Reflections Magazine Issue #73 - Winter 2011 | Page 13

Athletics Feature By Doug Goodnough Tim Bauer ’82 Has Built a Winning Tradition One Cheese Sandwich at a Time T im Bauer’s 25-plus-year coaching career at Siena Heights can easily be summed up in two words: cheese sandwiches. OPPORTUNITY Mission Accomplished Series This series of articles highlights individual examples of the Siena Heights brand, “Opportunity U,” and how the university’s mission is transforming the lives of our students as well as the world around us. OK, probably not easily, but there’s a story behind those cheese sandwiches. There’s always a story with Bauer. “We didn’t have a whole lot of anything,” said Bauer of his early coaching years at Siena. “We had sack lunches, which had two pieces of bread, a piece of cheese, packets of mayo and mustard, an apple and freakin’ potato chips. And a bottle of water. That was lunch. That was all we knew.” He smirked while telling that story, indicating it probably now serves more as a badge of honor than a hardship tale. Just like those cheese sandwiches, his no-frills, nothing fancy, get-the-job-done approach was exactly what Siena Heights needed to build its track and cross country programs when he took over as coach in 1984. Coach Bauer, circa 1992. Raised in blue-collar farm country of mid central Ohio, Bauer had a hard work and Ohio State football mentality branded into him. And that’s the way he’s coached. Using that “Us against the World” philosophy, Bauer has built the Saints into one of the top small-college track programs around. Never mind he hasn’t had a home track —ever. Never mind that his program budget has not changed much over the years. Never mind that some of the doors on the school vehicles occasionally didn’t work the way they should on the way to meets. In the end, it was all about results. In those 25 years, Bauer’s teams have earned 28 conference championships, more than a dozen individual or relay national championships, 148 All-Americans and 70 NAIA Scholar-Athletes. But the pride and sense of accomplishment he has tried to instill in his athletes drives him as much as the athletic success. At 52, Bauer shows no signs of slowing down, much less changing from his gruff-yet-engaging ways. Now on the cusp of having a new outdoor track and facility next fall, he is still a fixture at Siena Heights University. Welcome to Siena Ironically, Bauer first stepped foot on Siena’s campus wearing another school’s uniform. A standout athlete at Colonel Crawford High School in North Robinson, Ohio, Bauer was poised to earn a college running scholarship until a bad leg injury derailed his senior year. He decided to forego college, spending a year in the “family business”—helping on the family farm and working 7 days a week on the graveyard shift at the local factory. Eventually though, his competitive juices got the best of him. “Finally, one day, I said, ‘I’m done,’” Bauer said of his decision to stop working and attend college. “I’m tired of working seven days a week midnight til 8. I was out. It made my Dad mad, because I was making pretty good money.” . . . continued on the next page Reflections Winter ’11 13