Coach of the Year: Curt Culbertson
In the summer months,
Martin
(Arlington) baseball players are on their
own.
But when school starts in the fall, serious team
building begins, a good five months before the first game of the
regular season.
The cheering crowd is only a distant
consideration when coach Curt Culbertson maps out weight lifting
and a conditioning regimen that gets tougher every
season. Even Culbertson concedes the workouts are
"rugged.''

Curt Culbertson, Martin head coach
Courtesy photo
"We
do have a few that fall out, sometimes some pretty good athletes,''
said Culbertson. "But there's no way they would make it through this
kind of grind.''
The "grind'' of which the coach
speaks is Martin's push to reach its second straight UIL state
tournament Final Four. The Warriors (34-7-1) are one series win away
from a date in Round Rock for the Class 5A state semifinals. Martin
faces Carroll (Southlake) in a best-of-three Region I final at Grand
Prairie's QuikTrip Park, beginning 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.
For leading a team with only five returnees
this close to a repeat trip to state, Culbertson was selected as Dallas
High Yield Coach of the Year presented by Capital One
Bank.
Martin posted a perfect 14-0 record to win
District 3-5A and has prevailed in four playoff series, knocking out
Keller, Coronado (Lubbock), Fossil Ridge (Keller) and most recently L.D.
Bell (Hurst). A third game was needed only in the Fossil Ridge series.
But every series has had a one-run Martin win.
"Even
though we had only five guys back, they have accounted for a heck of a
lot of offense,'' Culbertson said.
This coming from a
coach that knows how a great high school hitter should look. During an
11-year stint at Bowie (Arlington), Culbertson coached current New York
Yankees outfielder Vernon Wells.
"Vernon could do
everything,'' Culbertson said. "He was the best I've coached. The
complete package. The problem was we didn't have pitching. So we had to
win games the other way.''
When it comes to clutch
hits this season, the man the Warriors like to see at the plate is
Drew
Dowdy. The senior center fielder stroked a two-run single for
a 4-3 victory in the decisive third game of the Fossil Ridge series and
followed it up last week with a single off the wall to score two runs
and clinch the regional semifinal series over Bell,
4-3.
"We like to feel that the work we put into it
makes a difference in those key situations,'' Culbertson
said.
Success last season did not take the coach by
surprise. "I had a good feeling,'' Culbertson said. "We were just so
deep in pitching.
"This year, we had question marks,
but I started feeling pretty good about three-quarters of the way
through district. Our seniors can hit any pitching they
see.''
And two juniors can really pitch.
Turner
Larkins, last year's No. 3 starter and closer, has been
terrific. And the record of
Daniel
Lingua tells it all. He's 12-0.
Martin's
baseball history is not long, but distinguished, producing high draft
choices Todd Van Poppel (first round, 1990) and Ben Grieve (second
round, 1994). The Warriors made state tournament appearances in 1990 and
1993.
But when Culbertson took over in 2005, the
Warriors were coming off a 12-win season that ended without a playoff
berth. Twelve months later, under Culbertson, Martin won 25 games and a
district championship. That's the year that Culbertson put teeth in the
off-season program.
"I remember some negative
reaction that first year,'' Culbertson said, "but we have had kids come
back from college baseball programs and tell us our program got them in
better shape.''
Culbertson was a middle infielder in
his high school playing days for the Arlington Colts. He continued to
play right down the street at UT-Arlington and signed a professional
contract with Cincinnati. But in one season Culbertson realized his
future rested in coaching, not playing. So he completed work on his
degree and took a job coaching in junior high and began to work his way
up in the ranks.
His first baseball head coaching job
came at Weatherford in 1990.
He returned to
Arlington to lead Bowie for 11 seasons and found his way to
Martin as an assistant for two years before being promoted to head the
program.
"The job just kind of fell in my lap,''
Culbertson said.
The 52-year-old and his bride of 30
years, Carol, have three daughters. The youngest two are in college and
the oldest has made Curt a granddad.
"It's a boy.
We're already thinking baseball,'' Culbertson said.