Kill’s Honeymoon Start at U Historic
It’s not true that
Jerry Kill rides
to campus everyday on a white horse. Truth is the savior of Gophers
football drives to work in a white Cadillac.
Symbolism aside, those who care about the
Gophers have taken a serious liking to the new head coach who is trying
to resurrect a program that hasn’t been a consistent winner since
Kennedy and Johnson were in the White House. Maybe it’s no
love affair yet, but a lot of Minnesotans at least have a crush on Kill
who has earned many admirers with his honest talk and sincere actions.
Except for Lou Holtz, no new
Gophers football coach since World War II came to campus and received
more adoration than Kill. University of Minnesota administrators,
former Gophers and fans praise Kill as if they have known and admired
him for years. Even the cynical media has found little fault
with the newcomer so far.
The honeymoon bubble won’t last through
the coming season. The Gophers will be pushed around on the field at
times and final scores could be lopsided. A group of fans and media
will find fault with Kill, justified or not.
But give the former Northern Illinois
coach credit for an extraordinary offseason during which he
won over a lot of people and impressed his athletic director, Joel
Maturi.
“No one prepared me for the unbelievable
job that he has done with our alumni, our boosters, our fans in general
and certainly the media as a whole.” Maturi told Sports Headliners.
“He’s been great.”
Maturi knew about the coach who had a
national reputation for producing results on the field at other schools,
but he wasn’t prepared for the public relations success. Kill’s ability
to make friends fast is a tribute to his character, values and deeds.
“I think there isn’t a person that Jerry
Kill hasn’t met or addressed that he hasn’t won over, and that’s a
credit to him,” Maturi said. “It wasn’t part of the ingredient of the
coach that I knew I was hiring. I hired him because the homework I did
told me he was a great coach, and that our teams were going to get
better, and they would play up to their ability, and we were going to
win in a period of time.”
Three years from now Kill will still have
admirers. The only question is how many fans will be in the Gophers football
tent? Without winning, Kill and Maturi know the number will be smaller
than what they want. That’s the business side of college football and
phase two of the Kill era starts September 3 in Los Angeles against
USC.
How long will the honeymoon last?