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PERRINO: A Football Family’s Take On Urban

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PERRINO: A Football Family’s Take On Urban


Nico Perrino

Football

When I saw late last week on ESPN’s bottom line the breaking news announcing Urban Meyer’s resignation as head football coach at U of F for health reasons, I wasn’t much surprised- and I was even less surprised when he went back on the resignation.
 
 Growing up in a football family where your fall afternoons and entire weekends are consumed by games and practices it’s easy to see how it can wear a man and a family down. My brother and I both started playing football at a very young age, and my dad had coached all throughout our childhood. I have vivid memories from when I was younger of my mom complaining about how she had nothing to do while we were practicing and my dad was coaching, and it became commonplace for her to joke around about how she didn’t have a husband in the fall.
 
As my dad rose up through the coaching ranks with us as we got older -finally ending up at the high school varsity level- he became increasingly scarce around the house. Coaches meetings, practices, games, early morning lifts; all of these coaching commitments amounted to more time at the school with the team than with his family. And with me moving out of the state to go to college, my mom had an even smaller pool of family to spend time with while my dad and brother were off doing their thing during the football season.
 
With my brother going off to college next year and my sister being in high school and at the age where she no longer thinks it’s cool to spend time at home, my mom forced my dad to quit coaching. Although he was only a high school assistant coach –and did it as a hobby instead of a job (he volunteered)- with all the time he spent attending to his coaching responsibilities, my mom didn’t want to be home all alone; empty-nesting by herself.
 
The often hidden part of football is the time commitment that coaches actually take to prepare for the season and each week’s games.  My dad played high school, college, and professional football, and has seen the amount of time that coaches spend on the field or in their offices and away from their families. He’s always told me that a coach has got to love the game to do what they do, because it’s an incredible sacrifice, and it only gets worse as you move up the coaching ladder.
 
The sacrifice is not only one carried by the coach, but one also carried by the coach and his family. When I was discussing with my dad the possibility that Urban Meyer would go to Notre Dame last month the first thing that came out of his mouth was, “no way.” And he didn’t say “no way” for the reasons you, and I, and ESPN might say “no way”, but he said “no way” because of how the move would impact his family- something you don’t hear discussed on any other forum or media outlet.  In a Chicago Tribune article today Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald said that during the season he is usually in the office every morning at 6:50am and often times does not leave until 11pm. That gives him nearly zero time to spend with his family. Now why would Urban Meyer’s wife be at all interested in leaving sunny Florida for barren South Bend? If you’re the wife of a head college football coach and never get to see your husband during the fall, why would you want to spend that alone time in a place like South Bend instead of Florida? Although Urban Meyer did say ND was his dream job, do you really believe his wife will let him take that job, which essentially means that she is going to have to stay alone inside all fall instead of alone outside in the sun? Not a chance.
 
It’s the hidden side of sports. Talk of how a coaching change might impact the families of those coaches who are being considered for the jobs nearly never comes up when analysts are breaking down whether or not a coach will accept a job, but I can guarantee you that the family has way more to do with the decisions than the public is let on to believe.
 
There are things coaches do do, however, to try to alleviate the strain coaching places on the families. In the same Tribune article Fitzgerald said he mandates that all coaches leave work at 5pm on Thursdays for what he calls “date night” so that they have time to go home and spend time with their families. Fitzgerald also takes 2 vacations to Naples, FL each year with his family, one after national signing day in February, and one two-week vacation in July. But even with these initiatives, the sacrifices coaches and families make can take an incredible toll on those affected.
 
I’ve experienced it first hand with my dad (granted, on a smaller scale), and I have no doubt that the long hours away from his family, and nearly unbearable burden Urban Meyer bears at Florida has contributed to his poor health and the decision at the young age of 45 to take a leave of absence.
 
Yet Meyer is the lucky one: He has a very secure job at Florida; one that doesn’t show coaching changes on the horizon. Some coaches aren’t so lucky. Some coaches every couple of years pack up their families and move across the country to accept a new job. The strain this puts a coach is enormous and often overlooked, yet it no doubt puts greater strain on already stressed out coaching families. The constant threat of job loss and subsequent moving amidst the prospect of a poor season must be a hefty weight for coaching families to bear.
 
This is why Urban Meyer’s resignation did not surprise me. I’m actually more surprised that this doesn’t happen more often in schools all across the country. But like I said, when he went back on his resignation I was even less surprised because as my dad has always said, “you’ve got to love the sport” and Urban Meyer, and most other college football coaches, do indeed, “love the sport.”

 

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RIDER: Bring Back the Axe

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RIDER: Bring Back the Axe


Ben Rider

Football

paul-bunyans-axe

Mr. Ben Rider didn't like it when the Badgers captured Paul Bunyan's axe last year.

Well isn’t the internet an amazing thing? 24 hours ago I had no idea this site existed and now I am a columnist for it writing my debut article. For those of you who live outside the Twin Cities area, this will be a normal weekend of football. Those fortunate (or unfortunate depending on your opinion) to be in the greater Minneapolis-St.Paul area will be treated to an invasion of drunken Wisconsin football fans this weekend. Not only are the Vikings and Packers playing Monday night but the 119th “Border Battle” or “Battle for Paul Bunyan’s axe” meeting between the Golden Gophers and Badgers (the longest rivalry in college football) takes place Saturday at 11:00am when many of my fellow students will be fighting the Friday night hangover. Not me, though. I plan on getting in early to TCF Bank Stadium for the victory walk and getting prime lower level seats (student tickets are general admission, first come first serve).

What makes this game different for many long time (and long suffering) Gopher fans, is that #1, the game is back on campus and #2 (and much more importantly), there won’t be a sea of red at the game. Only 2 little sections of red in the nosebleeds. What was embarrassing for so many years for hardcore Gophers fans is that when we played at the Metrodump/Big Inflatable Toilet against Ohio State, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and any other Big Ten team that was having a good year is that it almost felt like an away game. I remember going to one Ohio State game back in 2006 when I swear there were more Buckeye fans in the stands than there were Gophers fans. That is no more and why we are introducing our first (of what I’m sure will be many) “Gold Out” at TCF Bank Stadium on Satuday. In preparation, we even got hats back at our last game against Cal.

Despite the weather, which has been miserable the past two days, you can feel a certain air on the campus about Saturday’s game. I mean, even at our last home football game the mere mention of Wisconsin turned Gophers fans (well the student section at least) in to raving lunatics. Hell, I even started a “f*** the Badgers” chant that caught on for about 30 seconds and that was 2 freaking weeks before the game.

It really is amazing what this brand spanking new stadium (that I have already had the privilege of being in 4 times) can do for the program, fans, and most importantly the attitude on campus and in the city. The student section, 10,000 strong and hopefully will grow when the stadium expands, is psycho, which fits me perfectly. Watching a game over there with my fellow students is a literal workout: Standing, jumping around and dancing in the aisles (no I’m not kidding) and for once the other 40,000 fans are into it too. On 3rd downs the offensive and bench players on the Gophers sideline stand up on the benches and pump the crowd up. I have a blast at these games because it is like nothing I have ever experienced before in my life. A true college football atmosphere. Coach Brewster is a great ambassador for the program too. I knew the guy was special when he put together the #17 recruiting class in the country after a 1-11 season.

My prediction for the game is that the Gophers will win 35-14. It won’t be close. Wisconsin is 4-0 but they’ve had a really weak schedule and haven’t played a road game yet this year, the Gophers are 3-1 with the only loss against Cal who was ranked #6 in the country going into last weekend. The axe will be back home this year, I would talk more about it but that trophy deserves an article devoted solely to it. Go Gophers!

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BURNETT: I Owe Many B10 Coaches an Apology

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BURNETT: I Owe Many B10 Coaches an Apology


Ryan Burnett

In my struggle to understand why B10 revenue sports have taken a back seat to other conferences I’ve called a lot of people names, demanded that others be fired, and even on one occasion demanded that a head coach be castrated. But this morning it hit me, like a cup of ice cold water to the face I discovered the true roots of Big Ten ineptitude. It’s the schools. Not the universities, but elementary, middle, and high schools of the midwest. It’s bad enough the schools aren’t teaching kids to read as well as the Chinese, but it’s unforgivable that they aren’t teaching our kids to throw a ball as well as a Texan. 

Seriously, I owe a lot of coaches apologies. Last week I looked at the top 50 hoops recruits in the ‘09 class and mocked the Big Ten coaching as a whole for only being able to land 4 of them. I blamed it on their boring style of play and their inability to adapt to the modern game. But you know how many of those top 50 prospects lived in Big Ten Country? Four. B10 coaches defended their home-turf. Maybe it’s not their fault they’re stuck tilling a barren garden.

The lack of regional talent was just as pronounced in football where, again, only 4 of the consensus top 50 were from Big Ten Country. And you know what? The B10 landed all four of those players. You know how many of those players were from SEC states? Eighteen!  Twelve came from the Big 12, and eight came from Pac 10 states.  And just in case you’re thinking B10 coaches should go out like Rich-Rod did this year and snatch up some fleet-footed southern boys to bolster your slim pickings, remember that 72% of the top 50 players in 2009 committed to play for a university within their home state. So, poaching ain’t easy. What Rodriguez did was impressive, but it is NOT a long term solution.  When the state you’re in isn’t producing high-caliber athletes for you to pursue, its nearly impossible to go out and get them elsewhere.

I don’t have an answer for this problem, mind you, this is just my mea culpa. B10 coaches actually deserve a (small) pat on the back. I’m especially sorry to the coach (you know who you are) whose scrotum I said should be severed and shoved down his own neck-hole. That was somewhat out of line.

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LINNEHAN: Umps Changing Far Too Many Games

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LINNEHAN: Umps Changing Far Too Many Games


Softball

Andrew Linnehan

 

Big Ten softball umpires are way past their third strike.

Big Ten softball umpires are way past their third strike.

I hate making officials part of the story, I really do. But this year’s B10 softball season has seen far too many games where the umps blow it. I’m talking big-time botches, with petty calls that seemingly change games. The worst part of it is, in a lot of instances, the eye-test indicates these umps have alterior motives for their calls. These game-changing calls are decisions that aren’t consistently called on a regular basis, but instead in crucial times of consequence in the game where it appears the ump is attempting to steal the spotlight.

 

EXHIBIT A: April 8, 2009 - A brilliant pitchers’ duel between Indiana and Ohio State is decided (1-0) on a questionable illegal pitch call against IU’s Sara Olson in the 3rd inning of a game that would have worked wonders for the Hoosier softball program and the newly appointed coaching staff. With runners on the corners and two outs in the third, Indiana did what any sane team would do and walked current batter and POY candidate Sam Marder to load the bases. So with the bases loaded and two out in the third, Sara Olson went to work, only to have her inning abruptly ended by an umpire who thought that his call should be more of a story than an underdog scrapping and clawing for every ounce of blood against the bull mastiff of the Big Ten. Olson would become the 10th pitcher in Indiana history to hurl a no-hitter on this day. Problem is, she became the first to throw a no-no and LOSE. An illegal pitch in softball is like holding in football. It can be called on almost anyone at any moment. So why is the most important moment of the game the ONLY time the umpire felt like calling it?

EXHIBIT B: April 8, 2009 - In Game 2 of a double-header, Northwestern Head Coach Kate Drohan goes to argue a call in the 6th inning. Calmly and maturely, she requests an explanation from the ump about whether or not a tag was applied as her runner went in to second base. When she received the explanation, she turned and headed back in the direction of her dugout. The ump, obviously sensing that she still disagreed with the explanation, followed her path and kept badgering her instead of going back to his spot behind second base and finishing the game. When he did this, he obviously bated her into saying one more word (which, for the record, was not a curse word or anything that constituted an ejection) and then gave the NU coach a heave-ho. Mind you, this was the first ejection of Drohan’s life. Not as a player or a coach — not since she was gracing softball diamonds so small that a few crawls could get you to first — has the NU skipper been tossed. Obviously, she doesn’t partake in the sort of behavior that would induce an ejection. Not unless, of course, an umpire who wants to take over the game and get on his soapbox decides he wants her out of the game. This is the one case that arguably did not have an effect on the game’s outcome (Minnesota was leading 8-2 with one inning to play at the time of the ejection), but it still illustrates how frequently umpires care to be the center of attention.

EXHIBIT C: April 15, 2009 - Another game involving Northwestern, but this time it was Iowa that got a foot up their ass. With two outs in the bottom of the 5th and the game tied at one, Iowa ace Brittany Weil induces what should’ve been an inning-ending ground ball to third to get herself out of a 2-on jam. After both teams were, quite literally, back in the dugout, an umpire (not sure if it was the 1b or HP one) called both teams back out of the dugout and said the inning was not over because they decided (albeit 5 minutes tardy) that Iowa 1B Katie Brown’s foot came off the bag when she caught the throw from third. So the inning, which should’ve been over, continued… And saw the next batter, Adrienne Monka, blast a 3-run HR. That was followed up by a Michelle Batts bomb. Just like that, a 1-1 tie turned into a lame 5-1 NU lead, and a VERY controversial 6-5 NU victory. 

EXHIBIT D: April 18, 2009 - In a 5-5 tie in the 11th inning of a classic battle between yet another underdog (Wisconsin) and B10 giant Ohio State, the underdog gets screwed again on an unquestionably wrong illegal pitch call. With a runner on first, home plate umpire John Peterson called an illegal pitch on UW’s Leah Vanevenhoven, who was in the midst of one of the gutsiest performances of her life. Consequently, the illegal pitch moved OSU’s Courtney Pruner from first to second base, allowing her to score on a Rebecca Schultz single. Want to know WHY the illegal pitch was called? Apparently, when a pitcher licks their pitching hand to keep it moist, she must wipe that same hand off to ensure that the saliva she has put on her hand does not come in contact with the softball. In this particular instance, Vanevenhoven did in fact wipe her hand after licking it, which the Big Ten Network replay clearly showed. Mr. Peterson, however, didn’t see it… And if Mr. Peterson doesn’t see you following the rules, then apparently you didn’t follow them. 

I’m sure there are many more teams/fans that have witnessed situations where an umpire’s ego will take center stage and expunge all of a game’s drama. These are just four cases that I’ve witnessed in the past couple of weeks that reminded me of how critical the need is to reevaluate officiating on an NCAA level. Something has to be done, because no one likes getting screwed by an umpire.

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