The Sam Acho Podcast

In this episode, Sam Acho and co-host Cliff Marshall sit down with Ed Schilling, Pepperdine University's head basketball coach and seasoned mentor. Coach Schilling opens up about building a culture of faith, navigating tough transitions like being let go from prominent coaching roles, and the importance of keeping family at the center. He shares powerful stories from his career, including his time coaching Kobe Bryant and the lessons drawn from working alongside icons like John Calipari. Tune in for an honest look at leadership, resilience, and the daily habits that anchor success both on and off the court.

Follow Coach Schilling

Connect with Sam 

Book Sam to speak at your event: https://www.samacho.com/speaking

Read Sam's books 

Chapter Outline
(00:00) Humility and Coaching Influences
(04:18) Spiritual Leadership and Daily Example
(07:38) Faith in Facing Professional Setbacks
(13:30) Balancing Coaching, Family, and Faith
(20:33) Books, Mentorship, and Devotional Habits
(23:05) Lessons from Kobe Bryant
(29:14) Navigating Modern Coaching Challenges
(31:30) Anchoring Success On and Off the Court
(34:35) Fitness, Routine, and Personal Discipline
(38:04) Coaching with John Calipari and Recruiting Insights

What is The Sam Acho Podcast?

The Sam Acho Podcast, featuring Clif Marshall, helps athletes learn how to win without losing it all. By going first, giving space, and growing hope, Sam and Clif talk authentically about faith, family, football, and finance to win at more than sports.

Sam Acho: Welcome back to the
Sam Acho podcast featuring Cliff

Marshall, and we are so excited to
bring to you another special guest.

Clif Marshall: Absolutely
Sam, I am so fired up today.

We have my great friend.

Ed Schilling with us.

Ed is currently the head
coach at Pepperdine University

in Malibu, California.

He's also been an assistant
basketball coach with teams like

UCLA Indiana, and he is also been
at Memphis among other places.

ed has trained and recruited some
of the top players in the NBA,

but more important than that,
coach Schilling is a man of faith.

He's a husband, he's a dad.

He's been a mentor in my life
and he is really helped me grow

in my faith over the years.

So Coach Schilling, thank you for
your time today and thank you for

being on the Sam Macho Podcast.

Ed Schilling: Well, thank you.

It's truly an honor to be with you, cliff.

It's so good to see you again.

And Sam, I've, I heard so much about
you over the years with from Cliff when

we were together at Indiana, and so I
appreciate all that you're doing and it's

a, it's an honor to be with you guys.

Clif Marshall: Coach, I want to start out
by just man telling you how humble you

are because I've known you since 2017.

We, again, as you mentioned, we worked
together with the Indiana Hoosiers Men's

Basketball Program, and as I was doing
my research and reading up on you a

little bit, I found out you were the all
time leader in assist at Miami of Ohio.

University.

So not only are you a great
coach, but at one point in time

you were a great player as well.

Who was the most influential
coach you ever had in your life?

Ed Schilling: Well, first of all with the
assists, I happen to play with Ron Harper.

If any, basketball people know he.

Clif Marshall: Oh.

Ed Schilling: He, he runs, three rings,
I believe, at the, with the bulls

and then a few more with the Lakers.

So I figured out early in my career if
I just threw it to harp, good things

happen and I got a lot of assists.

So, you know, he's the one that's,
is to thank for all those assists.

But, no, appreciate you saying that.

you know, it's interesting, I played
for quite a few coaches, but my high

school coach at Lebanon High School
in Lebanon, Indiana, Jim Rosen Steele.

when I played for him, he was older.

He coached a guy by the name of
Rick Mount, who was the first

high school athlete on the
cover of Sports Illustrated.

Had quite a few division one players,
but, I transferred there my junior

and senior year at high school
for my junior and senior year.

And the thing that kind of made
him special is that you left every

practice wanting to practice more.

he was kind of.

Had his own way of doing things.

He was kind of old school.

He was, a offensive genius.

And, but he would say, you'd
be going along, you're going

for an hour and a half or so.

And he'd say, all right,
Eddie, go get you a shower.

And then he'd say, send another player.

Go get you a shower.

And we'd like, no coach.

Lemme go a little bit more.

And, but he'd always
leave you wanting more.

So we'd be.

He'd make it.

Nah, you've had enough today.

and so we'd go down and we'd be done
showered and headed out, and there'd be

a lot of guys still out there practicing.

So, but that was just one example.

But he was a guy that just every
time practice ended the games,

man, you just wanted to do it more.

and he was a guy that really just
fostered the love of the game in you.

and he would coach you, he'd
get on you when you needed to.

But the other, but the bottom line is.

You know, he was there for you
when we played pickup games

all summer at the Lebanon park.

He'd sit there on the park bench and
watch and, you know, he was just a,

he was a player's coach, but he had
a way of just bringing the best out

of you and I came, went from there.

And then I was fortunate to average.

34 minutes a game as a freshman on an
NCA tournament team at Miami, university.

But a lot of it was just because of the
confidence that he would instill in us.

and his name was Jim Rosen Steel.

but just a guy that, that brought
the best out of you and always the

end ever practice into every game.

You just wanted to play more.

Sam Acho: Wow, that's so good.

Well, coach Schilling, now that you're
the head coach at Pepperdine, how

are you using your influence to help
players both on and off the court?

Ed Schilling: Well, I hope from
a spiritual standpoint, and I'm

fortunate, we're very blessed
to be at a Christian university,

Pepperdine's at Christian University.

So we start every practice with, well,
I get 'em, we huddle up, I'll make a

few announcements, and then we pray
before practice starts, every practice.

And then, we also have
chapel before every game.

We have, I'm part of a group
called Nations of Coaches.

and so we have a team chaplain, we call
'em, character coaches around the country.

And we're in about.

Oh, I'd say 150 campuses now have a
character coach for men's basketball.

And so we, I have a chaplain.

if he's not there then I might do it.

But we always have a
chapel before every game.

But I think most of all, we wanna
just make sure we're trying to

set the best example that we can.

One with our passion, our enthusiasm,
also being prepared, coaching these

guys up, but also coach 'em in a way.

That we can be demanding
without being demeaning.

And so that's what we're trying
to do on a daily BA basis is

to try and set that example.

As much as anything, I can say all
I want, we can have all the great

slogans all over the walls, but
it's really what are we giving?

What are we.

What are we bringing to,
to practice every day?

What are we bringing to the games?

What are we bringing in a text message
to a player at night after a tough game?

What, you know, those are the things that
we're trying to do to make an impact.

And I've been doing this long
enough that I don't need to climb

any ladders or do anything else.

I'm just trying to.

do the best I can to make these
players in this program the best it

can be, but also trying to make a
difference in these guys eternally.

And, you know, if I could open
up a saw, open their head and

pour the Bible in, I would, but
it doesn't really work that way.

So what we wanna try to do is just try
to be the best example that we can.

praying with them, praying for
'em, and then also making sure

that they do hear the word.

Then the, we trust the Holy Spirit to
take that word and make sure, and we

know that it'll never come back void.

So, that's kinda a short answer.

Clif Marshall: That's great.

Coach.

I wanted to ask you, About an experience
you had at Indiana University when

you and I were there together in 2018.

I helped you clean your locker out.

you we're gonna move on no longer
be with the Indiana Hoosiers.

And I watched you experience that and
helped you pack your stuff to, to your

car and clean your office out and.

I always look back on that moment and
actually there was a student manager

who saw you and I that evening and he
took a picture of us and we were praying

together in the parking lot after
you had cleaned all your stuff out.

And I still have that photo and.

This year, I found out in 2025 I
wouldn't be returning to the Indiana

Hoosier Men's basketball program.

And I reflected on how you
handled that situation.

You handled it with faith and you, just
showed me that you had total trust in God.

I want to know, number one,
where does that faith come from?

And number two, I want to know what
you learned from that situation.

Ed Schilling: Well that's great.

I appreciate you sharing that Cliff.

well, you know, it's never easy.

You know, you say I'm moving on, but
you're getting fired no matter what.

What the situation is.

and you know what, if you've
been in coaching long enough,

you're gonna get fired.

If you're an athlete, they're
gonna come a time where they're

gonna bring you in and say, Hey,
we're going a different direction.

We're going with somebody else.

So it's gonna happen to
everybody at some point.

And, you know, I just trust in Romans
8:28 that God's gonna work all things

for good, for those who love him, and
are called according to his purposes.

And so.

You know, whether I'm getting fired
at Indiana or I'm getting hired

as a head coach of Pepperdine.

God's gonna use it for good, for his good.

It may not be for my ease and my comfort,
but he's going to use it for a great good.

and even through that Indiana
situation, we may talk about it later.

God really did use that for
good and in, in ways that.

I did not, you may not see it right
then, but you just have to trust that

God is gonna use it for good and okay.

This isn't what I'd have drawn
my, my, if I was drawing it up.

I wouldn't have drawn it up that way,
but that's how the Lord drew it up and

I had to just trust that, you know what?

he can see the end from the beginning
and that's ultimately what we have to do.

And whether we're winning championships
and cutting down nets or whatever

the confetti falling down, the
bottom line is we just gotta trust

that God's gonna use it for good.

Even the tough things.

The tough things from
injuries to firings to.

You know, stuff that man, you're
like, how could that be good?

Well, in, in and of itself may not be
good, but God is going to use it for good.

And I think the Indiana situation,
God really did use it for good.

and by grace he was able to give
me a mindset to trust that, you

know, I, you know, sometimes you
just, the Lord just comes upon you.

You just feel like, okay.

It's gonna be fine.

And in that case it certainly did, and I
think in your case it's gonna be the same.

You're gonna impact even more
people, in this next chapter.

Clif Marshall: Amen.

Wow.

Sam Acho: coach, I want to
park there for a second.

you mentioned the Indiana situation
and that God worked it out for good.

I want to ask you how.

Specifically, you said,
oh, we may get into it.

I'd love just to get into it now.

How did God specifically work
out you getting fired for good.

Ed Schilling: Well, I had only been
to Indiana for two years and I, I.

One of the main reasons that I left
UCLA to go to Indiana was because my

dad was not doing well physically, and
I'm an only child, and my parents lived

in Indiana, you know, still lived in
Lebanon, Indiana, which wasn't far,

wasn't too far from Bloomington, Indiana.

And so my dad wasn't doing well, and I
got released, I got let go, but I was

still gonna getting paid for another year.

And so what I was able to do is.

Spend incredible amount of time with my
family, but also I was able to see my dad

every single week for the next year or
so when it was the last year of his life.

And my dad and I were really close.

I mean, again, my dad was a, you
know, he was a basketball coach,

he was an athletic director.

He played some professional basketball,
and so we were really close.

And so to be able to be with
him in that last year or so,

and also to be with my mom.

To help her through everything, and as
an only child man to be able to be there

for my mom, but also to be with my dad.

Those last, and it was a hard year
for him, physically going through

cancer, going through this and that.

So I, God just basically said, you know
what, we're gonna meet all your needs.

We're going, the paychecks are gonna
keep coming in, but you're gonna

go get to see your dad every week.

You're gonna be there to help
your mom through all the different

things, moving them from.

The hospital to a nursing
home, back into the hospital.

But I was able to be there
for her, but be there for him.

And then also it gave me a year to just
really dive into my family and making,

you know, I was dropping 'em off at
school every day and being there with him.

And so God really just did an
amazing thing and, you know.

You, you could look at it and say,
man, you got fired and you're driving

around Bloomington, which we all know
is everybody knows everything about

Indiana basketball, but the bottom
line is, I got to do something.

That I could.

I mean, how could you ever, if
I'm coaching at Indiana, I might

have been able to see my dad
once, maybe every month here.

I got to see him every week.

I was there.

My mom needed something.

Boom, I was there.

I remember one time my mom
called your dad's falling.

I can't, we gotta get, and so I, boom, I
was able to drive down there and help, you

know, go get him and help him up and help,
you know, just all those kind of things

that I never could have done otherwise.

So God really did an amazing, just a
such so gra, so gracious and merciful

to me by letting me get, go get
fired so that I could be there during

that and I'll never, you know, I
cherish that year more than anything.

Okay.

Clif Marshall: Amazing coach.

Shortly thereafter, you got hired as an
assistant coach at Grand Canyon University

in Phoenix, Arizona, and, you guys had a.

Incredible run there.

And obviously just this last year,
you finished up your first season

as the head coach at Pepperdine.

I wanted to ask you, as a head coach, as
a husband, and as a father, how do you

manage wearing all three of those hats?

Ed Schilling: Well, first of all,
one, I think you have to be present

wherever you, your feet are.

You know, if you're at the office,
man, I want to be locked in.

I wanna be, be locked in on practice.

I wanna be, you know, whatever that is.

But when I'm home.

I don't want to be at practice.

You know, I wanna be able to be
able to step, just like we talk

about in basketball when you're a
player, or Sam if you're football.

When you step across that, the
line, you gotta be ready to play.

No matter what's happened or what's
gonna happen after, you gotta

be able to step across the line.

And I wanna make sure that
when I'm at home, I'm at home.

You know, and so that's one thing.

But then also the blessing of being a head
coach is my kids can come be in my office.

my youngest daughter loves sitting
on the couch, putting her feet up and

hanging out in the office and going and
getting into the snacks and all that.

She loves that.

And then they can come to
practice anytime they want.

They can run around on the court.

And so they're always welcome at practice.

and I want 'em to come by.

And so April, my wife,
she'll bring him by practice.

She'll, they'll drop 'em,
they'll be here in the office.

and so you know what the, that I
remember early in the career you

think this is so, so important.

And this is, they're nothing important,
more important than them kids running

around the office and on the floor.

Yeah.

And ultimately I think it's a good
example for our players to one, be able

to see that man, this is their priority.

This is the priority is yeah, my fate,
but my family is a priority to me, and

as much as I'm ex, I want 'em to make
jump shots and get stops on defense.

What I really want is I wanna make
sure this my daughters feel loved and

they know that they're seen and that.

I'm excited to see 'em and they
are welcome not only at home

into our living room or bed.

They're welcome here in my office.

They're welcome on the court as well.

So that's one of the ways
that, that we wanna make sure

that, man, this is important.

And yeah, we'll have to do recruiting
and we go away for road trips.

But, you know, we, the great thing
too is with technology, we can get

to FaceTime in the hotel, we can
do all that stuff, but when we're

home, I wanna make sure I'm home.

And they know that.

Dad's home, but he's still in the office.

No, I don't want that.

You know, I want him to
know I am home with them.

So that's a, that, those
are some of the ways.

Sam Acho: That's so good.

And coach, you might hear some of my
little ones in the background 'cause

I'm home, but in the office, but I'm
listening and I, this is so good because

so often we talk on this podcast about
faith and about family and football and

finances and football, basketball, track.

We talk about a bunch of different
sports, baseball, but it's

almost like you're prioritizing.

Not necessarily your work,
but it sounds like it's faith,

it's family, then it's my work.

And it sounds like you get a chance
to compound that a little bit.

Can you share more on, on how that works?

Ed Schilling: Yeah, sure.

Yeah.

it's true.

and you want them to be part
of your work if you can.

you know, for example, when we
have a recruiting visit, I'll take

one of my daughters with me out
to eat, and now she feels like

she's recruiting, you know, she's.

she's 10 years old and she's making a,
you know, drawing something up, you know,

come to Pepperdine and handing them,
so they'll ju they'll come to, on the

recruiting visits, you know, they're,
they can jump in and, so, you know, little

things like that, you know, and they
come, they're making stuff, I'm putting

it up in my office and things like that.

So again, I want them to feel
like they're a part of it.

You know, just like I want to be part
of what's going on for them in school.

Just like I, you know, I want them
to be, Hey, they're, you're part

of this basketball program now.

They're not living and dying on Oh, we're,
you know, now they do cry after if we

lose, but I don't want it to be like that.

I want them to feel like, man, I'm
part of this, I'm part of the program.

This is it.

And you know, we're, when we pray
at night, we might pray for the

game coming up, or we might pray for
this player or that player, because

that's part of our life, just like.

It's important for them at school
to, you know, something's going

on at school, we're going to talk
about it, we're gonna pray about it.

This is a challenge that it's, you
know, there's gonna be challenge.

There's challenges at Pepperdine.

We've lost a lot of games this past year.

Well, how did I handle it?

It, you know, how are we handling?

Am I coming home and don't talk to 'em?

Daddy lost no.

They, I want them, they may see
I'm disappointed or whatever, but

we wanna make sure we're real.

That we're saying, Hey, you know what?

We can have, we can get beat, we can
have a setback, but yet it's not gonna,

that doesn't give me a license to not be.

Kind to my kids that I'm not gonna
be kind to my wife, you know?

So I want them to see that no matter
if good things or bad things happen,

that they know that dad's still gonna
be dad and he's still, you know, I want

them to see that and I think sometimes.

You know, coaches, we can get
carried away with this and

think, well, I lost it and game.

And so don't talk to 'em.

no.

We're in this thing together.

And you know, if it didn't go well,
well, okay, we gotta, sometimes

you win, sometimes you learn.

We gotta learn and here's how, and
hopefully we're setting some examples of

how to handle adversity and then also how
to handle success and bringing people in.

We are successful, that it's
not just, Hey, look at me.

No, it's look at us and
hey, we got to do this.

Isn't this great?

this is fun.

We're enjoying it, and if we lose,
man, what could we have done better?

We just gotta go practice harder and
we need to get better at this, and we

need, you know, so that they're into it.

They know.

They know what's going on.

Clif Marshall: That's great, coach.

I tell you as an encouragement,
keep your family involved because

Sam Acho told his college football
coach on our podcast just recently.

The reason he committed to Mac Brown
and the Texas Longhorns was because on

his official visit, he saw the family
atmosphere, how Mack, coach Mac Brown

had his family around in the office.

And I think there's a lot of
coaches who talk about family,

but don't necessarily live it out.

And I just love the fact that you have
your wife and kids involved, and I

know that your players at Pepperdine,
they appreciate that as well.

I wanted to ask you, I, I mentioned to
start the podcast, you had a great impact

on my life and on my faith journey.

in 2018, you gave me a devotional book.

I've got it right here.

Ed Schilling: You

Clif Marshall: everybody to see.

I mean, this thing has been through it.

It's experiencing God day
by day, the devotional.

and journal by Henry Blackaby, and
when I open it up, there are so many

notes and there's highlights and
there's things that I've written

down over the years, man of pain and
heartache and great success though.

But as I look back on it, I'm
reminded of God's faithfulness

and that's why I journal in this
thing every single day since 2018.

But I often remember you giving
this to me, and now I give it

to the athletes that I train.

I like for them to have this same book.

So I want to ask you, and I
know you've read a ton of books.

I remember going in your office and
your bookshelf had the best books.

I want to know what is the
greatest book, that you've

read, and how did it impact you?

Ed Schilling: Well obviously the
Bible will take that out 'cause

there is no, greater than that.

But, there was a book I, it is called,
God Minute for Good by RT Kendall.

Now it was one that somebody gave me when
I got let go at Wright State University.

I was the.

I guess the, I was the youngest assistant
coach in the NBA when I was with the Nets.

And then I was the second
youngest division one coach

at Wright State University.

And we were in the same conference with
Butler and you know, those schools.

And I had six years and, you know, had a
good run but got let go and somebody gave

me that book and I read it and it really.

really ministered to me and it's about the
life of Joseph and man, I'll tell you, if

you ever have somebody that gets fired or
has a really tough, something happened,

man, there, that is, that was the most
impactful book I've since given it to.

I've given it away to many
people over the years.

I'll just order it up and have it sent
out because it's a really good one.

And it's about the life of Joseph
and as you, you know, his life, that

man, he was gonna be, he was gonna
be this, star, so to speak, and,

but has a whole lot of hard times.

Unjustly accused, thrown in jail,
this, that, and yet he, he stays

faithful and, doesn't hold a grudge.

And he, and it just takes you through
the whole progression and a lot of

things that you don't even realize when
I was, you know, we know the story and

you've read, I've read it many times.

I've read through the Bible
every year for the last, I don't

know, 25 years Bible in a year.

And, but there's things that.

Man, that book just
really brought to light.

And when you're going through something
like that book really ministered to me,

probably unlike any other book, that one
did, God Meant It For Good by RT Kendall.

Sam Acho: That's so good.

Coach, you have a story about a time
that you worked with Kobe Bryant.

I'd love to hear that story.

What happened, in

your experience

Ed Schilling: Okay.

Sam Acho: with Kobe?

Ed Schilling: Well, I mentioned
I was one of the youngest, I was

the youngest coaching assistant
coach in the NBA at the time.

And so I had just gone from high
school coach in Indiana at Logan Sport

High School to an assistant at UMass.

When we went to the Final Four,
with, I was assistant with John Cala

Perry, and we had, Marcus can be on
that team and then I went and was

an assistant coach for the Nets.

So in 310 days I went from high school.

To college to the NBA.

And so, you know, we got the job
right after our, final four run

and all that, the seasons ended.

and Coach Cal asked me
to be his assistant.

and so, you know, here we go.

And it's not like today
where they have like.

20 assistant coaches behind the
bin I mean, there, there was

like, you get three assistants.

That's it.

And you guys are doing it all.

So one of the things that we
would do is obviously we were

getting ready for the draft and
so we would go and work guys out.

You know, we had the seventh
pick in the draft that year.

And so we'd go pick 'em up at the
airport and usually have dinner with

them and then we'd work out the next day.

And, so this particular time I went and
it was a kid going right from high school.

To the NBA and again, it wasn't the, we
didn't know him like LeBron coming out,

you know, he wasn't quite like that.

He was a McDonald's all American.

But he wasn't a household name.

Like, you know, now there's so much
more with social media and stuff

that people kind of, they know
about everybody, but then it was

like, okay, he's a high school kid.

Well shoot less than a, just
about less than a year ago.

That was my guys I was working
with at Logan Sport High School.

So hey, he's just another
high school kid to me.

So we went and had dinner and when
the GM was eating with us, aki, he

was real kind of quiet and all that.

Well the GM then left and we were chopping
it up and hanging out and so the next

morning we get up and we work out and
Coach Cow and I are working them out.

You know, he was good.

I mean, he's like, you know, come off.

We'd put him through a whole series of
stuff and usually after about 40 minutes

when it's just one player, they're dying.

They're looking at the clock
like, yo man, is this almost done?

and, but this guy, I mean, he was
going, I mean, he was, you know,

whether it was shooting drills,
coming off, making shots back,

cutting, dunking, everyone transition
drills running as running, like.

You can then back in the day, I
was still could play a little bit.

So we'd go from half court and he'd
guard you, and he looked kind of thin,

but he was pretty, he was wiry strong.

And so it was like, wow,
this kid's pretty good.

And so we'd go for about
45 minutes, almost an hour.

And finally Coach Cal's
like, all right, that's good.

Hey, we'll be in touch with your agent.

All right, we'll see you.

And so he left.

And so I'm scooping up the balls.

You know, it's a little bit
more sophisticated nowadays.

and the kid, and he taps me on the
shoulder and he says, Hey, can you show me

some more of those drills we were doing?

I'm like, sure.

So we go and it's just the
two of us in the gym now.

And we're going through stuff and it's
5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15, 20 again.

Now we've already gone through a crazy
hard workout where we try to almost

break 'em to see how hard they'll go.

And so we just, we keep going.

It's 30 minutes, 35,
and we're still going.

We're going hard sweat's, pouring,
we're going and we're both into it.

Finally, I look, I'm like, oh
shoot, you got a flight to catch?

You know, we've gone about 40
minutes and I'm like, go shower.

We gotta go.

And, so I, as he's going in the shower,
I'm calling Coach Cal and I'm like,

coach man, this kid's gonna be special.

He goes, yeah, did you
see how he shot the ball?

And I said, forget it.

That's not what's gonna make him special.

He said, yeah, you're right.

How about how he ran that?

I said, that's not it.

he goes, well, you talking about
how athletic he was, he dunked

all 20 of those on the back cut.

I said, Nope, that's not it.

And he says, what do you think
he's gonna be so special for?

I said, he wants to be
coached and he wants to work.

And so long story, we ended up,
coach Cal and I both wanted him,

but the hi, his dad actually got on
the phone and called and said, Hey,

if you draft him, he's not coming.

And Cal's like, what do you mean he,
this isn't college, you don't choose.

He goes, well.

He'll go play in Italy.

Well, Jerry West had talked to him and
he had everything worked out for him to

go to the A trade to come to the Lakers.

We were the only ones that could
mess it up with the nets, but the

owners were like, man, you can't
draft somebody and him not come

and you take a high school kid, you
first New York Media will kill you.

So we ended up taking Kerry Kittle, who
was ended up being a really good player.

All rookie team and all that, but didn't
quite have the career Kobe Bryant had.

But, nonetheless it was, when we went
to play him, Kobe came in the locker

room and found me and said, Hey.

I just wanted to say thanks.

I've been doing those drills
you showed me that day in June.

I've been doing 'em ever since.

I just wanna say thanks.

So, you know, the point is that one of
the all time greatest, one of the biggest

attribute that I took when I worked him
out was one, he wanted to be coached.

Two, he really wanted to work.

And then the other thing is he showed
gratitude and so, so often kids

today, they get what they can get,
but they're not grateful for it.

He was grateful for it and he was willing
to work and he wanted to be coached.

Clif Marshall: What a story.

That's something that can be
shared to athletes of all ages

and a lesson that can be taught.

I remember you talking to our
players at Indiana about that.

At and I never forgot that story.

And, man, what a great
testimony about Kobe Bryant.

I want to ask you, as a head coach
at Pepperdine University, what is the

most challenging part of your job?

Ed Schilling: Well, I mean,
nowadays things have changed even

since we were together at Indiana
with the transfer portal and the

NIL and things like that, it.

it's made it more challenging.

one, the fact that, you know, I
look at my roster and chances are.

95% of 'em are not gonna be with
me the next year just because of

the way the transfer portal works.

And that's how it was.

I took over the job, a little
over a year ago and I had one

scholarship player that stayed.

By the time I got the job, they'd
all been in the trans, so I had

to put together a whole team.

And it was basically that even the
transfer portal dated basically

being there was only a few days left.

So, you know, I had to put a whole
team together and this year the way

things happened with graduations.

Guys go into transfer, man.

You gotta almost do the whole thing again.

And so, you know, that's one of the
hard things is before like even we're

at Indiana, you'd have a couple, like
when we had Romeo Langford, you know, he

was probably gonna be there for a year.

But now you have a whole team like that.

And so that's challenging, you know,
and you can either sit back and complain

about it like, man, this stinks.

This is not how I got.

Or you can say, you know what?

I've got an opportunity to impact more
people in a four year period rather than,

I got kind one group for four years now.

I got four different groups, so I've
gotta try to look at, even though it's

a big challenge and how it's changed.

I can look at it as an opportunity that,
hey, I'm gonna get a, have an opportunity

to try to pour into more people's
lives over the course of several years,

hopefully I'm here for several years.

But that's one of the biggest things
is just that transfer portal that

you've got less time with these
guys than you did in years past.

You know, when you, when
before this transfer portal.

Sam Acho: Coach, you've played and coached
in nearly every level of basketball.

You've coached some of the greatest
athletes, but my question is.

How do you win both on
and off of the court?

Ed Schilling: Well, I think you have to
have an anchor, you know, and you better

have, whether it's, for me, it's my faith.

You know what?

My family, but whatever it is, you
better have an anchor because you

can get blown all over the place if
you're just going on wins and losses.

and so you, what's your anchor?

what can you count on?

Like things are going great
or things are going bad.

What do you come back to on a daily basis?

And for me, it's my faith and you
know, no matter what that I'm gonna

get in that word in the morning.

and it's gonna, that, that Bible
is a mirror to me and it's going

as I read it, I see myself.

And I'm like, whew.

Oh man, I gotta repent just like the
Israelites needed to repent or I look

at the, you know, and so one, you
have to have an anchor and then you

have to build your life in such a way
that you create habits to really keep

yourself grounded, through the good
times and the bad times, and in between.

and so that's the biggest thing.

and then the other thing is that you don't
wanna live or coach in fear because fear.

Fear will make you stay in the
office for days on end, watching

tape till your eyes bleed, thinking,
oh, I gotta, I can't lose this game.

We gotta, and so you can't coach in fear.

You've gotta coach in faith that you know
what I'm gonna do, what needs to be done.

I'm gonna try to be excellent in what
we do, but not to the point where it's

impacting the things that matter the most.

and I think that I, what I've learned
over the years of doing this and

30 years of coaching is so often we
spend, coaches spend so much time

because of fear that they do stuff.

They waste, they spend a lot of
time that's really unnecessary.

make sure you have your scouting report.

Make sure you're play,
make sure you're organized.

But don't coach in fear, coach
in faith, be prepared and then

go out and do your best and let
the Lord take care of the rest.

And that's the anchor that we have
to have, is that we're anchored in

faith and my faith is in the Lord.

if you're not anchored in the Lord,
then you better find something.

I don't know what it is, but you
better find something that can keep

you grounded through the good times
and the bad, or you're gonna be blown

all over the place in this business.

Clif Marshall: Great insight there.

Coach.

I want to ask you about
your fitness routine.

The one thing I can remember
about you being at Indiana is.

Man, you got after it in the weight
room and you were consistent,

like you never missed a day.

And I watched Sam Acho just yesterday
on ESPN as he was talking about Dion

Sanders, because Dion Sanders had a, you
know, a, a huge media event today, so to

speak, press conference regarding his.

Cancer.

And one of the things that Sam said, in
regards to Dion was health is wealth.

And I know just watching you
how important your fitness is.

How do you make that a priority
even now as you're a head coach?

Ed Schilling: Well, it's actually easier
as a head coach, but, my, my routine,

I'm a, my, my wife kinda laughs at
me, but I'm up at 5:15 every morning.

I get up and I either do, you know,
me on my push and pull stuff, so I, if

it's a pull day, I go down and I get my
pull-ups in and then I go up and I get my.

Hour in the word.

So I'm gonna spend an hour, so I get
my five minutes in, I get my pullups,

or I get my pushups in to wake me up.

I get in that word and I get an hour in
that, and then I go and I walk the dog.

Now walking the dog at Pepperdine's a
little different, because I tell you,

we live on campus, so I'm up at the
top and so I walk the dog down, but

then we gotta walk the dog back up
and so it's a little over a mile 0.2.

So I get to walk in and, Do the
breakfast, do that stuff, and then

when I get to the office, I get things
opened up, maybe do one or two things.

And then I go get my workout in.

It's about 30 minutes.

If it's a, if it's a pull day, I'm getting
my pull exercises in, and some core.

And then if it's a push day, I'm
getting my push stuff in and some legs.

and so now I've gotten my, either
my pullups or the pushups before

I've gotten my time in the word.

I've got my walk in.

Now I've got, I got my 30 minutes
in and it's still basically, you

know, nine o'clock or nine 30.

So I try to get it in and, you know,
I've seen over the years people that.

They don't take care of themselves
and one, so you're either gonna pay by

spending some time each day, or you're
gonna pay by being sick and you're

gonna be have poor health and you're
gonna have poor energy and you're

gonna spend the time in the doctor's
office or in the bed being sick.

And so, you know, I'm
gonna do everything I can.

Just like somebody that goes and
has a heart attack and now all of

a sudden they walk every morning
or they watch what they eat.

So I'm gonna try to do
it on the front end.

And as much as I can to do my
part, and I'll let the Lord do

his at whatever he wants with me.

But I'm gonna try to do my part, to keep
myself in the best health that I can.

Not just for me, but also
for my kids and my family.

I wanna make sure that I'm gonna be.

And the best health that I can for them.

So for me to not care about my body and
fitness and things like that's because

that's being selfish, that I'm not
gonna be all I can be for my family.

I wanna be able to run
around there with my girls.

I wanna be able to be there for.

to help what I need to
help out with my wife.

So I wanna do all that.

And so I wanna make sure that I'm
in the best health that I can.

You know, the, there's a saying.

I do a quote every day on my social media.

I have a thought for the day.

So I think I had one the other,
oh gosh, a little while ago, but

I'm trying to remember it now.

But it's like a man that.

That is healthy, has lots of wants.

A person that's unhealthy has one.

They wanna be healthy.

So, you know, I wanna make sure that
I'm doing my part the best I can to

be as healthy as I can for my family.

Sam Acho: That's so good.

There's so many nuggets and so
much wisdom and so much insight.

We're so grateful.

Last question for me, and then
Cliff's gonna help close us.

Ed Schilling: Hm.

Sam Acho: What was it like coaching
with a coach like John Kalari and

what made him such a great recruiter?

Ed Schilling: Oh goodness.

Coach Cal is great.

I mean, the one thing working
with him is we had fun every day.

I mean, you came in, you never
knew what was gonna happen.

I remember one time he calls
me and Eddie, the chill.

Get everybody ready.

we're gonna go to Signature Airport.

We gotta be there at 7:00 AM.

Okay, so we get there
and we go to the airport.

We don't know what's going on.

We get on a plane, we fly to Dallas.

Bill Parcells is the football coach
of the Cowboys, Dallas Cowboys.

So we get there.

We watch, we're gonna go watch his team.

But before that, we go
to the Dallas Mavericks.

We watch the morning session
of their training camp, then we

go watch the Cowboys practice.

We go and watch the whole practice, watch
him do his thing, talk to Jerry Jones in

the office for a little bit afterwards.

Then we go to dinner with Bill parcels
for about three hours and he's just, you

know, just talking and I'm just listening.

Get back on there, go back to the airport.

We fly back on the private
jet drive back home.

That was the day.

And so that, that's kind of how Cal is.

You never know what's coming.

the only negative with
working with Cal is.

He keeps you busy.

you're always doing something,
but it's a good time.

It just, you're away a lot.

but what makes him such a great
recruiter in my opinion, is if he

could be with a, he could be with a
group of fortune hot 500 presidents and

CEOs, and they think he's one of them.

They think he's a CEO of one of
the top companies in the world.

He can go into a home of a
recruit that has a dirt floor

and they think he's one of them.

and he's got the ability to connect with
anybody, whether it's, somebody that

doesn't have two nickels to rub together,
or if it's somebody that you know is

runs a multi-billion dollar company, they
all, he can connect with all of them.

And I think that's one
of the things he does.

he's got that personality
that he can be right there.

And I always think of
the scripture you wanna.

You want to be all things to all
people so that you might win a few.

Well, you know, coach Cal can be
all things to all people so that

he can recruit a few and get 'em
and win games, so he does that.

But you know, the one thing
about Coach Cal is he is as

loyal a person as there is.

You know, if you're one of his
guys, you're one of his guys

and he's gonna be there for you.

if things, you know, I remember when I
was at Wright State when I, you know,

ultimately got let go, he's like.

Hey, you always got a job with me.

You just coach and you coach the
way you do the things you think's.

Right?

You always got a job with me.

And sure enough, when I, after six years
at Wright State, I went to be with him

at Memphis, you know, and he found a
po, you know, he's like, if I don't

have one, I'll make a position for you.

So, you know, that's how he is.

he's super loyal.

He can connect with anybody and you know,
he's just got that gift to be able to.

To connect with anyone and I think
part of that too is just they can

read that he's gonna be loyal.

He, you know, if you're one of
his guys, he's gonna be with you.

Clif Marshall: Wow, coach.

I always like to take some cliff
notes during these interviews

and I've taken some great ones.

today with you, and I wanted
to share a couple of those.

The first one is, I believe, you were
talking about reading the Bible, right?

Reading over, you know, reading books.

And I read a quote recently.

It said, read many books,
but live in the Bible.

And you mentioned that you've
read for, I think, 20 some years

now, the Bible in one year.

this was a quote I believe from John
Wooden and just, commend you for

that and learn a lot, by watching
you get in the word every day.

And that's my next point.

The second cliff note that I took is.

David Pollock, a great friend of
mine who we've had on this podcast.

He says, you have to be
selfish in the morning.

And I said, well, what does that
mean, selfish in the morning?

And you kind of explained that to us,
you know, getting up at five 15 in the

morning, spending an hour in the word.

Training your spirit and then you go and
you train your body right after that.

Even as a head coach at
Pepperdine, as busy as you are,

you're making time for that.

So my third cliff note was you said it,
do your best and trust God with the rest.

I think all of our listeners, here on the
Sam Tcho Podcast can resonate with that.

So thank you for the cliff Notes.

Coach Schilling, thank you for
your time and thank you for being

a great friend and mentor of mine.

Ed Schilling: My pleasure.

Cliff, it's a truly an honor to be
your friend and your brother, Sam.

It's a real blessing to meet you
and to spend a little time together.

So thank you guys.

Sam Acho: thank you so much, coach and,
Before I even close, I do want to thank

Cliff 'cause so much of the conversations
that we have, the people we have on this

show, it's 'cause of the trust currency
that Cliff has built with people.

Like you coach, you've been coaching
for 30 years, you've co you've trained

Kobe Bryant, you've coached in high
school, college professionally.

Yet as soon as you hear a or
a text message or a call from

Cliff, you say, Hey, I'm on.

And so Cliff, I want to say thank you
for being a man of your word as well.

Because that's one thing I
think we miss out a lot on.

People aren't really men of
their words, so thank you, cliff.

And then Coach Schilling,
thank you as well.

I mean to hear you said, every day I
wake up at five 15, I get my pushes,

get my pulls, and I get in the word
for an hour, and then I go back and do

my workout after an hour, after a 1.25

mile walk.

There's a level of consistency that I
think a lot of people can learn from.

So thank you for teaching us
that over the last few minutes.

Ed Schilling: Well, thank you guys.

Honored to be with you.

Thank you so much.

Sam Acho: Yeah.

And thank you all for listening to the Sam
Macho podcast, featuring Cliff Marshall.

We can't wait to hear what you think.

Not only about this
episode, but other episodes.

We're so grateful to have you
along this journey with us and

Coach Schilling, thank you as well.

We'll see you all next time.