[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 48 (Tuesday, April 5, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S2128]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOLLECTIONS OF PRESIDENT RICHARD W. LARIVIERE, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, recently, the president of the University
of Oregon, Richard Lariviere, came to meet with me in my office. The
University of Oregon is my law school alma mater, and I was
commiserating with President Lariviere about the Ducks' narrow loss in
the BCS national championship football game. President Lariviere told
me about a wonderful speech that Coach Chip Kelly gave to his players
after the game. I asked President Lariviere to share the story with me
in writing; and with his permission and that of Coach Kelly, I would
like now to share that story with my colleagues:
Recollections of President Lariviere:
On January 10, 2011 when the final whistle ended the BCS
national championship football championship game, the
University of Oregon was behind by three points--three points
scored by our friends from Auburn in the final two seconds of
the game.
The UO players made their way to the locker room,
disappointed needless-to-say. Coach Chip Kelly talked to his
players, and his remarks were just what any university
president would want to hear from a head coach, made more
remarkable and emotional because of the magnitude and
unprecedented nature of the moment.
With the team gathered around him, Coach Kelly told these
student athletes that they had played a great game, that he
was proud of them, and that he could not have asked for more.
Then he said this:
``In ten minutes the media will come in here and they're
going to ask you how you feel. They're going to tell you that
this is a defining moment in your lives. I want you to know
that this is not a defining moment in your lives. You are
young men who play football, but football does not define
you. A defining moment will be when you graduate, when you
marry, when you have children. Those are the moments that
define your lives.''
Then Coach Kelly turned to each of the seniors and reminded
them of the promise they made to him that they would
graduate.
In that locker room with a team that accomplished what no
other Oregon football team had ever done, Coach Chip Kelly
represented the very best values that have come to be
associated with the University of Oregon: bold and audacious,
hard working and high achieving, and a focus on what really
matters.
March 2011
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