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Nelson inducted to coaches hall of fame

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| July 6, 2011 9:20 AM

Despite the 23 state championship

banners he’s helped Whitefish High School earn, boys and girls golf

coach Terry Nelson says it’s never been about the wins or

trophies.

“As a coach, we never talk about wins

or losses,” Nelson recently told the Pilot. “It’s not about winning

championships. It’s about getting kids involved and becoming

life-long golfers.”

It’s that sentiment — along with an

absurd record for winning championships — that has propelled Nelson

into the National High School Athletic Coaches Association Hall of

Fame. Nelson traveled to Grand Rapids, Mich., this past June to

accept the award.

He says the honor ranks up at the top

among the many coaching awards he’s earned because it considers his

career accomplishments, not just a singular season.

“It’s quite the honor, that’s for

sure,” Nelson said.

Nelson won National Coach of the Year

in 2006 and 2007, he has been Montana Coach of the Year 18 times

and is also in the Montana Coaches Hall of Fame. In 2007, Golf

Digest magazine recognized Nelson with an individual award.

He says the Hall of Fame honor is in

part due to the great players he’s worked with over his 25 year

career. Many of his students go on to play collegiate golf, some

dabble in minor tours and dozens have found careers in the golf

business as course supervisors, pros or golf shop managers.

He’s also proud that about 90 percent

of the players he’s coached go on to graduate from college.

Whether its an elite golfer, like

Whitefish senior Reed Platke who needs only minor grooming, or a

raw golfer with hidden potential, Nelson says he enjoys the

challenge of working with each of his players.

“This year, we’ll have a really young

girls team,” he said. “That will be a challenge. But the boys will

be pretty darn good — better than last year.”

It’s fun, Nelson says, to watch a

player like sophomore Erin Tabish go from scoring in the 120s to

shooting in the 80s.

With players like Platke, though, it’s

less about the mechanics of golf and more about the mental

game.

“I don’t have to spend a lot of time

working on his swing,” Nelson said. “It’s more about building

confidence and helping him be ready in the moment. Sometimes it’s

about helping kids understand how good they are. Players get ahead

of themselves and don’t get comfortable when they are shooting low

scores. I’ve helped him in that regard, but Platke’s always had a

great swing.”

He says much of Whitefish’s success has

come from their superior mental game.

“Coaching golf is different from other

sports in that we don’t want to get our kids fired up,” Nelson

said. “We want to keep them calm. I work pretty hard at trying to

keep them relaxed.”

Whitefish has always made a point to

schedule elite competition to build confidence.

“The tougher the competition, the more

I like it,” Nelson said. “When we get to state, the kids have been

there before and they’re not standing around with big eyes.”

Often time though, Whitefish is the

elite competition and Nelson’s teams have to get used to being

chased.

“Everybody likes to beat us,” he said.

“The kids pick up on that real quick.”

Luckily for Whitefish — and unluckily

for those chasing the Bulldogs — Nelson has no plans to retire

anytime soon.

“I still enjoy the challenge and the

new kids,” he said.