Guess What School
Provides U Football Model?
The Gopher football program begins its 126th
season on Saturday at Syracuse. The program that produced six national
championships hasn’t won any since 1960 and during the last 40 years or
so has struggled to be anything other than a Big Ten cupcake.
So who can the Gophers emulate to improve
their results? Yes, the Hawkeyes and Badgers are easy guesses. Our
neighboring states of Iowa and Wisconsin are similar to Minnesota in
various ways including so-so high school football talent. In the
last 20 years the programs at Iowa and Wisconsin have each won three Big
Ten titles. But there’s probably even a better model to stir the
hope of long patient Gopher fans. Northwestern, for decades a sorry excuse
for a football program, is no longer the “Mildcats,” and may
even provide any
anti-sports folks at the U something to think about.
At Minnesota the leadership wants to
emphasize academics, and also honesty in recruiting. Winning, they will tell
you, is important, too. To all of that Northwestern says: check, check
and check.
Since 1995 the Wildcats have won three Big
Ten championships. Only Ohio State and Penn State have won more titles
during that time. The Gophers' last championship was in 1967.
Northwestern went to the Rose Bowl in 2006. Minnesota was there in
1962, the longest absence of any conference school. Since 1993 when
Penn State joined the Big Ten and made the conference an 11 team league
the Gophers have the 10th worst winning percentage in Big Ten
games, with only Indiana doing worse, according to
http://www.cleveland.com/datacentral/index.ssf/2008/10/alltime_big_ten_standings_and.html
Northwestern, the Big Ten’s only private
school, overcame an embarrassing football reputation with smart coaching
and recruiting. First Gary Barnett, then Randy Walker and
now 34-year-old Pat Fitzgerald have shown that winning can be
accomplished almost any place.
Educational mission? Apparently NU is
still on track there. Northwestern was the top ranked school from a BCS
conference in America, according to a 2008 Forbes listing of colleges.
The criterion included impact of a school’s degree on a career,
how much student debt is incurred, quality of
the professors, and also national and international reputation of the
institution. Northwestern ranked No. 11 among all schools
in the listing and Minnesota was the lowest among Big Ten schools at
554.
Last season Northwestern finished 9-4
overall, 5-3 in
the Big Ten (last time the Gophers did that was 2003, 10-3, 5-3) and
went to the Alamo Bowl. What have the Wildcats done since? Well, at
the top of Fitzgerald’s list of talking points at a Big Ten media
gathering this summer was academics. Collectively, his players had a
3.0 grade point average for spring semester.
Fitzgerald, who played on the teams that
started the Northwestern renaissance in the mid 1990s, has a 10 player
leadership council to help make everyone accountable. That and a whole
lot of other things seem to be working at Northwestern.
Northwestern won the first of its recent
three conference titles in 1995, ending a title drought dating back to
1936. The nine wins last year happened for only the fifth time in
school history. “I think we’re just scratching the surface,” Fitzgerald
said.
As the Gophers begin a season that has
them opening a magnificent new stadium with a third year leader in coach
Tim Brewster, scratching the surface and looking to Northwestern
for inspiration seems like good advice.