calvert’s track coach. Behm was, after all, a guy in his 20s in 1996 who hadn’t exactly planned on taking over the Senecas’ program. Behm — a Bellevue graduate who was a standout runner there and at Heidelberg —had helped out with the ’Berg cross country team after the head coach had quit just before the season. Later, in the spring of 1996, then Calvert coach Bob Stover had quit right before the start of the season. At the same time, Behm was working at the Tiffin Developmental Center, where he’d made some contacts at Calvert. “They knew I had a track background, so, I literally interviewed on a Thursday, was offered the job on a Friday, had a parents meeting on Monday and started practice on a Tuesday,” Behm said. To most, this wouldn’t seem to be an ideal start to a high school coaching career. But 22 years later, Behm walked around in the biting cold at Riesen Field at Hoernemann Stadium, after finishing another Calvert practice. He must be doing something right. Hammer certainly thinks so. He started as a freshman on Bame’s team that spring. Two years later, he’d be part of a state champion relay team. “Even though he says he didn’t know what he was doing in the very beginning,” Hammer said, “it was obvious that he did.” Twenty-six individual state qualifiers, 14 allOhioans and two state champions says that as well. And this past January, Behm was one of four recipients of the 2017 Fred Dafler Career State Coach of the Year Award during a banquet of the Ohio Association of Track and Cross Country coaches. Awards — and for that matter Hall of Fame ceremonies — are nothing new to Behm. He’s in the Bellevue Athletic Hall of Fame. He also joined his father Don in the Heidelberg Athletic Hall of Fame. But the coach said the latest award is different. “I think the difference between this one and other ones is the other ones were because of my accomplishments,” Behm said. “The other ones were because of what I did personally as an athlete. This one is because of what I helped other kids do as athletes.” And talking to Behm’s former athletes, it’s clear he’s helped them a lot. And it may have all started with that first boys track team. “That first year I came in, I had a group of freshmen who were willing to — I don’t want to say buy into my system — but they trusted me,” Behm said. “And three years later, we’ve got a state champion 4x4 relay team, we’ve got another girl on that team who finished fifth in the state in the discus, and everything kind of ‘hey, this guy knows what he’s doing.’ And it snowballed since then.” Hammer, who was on that state champion team with his twin brother Brad, Ryan Schumm and Todd Iannantuono, said it was easy to believe in Behm. “I would say that buying in was easy, just because we saw the gains and we did well in the meets,” Hammer said. When you talk to former athletes of Behm, one thing tends to get repeated —the coach’s ability to prepare them for the big events. Behm said he picked that up from the coaching he received. “I consider myself extremely lucky, because I had one of the best cross country coaches in the state of Ohio in (Bellevue’s) Earl Miller,” Behm said. “He taught me a lot about just preparing for that big day. And I think that’s a lot of what’s helped me.” And that’s the key. “You can get through the day-in and day-out stuff, but it’s that’s consistency that helps you prepare the kids for that big day,” Behm said. “Big day meaning, whether it’s the league meet, the regional meet, the state meet, whatever it is, you do what you need to do to prepare them for that. And I was very, very fortunate to have a cross country coach in the likes of Earl Miller. And then, when I got to college, the coach I had there was very similar, had the same coaching philosophy. It

Calvert track coach Stewart Behm

Spring Sports 2018 really just continued to solidify the fact that I wanted to do that. I wanted to be a coach. I wanted to be able to take what I had learned and help other kids.” Another athlete who benefitted from that approach is Olivia Smith. Smith is a two-time state champion in the 800, winning in 2012 and 2013. She now runs at Ohio State. She’s getting ready for her senior year with the Buckeyes.

Also Inside: The A d v e r t i s e r- T r i b u n e Saturday, March 24, 2018

“(Behm) was always really, really encouraging,” Smith said. “He believed in his athletes, that they could perform at the level they were capable of. He laid out the workouts, made it so we were physically ready as well as mentally prepared for those big races.” But with Behm, it’s never about just athletics. He

■ please see BEHM, 3

Baseball, softball, track and tennis photos and previews for 14 area schools

B BAUMANN AUMANN BAUMANN WON’T BE BEAT www.baumannautogroup.com

2291 W. SR 18 Tiffin • 800-598-6612

Mon. & Thurs. 8:30-8:00; Tues., Wed., Fri. 8:30-6:00; Sat. 8:30-3:00


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Spring Sports 2018 by The Advertiser-Tribune - Issuu