One player discovers the ‘grass isn’t always greener’ elsewhere
There were more than 17,000 high school sports transfers recorded last school year in California, and one of the most bizarre involved Chaminade offensive lineman Harout Agazaryan.
On a Monday in January, he checked out of Chaminade. On Tuesday, he began classes and football practice at Burbank High. By Tuesday afternoon, when his mother picked him up after football practice, he told her, βI donβt think itβs the right place for me.β
βYouβre probably right,β she said. βHow do you feel? Do you want to go back to Chaminade?β
βYes,β he said.
On Wednesday morning at Starbucks, he met with Chaminade football coach David Machuca and asked to return.
By Thursday, he was back at Chaminade in the same classes. He felt awkward, but his teachers joked, βYou missed me already?β
It took courage to ask for a second chance, and what a decision it has turned out to be. Five times this season, Agazaryan has been named a team captain by his coach. The 6-foot-3, 255-pound senior been a standout offensive tackle and defensive lineman.
βHeβs been amazing,β Machuca said. βYou talk about a kid that did a 360. Heβs representing what I believe is important to being a captain β dedication, holding people accountable. Heβs doing everything right.β
Thereβs so many lessons to be learned from Agazaryanβs experiences.
βThe grass isnβt always greener where you go,β he said. βI discovered thereβs not many places better than Chaminade.β
It was his parents who gave him the green light to transfer even though they wanted him to stay.
βHonestly, at the time, I had a lot of friends [at Burbank],β he said. βThey were texting me every day. I wasnβt doing very good academically here. I thought I needed a restart.β
He quickly determined he was wrong. But would he have a chance to return to his old school?
One of the most important decisions he made was to have a conversation with Machuca before he left. So many times, students and their parents donβt even inform the coach they are leaving.
βI feel you have to leave on good terms because I know teammates that left last year that didnβt talk to coach Machuca at all,β he said. βI felt as a man, I had to talk to him.β
That earlier discussion made Machuca open to welcoming Agazaryanβs return as long as parameters were followed.
βI actually told him when he was leaving Iβm really happy weβre at the point of having a conversation,β Machuca said.
The second chance has not been wasted.
βItβs been way better,β Agazaryan said. βI feel when I came back, my head switched. I was a way better person, better in the classroom, better on the field. I felt I was controlling my emotions more.β
Coaches have been complaining that itβs harder to coach players these days, because they know if someone takes something they say the wrong way, they immediately think about transferring to another school.
Agazaryan warns, βDonβt ever burn your bridges because you never know what will happen. Just because one thing bad happens doesnβt mean you should take your stuff off and leave. You have to build a relationship with everyone on the campus, then youβll really be happy.β