‘Brew Crew’ Final Grade Not Pretty
Too bad Tim Brewster
and his staff weren’t on the sidelines in Ann Arbor last Saturday to
experience the Gophers 58-0 humiliation. The “Brew Crew” was
responsible for recruiting most of the players on the Minnesota roster
that was dismantled by Michigan.
If Brewster hadn’t been fired during the
2010 season he would now be in year five as Minnesota’s head coach. A
five-year tenure is almost always enough time to fairly judge a coach
and his staff.
Even though the “Brew Crew” is no longer
wearing maroon and gold sweaters on the sidelines, we can issue the
final grade: Flop.
What first year coach Jerry Kill
inherited was a football team lacking not only playmakers, but physical
and mental toughness. The Gophers are probably the worst team in the Big Ten and
not even capable of beating schools from low level conferences such as
the Missouri Valley and WAC.
Brewster hardly prepared us for this back
in his early years on the job. He criticized the talent Glen Mason
left him, although the rearview mirror now shows that players he inherited from
the former Gophers' coach were the ones that produced some success in
2008 and 2009.
As for Brewster’s own recruiting, he was frequently over
the top in exaggerating the talent he attracted. Brewster’s
players were solidly entrenched last year and also this season. The
record is 4 wins, 13 losses and counting including embarrassing defeats to South
Dakota, North Dakota State and Michigan.
Brewster recruiting hype? Quarterback
MarQueis Gray was similar to former Texas All-American Vince
Young, Brewster said. Playmaker David Pittman, who hardly got on
the field at Minnesota, was reminiscent of Antwaan Randle El.
Not able to land yet another top Minnesota
prep headed for a better college program? Didn’t seem to bother
Brewster who said he had a better stud coming from out east.
There was often the “sizzle” but not the
“steak.” And Brewster didn’t even secure his much hyped high school son
Nolan who landed at the University of Texas where dad built a
reputation as a slick recruiter working for coach Mack Brown.
Hiring Brewster ─ never a coordinator or
head coach at the major college level ─ was a colossal mistake. The
program is so down right now that it could take three more seasons to
pull it up to the Mason level of 2006. Mason was let go after
compiling a 64-57 overall record, but was 16 games
under .500 in the Big Ten.
Losses to USC, New Mexico State, and North
Dakota State were by a combined 22 points. Last Saturday in Ann
Arbor the Gophers lost to Michigan by the worst score in their Big Ten history.
After the game KFAN Radio named punter
Dan Orseske Minnesota’s Offensive Player of the Game. The punter?
Honest.
Building a major college football program
requires coaching, recruiting and time. Brewster and staff squandered
away all three at Minnesota.