From The Heart

Dave Belisle Post Game Speech Reminds Millions Of A Coach’s Impact Goes Well Beyond The Scoreboard

Dave Belisle never set out to be an overnight Internet sensation. Nor was he looking to be the voice of reason in what many view as a sea of insanity in the world of youth sports.

But that’s exactly what happened when a private pep talk between the Little League coach and his team was shared with millions of viewers on a live ESPN broadcast.

Minutes after the Cumberland Americans’ dream season came to an end with an 8-7 loss to a Chicago contingent at the 2014 Little League World Series, Belisle called his players to the fringes of the outfield grass for the last time.

His message was simple, but packed a powerful punch. As the tears cut a path down the 12-year-old cheeks caked with the dust and dirt of the baseball diamond, Belisle spoke from his heart about what the improbable run meant not only to the 57-year-old coach and his family but to one Rhode Island town and the entire New England region.

Heads up high. I’ve gotta see your eyes, guys. There’s no disappointment in your effort — in the whole tournament, the whole season. It’s been an incredible journey. We fought. Look at the score – 8-7, 12-10 in hits. We came to the last out. We didn’t quit. That’s us! Boys, that’s us!

Even though he agreed to wear a microphone for the ESPN broadcast, Belisle didn’t know that it was still on and that his message was being sent out to over the airwaves. He didn’t realize the impact his words had until the next morning when the Cumberland players were buzzing about how their coach had literally become an overnight sensation.

“The next day we woke up and all the kids were so excited. They said, ‘Coach, your speech. You’re going viral.’ I didn’t know what that meant,” he said after the video had been watched and shared more than 500,000 times in less than 24 hours.

You had the whole place jumping, you had the whole state jumping, you had New England jumping, you had ESPN jumping. And you want to know why? They like fighters. They like sportsmen. They like guys who don’t quit. They guys who play the game the right way. 

The coach’s post game speech was a page taken directly from his father’s playbook. Back when he was a youngster playing baseball in Manville, R.I., Bill Belisle would take his team into the outfield after each game, win or lose, to discuss what they did right and what they needed to work on. Then they would join hands and shout out their team name before heading in to meet their parents.

“When I started coaching, no matter if it was a Rec team or in tee ball, I'd always take my kids to the outfield and regroup,” Dave Belisle said.

The lessons you guys have learned along the journey, you’re never going to forget. When you walk around this ballpark in the next couple of days, they’re going to look at you and say: ‘Hey, you guys were awesome!’ 

It’s one of the many lessons the second oldest Belisle boy learned from his father. For 42 years, and counting, Bill Belisle has been shaping the lives of young men in Rhode Island as the head hockey coach of the prep powerhouse Mount Saint Charles. And that, more than his 990 career victories and 32 state titles is why the 87-year-old coach was enshrined in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2016.

“As tough as my dad sounds, and he is tough, in the end he is nurturing,” Dave Belisle said. “Tough love has always been his way of teaching. He’s never let anyone fall through the cracks.”

It’s a lesson the Belisle boys have carried with them as they embarked on their own coaching careers. In addition to Dave, brother Peter is in his sixth season as the varsity hockey coach at the University of Massachusetts Boston. And youngest brother John is also coaching at the youth level.

There’s no disappointment in your effort in this whole tournament or the whole season. It’s been an incredible journey. The only reason why I’ll probably end up shedding a tear is because this is the last time I’ll probably end up coaching you guys. But I’m going to bring back, and the coaching staff is going to bring back something that nobody else can provide, and that’s pride. You’re going to take that with you for the rest of your life. 

In the spring of 2014 the baseball field became something of an oasis for the Belisle family. Nancy Belisle, Dave’s wife of 19 years, was diagnosed with colon cancer. As the rock of the family, she didn’t want anyone to think of her as “the cancer lady. The person everybody is feeling sorry for.”

For her it was about seeing her youngest son, John, have the same opportunity to compete in a Little League World Series as his older brother, James, had three years earlier.

With the support of his players and their parents, the Americans run to the Little League title was about more than just winning baseball games.

“My wife didn’t want anything for herself. It was all about John,” Belisle said. “So we worked and we worked, practiced every day. We became so close and then when we played our hearts out in that game and we fought right up until the last strike. And then it was done.”

It’s OK to cry, because we’re not going to play baseball together anymore. But we’re going to be friends forever. Friends forever. Our Little League careers have ended on the most positive note that could ever be. OK? Ever be.

Two years have passed since his words first hit the airwaves, and not a day goes by that someone doesn’t mention how that message resonated with them.

“I’ll be on the road making a sales call or I’ll call somebody and they will say, ‘Hey, you’re the coach. Great job, great speech,’” he says. “I don’t even have to ask them what they’re talking about.”

On a personal level, the speech still serves as a not-so-subtle reminder to take a step back from the heat of the game and realize what is truly important. First and foremost, it’s about family. And it’s about friends. It’s about the community, that rallies around one another through good times and bad.


And on Bill Belisle’s big night there were plenty of both on hand to show their love and support. What the hard-edged coach gave to so many players over the years was being paid back in spades.

“I’ve learned that passion from my dad. He gave me a chance to coach and I love it. I think I love it more than playing,” said Belisle, who continues to stand shoulder to shoulder with his 87-year-old father behind the bench at Mount Saint Charles.

I love you guys. I’m gonna love you forever. You’ve given me the most precious moment in my athletic and coaching career, and I’ve been coaching a long time – a looooong time. I’m getting to be an old man. I need memories like this, I need kids like this. You’re all my boys. You’re the boys of summer.

On a stage inside a downtown Philadelphia ballroom the two stood shoulder to shoulder one more time as the son spoke for his father during his acceptance speech, reminding the capacity crowd, including fellow enshrines Craig Janney and members of the U.S. team that won the 1996 World Cup of Hockey, that a coach’s impact on a young player extends well beyond any one game or season.

“You accomplish so much more and touch so many lives,” Belisle said. “My dad taught me more about everything, more than just the game. He’s taught me about life. 

“I don’t think you realize that when you’re playing for him. But those things that you are learning about in the present you’ll carry with you the rest of your life.”

Issue: 
2017-01

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