Records Are Made To Be Broken...
They know their legacy isn't what they did on the field. They are well-rounded. Dale Brown may have retired from coaching in 1997, but in many ways, his life was just getting started. After 25 years as the head basketball coach at LSU, in which he transformed the program into a basketball powerhouse and launched the careers of such NBA notables as Shaquille O'Neal. Brown could have quietly faded to the background to rest on his laurels, congratulate himself on his past successes, and enjoy an easy life of vacations and the occasional roast thrown in his honor. But that's not the kind of man Dale Brown is. "Retirement can be a rocking chair or it can be a launching pad," Brown quipped in a recent documentary about his life, The Man in the Glass. "And I'm choosing a launching pad."  | | Opening Sequence of "The Man in the Glass" |
The film, which won several awards, highlights Brown's incredible zest for life, both during his career and in the years that have followed. While family and friends discuss Brown's innate curiosity that often leads him on crazy adventures to the jungles of southeast Asia or up mountain sides in Turkey in search of Noah's Ark, they speak even more warmly of his fighting spirit that takes causes to heart. For example, when federal funding for schools on Indian reservations grew woefully short, Brown made the cause his own. He traveled to Washington, D.C. to lobby on behalf of Native Americans to ensure that the educational needs of their children were being met. He also works with at-risk youth at alternative schools, and has been very active in providing encouragement to prison inmates about making better life choices. Besides his activism, Brown is also a decorated motivational speaker and highly successful author. He recently published a book entitled, Getting Over the Four Hurdles of Life. In it, he outlines what he considers the four greatest hindrances to success -- including an I can't/you can't mentality; fear of failure; handicaps and lack of self-knowledge -- and how a person can clear each one to reap the benefits of overcoming the challenges. It's a philosophy he has certainly lived out himself. "I would like to try my best to make the world a better place to live in," Brown said. "It's so easy to not be active, to sit in this chair. It's comfortable. It's nice. But who's going to fight the fight if you don't?" |