[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 41, Number 19 (Monday, May 16, 2005)]
[Pages 799-801]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks Honoring Spring and Fall NCAA Championship Teams

May 13, 2005

    The President. Please be seated. Thank you. Welcome to the White 
House, the people's house. We're glad you're here. Today we honor four 
outstanding NCAA championship teams. The--it's a great--I love this day 
in the White House. It's a chance to honor people who have worked hard, 
made right decisions with their lives, and served something greater than 
themselves, their team. So, really glad you're here. I hope you're 
excited--as excited about being here as I am as excited about receiving 
you.
    I first want to say thanks to Congresswoman Anna Eshoo for coming. I 
think--I suspect you're here to support the mighty Stanford women's 
volleyball team.
    Ed Royce from California is here. He's a Cal State grad--Cal State, 
Fullerton, grad. And you like baseball?
    Audience member. [Inaudible]
    The President. Yes. All right, good. I'm glad Marie is with you. 
Welcome, Marie.
    I want to thank Mike Sodrel for coming. Mike, it's good to see you, 
sir, and your wife, Keta. Mike is from Indiana. He's here because of the 
men's soccer team, right, Michael?
    Audience member. Yes, sir.
    The President. Good. Glad you all are here.
    Milton Gordon is the president of Cal State, Fullerton--and his 
wife, Dr. Margaret Faulwell Gordon. I'm glad you all are here.
    Mike Freitag, the head coach, is with us from mighty Indiana 
University, his wife, Renee, and his daughter Hanna. Welcome.
    I appreciate Randy Waldrum, who's the head coach of the University 
of Notre Dame women's soccer team. Randy, it's good to see you, sir. I 
know your son is here as well.
    I appreciate George Horton, who is the baseball coach at Cal State, 
Fullerton.
    I want to thank John Dunning, who's the head coach of the women's 
volleyball team

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at Stanford. I welcome his wife, Julie, and his daughter Lauren.
    But most of all, I want to thank the players who are here. Good 
going, and congratulations.
    The first team we honor is the Indiana men's soccer team. They are 
the champs for the second year in a row. I kind of like that idea, back-
to-back trips to the White House. [Laughter] Glad you all are back. And 
the championship game was pretty darn exciting, wasn't it? The game was 
tied after regulations, 20 minutes of overtime. It came down to penalty 
kicks. Congratulations.
    Coach, I want to congratulate you as well. Pretty good job for a 
rookie. [Laughter] One of the interesting things the coach made the 
decision on--the back-to-back championship, he said, ``If we win, the 
team can go ahead and shave his head.'' That's something we don't want 
to get started here in the White House. [Laughter]
    Interestingly enough, the team made an incredibly generous gesture. 
They purchased a water buffalo in Laura and my honor and gave it to a 
family overseas so that the family could better make a living. And I 
want to thank you for that great act of generosity. Thank you all. It 
really does mean a lot.
    I want to welcome the Notre Dame women's soccer team. I think it 
helps a lot you've got coaches from Texas. [Laughter] What do you think? 
Yes. Anyway, what a great victory the women's team had as well. You beat 
UCLA on penalty kicks. I loved your slogan, like, GOAT, ``Greatest of 
All Time,'' in reference to your team. I appreciate you setting high 
standards and working hard. And congratulations on a job well done.
    And the mighty Titans from Cal State, Fullerton, had a motto of 
their own. The motto was, ``Think How Good It's Gonna Feel.'' I didn't 
feel so good for the Longhorns. [Laughter] But I do want to congratulate 
you. I love baseball. I was telling the players that's my favorite sport 
of all. It's a hard game to play, and it's definitely a team game, and 
it's really hard to win the national championship in all sports. And 
this is a team that was, like, under .500 in your first 30 games or so, 
and then you went 32 out of 38 for the final--in the final stretch of 
the season.
    I really appreciate what Coach Horton said. He said about the 
championship victory, ``I still have chills. It's not from the cold 
water that was dropped on my head.'' [Laughter] You don't have much hair 
to protect your head anyway, but--[laughter]--that was kind of a cheap 
shot, wasn't it? [Laughter] The guy is a pretty good coach, though. Good 
luck.
    I also want to welcome the Stanford women's volleyball team. I was 
telling the women from Stanford that I was just with Condoleezza Rice, 
former provost of Stanford University. I said, ``Come by and welcome the 
home girls. Come by and tell them, good going for the second visit in 4 
years to the White House.'' She said she had to meet with a leader from 
another nation. So she sends her best to you.
    I want to welcome you all back here. I appreciate the fact that you 
won 15 games in a row and you weren't supposed to win the championship. 
You know, sometimes they count you out of a race--[laughter]--a little 
too soon, right? [Laughter] But we're glad you're back.
    And I want to thank all the teams. I particularly want to thank all 
the teams not only for being such good role models as you play your 
games, but also off the fields of play. And it's really important that 
you recognize that as champs, there's some person watching you and some 
person trying to learn from you and some person that if you--whose life 
you can affect more than you know.
    And so, when I'm told that the Indiana men's soccer team volunteer 
for youth soccer programs and go to schools encouraging people to make 
good choices in life, it heartens my soul. And I want to thank you all 
for doing that. You just don't know what it means to be a champion and 
have an eighth-grade kid or a seventh-grade kid hear from a star, ``Make 
a good choice. Love a neighbor like you'd like to be loved yourself.''
    And the Notre Dame women's soccer players volunteer at an after-
school program. That's great. You know, it can't be a greater gift than 
to teach a child to read or to encourage a child to read. It's a lasting 
legacy. Frankly, it's more important than a sports trophy. And I want to 
thank you for doing that.

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    I appreciate the Stanford women's volleyball players who read to 
children at local elementary schools and then help young girls learn the 
great value of being on a team sport through a volleyball clinic. Keep 
doing it, not only as college students but after you get out. It's one 
great way to serve our Nation.
    And I appreciate the fact that the Cal State, Fullerton, players 
took time out of the World Series last year to go to the hospital and 
say something to somebody who hurts.
    What I'm telling you is, you can be a champ on the field and you can 
be a champ off the field. You'll have a full life when you're able to 
say to yourself, ``I've really helped somebody in need.''
    Congratulations for setting such a great example. Welcome to the 
White House. Maybe you'll be back next year. I'll be here to greet you 
if you come back. God bless.

Note: The President spoke at 2:02 p.m. in the East Room at the White 
House. In his remarks, he referred to Marie Royce, wife of 
Representative Edward R. Royce; and professional soccer player Ben 
Waldrum, son of University of Notre Dame women's soccer head coach Randy 
Waldrum.