“OK, well, that’s the University of Minnesota; I hope you enjoyed the tour. I think you’ll agree this is a beautiful campus, even in January. I can tell you, it’s even better once spring rolls around. Now, our stadium is just a couple miles off campus, right downtown actually. We’d love to show you around, but unfortunately, there’s a tractor pull there this afternoon, so we’re not able to give you a tour of the facility.”
Sounds absurd, right? A college football coach telling a recruit the stadium he would be playing in was overtaken by a tractor pull?
Welcome to recruiting for former Minnesota coach Glen Mason . Welcome to recruiting at the Metrodome.
Sometimes it was tractor pulls, other times snowmobile contests, he said. It wasn’t like he didn’t understand why those events were going on — a 64,000 seat indoor arena couldn’t sit idle for the majority of the winter.
But being unable to show potential Gophers where they would play their collegiate games wore on Mason after awhile.
“It became very frustrating that [the stadium] wasn’t on campus,” Mason said.
The atmosphere at the Dome wouldn’t exactly be described as collegiate, either. Off-campus, indoors — not exactly attractive for a recruit.
Ironically, when the decision was made to move from Memorial Stadium to the Dome after the 1981 season, it was expected to help with recruiting.
“One of the selling points was, it’s going to help recruit because we’re going to play indoors and we’re going to get kids from Florida, California and Texas — great football states — who aren’t going to be afraid [to come to Minnesota] because they don’t have to worry about playing in the cold,” Athletics Director Joel Maturi said.
Mason found that logic to be flawed.
“You could show prospects from the south that you play indoors; you don’t have to worry about the weather. But the weather’s still severe here when you have to go to class so that negated it,” he said. “I was always one to adhere to the belief that our weather during football season here in Minnesota isn’t any different than it is Iowa City or Ann Arbor or Columbus or Madison.”
Recruits weighing the Gophers against Iowa, Michigan, Ohio State or Wisconsin had plenty to consider, one factor being: Do I want to play in an on-campus, outdoor stadium that’s packed to the gills every weekend, or do I want to play in an off-campus, climate controlled bubble that might be more packed during a tractor pull than a football game?
But as much as Mason felt football needed to be moved back to campus, there was only so much he could say.
“It’s not something you want to say loudly publicly, because he had to recruit to that place,” Maturi said. “You don’t want to tell recruits, ‘This isn’t a good place to play.’ ”
“At the same time, in the appropriate time and place, say, ‘You know what? We need to move this back to campus.’ Coach [Mason] said that more than once and rightfully so.”
Out with the indoor, in with the outdoor
Mason got his wish, albeit a few days late. On Dec. 31, 2006, two days after the Gophers melted down in the second half of the Insight Bowl against Texas Tech and lost 44-41, Mason was fired.
On Jan. 3, 2007, the schematic design and budget for TCF Bank Stadium were approved by Minnesota’s Board of Regents.
Then on Jan. 17, 2007, it was announced that Tim Brewster would be the head coach recruiting to a brand new, world class outdoor facility on the east edge of campus.
Nearly two years later, Brewster is experiencing the impact TCF Bank Stadium has on Minnesota football.
“I don’t think there’s any way that you can overestimate the good that it’s going to do our program and the good it’s already done our program as far as recruiting is concerned,” Brewster said.
Brewster brought a bold vision to Minnesota — one of elevating the Gophers to Big Ten and national prominence — and he said the stadium is a big step toward that goal.
“Kids want to see a financial commitment. Kids want to see shiny new things when they visit your campus,” Brewster said. “We’re showing them a gorgeous, brand new stadium that’s incredible and kids want to play in [it].”
True freshman Troy Stoudermire, who was recruited from Dallas Skyline High School , said the new outdoor stadium did play a big role in his decision to attend Minnesota.
“I really like the outdoor stadiums better. When we went to Ohio State, that was the best thing ever — going in and seeing all those people,” he said. “I just want something like that for us, so hopefully it will be like that next year.”
It should be — there’s already a waiting list for 2009 season tickets. Add a packed house to the list of things Brewster and his staff can promote when talking to recruits.
“I think coach Brewster will tell you — at least on the front end — because of the newness and the excitement, he feels that [TCF Bank Stadium] is helping us sell the program,” Maturi said. “And I don’t doubt that that’s the case.”
Comments
More excuses from Glen
Whine all you want about the fact you didn't have a good recruiting tool in the Metrodome, Glen. That doesn't diminish the Sunday through Friday facilities at the Gibson-Nagurski complex. How much was the recruiting hurt? Look at the NFL talent on, say, the 2003 team -- that didn't have to play Ohio State or Purdue but still couldn't finish better than 5-3 in the Big Ten and didn't go to a New Year's Day bowl: Marion Barber, Laurence Maroney, Thomas Tapeh, Anthony Montgomery, Darrell Reid. A capable senior QB in Asad-Abdul Kaliq, a decent No. 1 receiver in Aaron Hosack, a good-enough back seven.
The talent level was high enough to build a 28-7 lead against Michigan in 2003. It was good enough to rally late against Michigan State that same year. It was good enough to build another lead at Michigan the year after that, and it was good enough to have Wisconsin down 10 in 2005 with 5 minutes left. The coaching failed them all those ocassions.
I'd also dispute that Mason didn't whine about a bad Saturday stadium. It always seemed to me he used that as a crutch to waltz into the fat contract extension he signed after another mediocre 2005 season. Which was, of course, bought out a year later.
The reason Glen Mason failed in the latter half of his tenure wasn't the facilities. Yes, he deserves commendation for getting Minnesota from bad to mediocre early in his time with the Gophers. Problem is, he never brought them past that level of success. His firing was deserved. It just came a year too late, after a huge extension that put in in the top tier of well-paid Big Ten coaches despite no New Year's Day bowl games, let alone 6-win Big Ten seasons.
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