Brewster Wants to Rank with the Great Coaches
Tim
Brewster wants to eventually be remembered as a national championship and hall
of fame coach. The Gopher coach talked to Sports Headliners
earlier this week about his goals and determination. Although his first
head coaching job has started with a 1-4 record, including 0-2 in the
Big Ten Conference, and despite critics who think he’s too positive and
enthusiastic in his speech, Brewster said he won’t be modifying his
public or private approach.
“I am always going to be me, that is a
(glass) half full guy,” Brewster said. “A guy who is unbelievably
excited about the opportunity he has. And irregardless of what anybody
thinks, I am going to believe every second of every day, that we’re
going to make the Gophers special again.”
Brewster, 46, waited a long time to become
a head coach on the collegiate or pro levels. Following years of
serving the Mack Browns, Marty Schottenheimers and Mike
Shanahans, his intensity is in overload mode to prove himself. “I
am not interested in going to a bowl game,” Brewster said. “I am
interested in winning a national championship. I am not interested in
being a football coach. I want to go down as one of the great coaches
of all time. That’s my mindset and it always will be.”
The interview focused on why and how
Brewster became and remains so optimistic about life. He said his
outlook has always been upbeat and he talked about his divorced mother
who raised two sons while creating a positive home
environment. Despite the divorce, Brewster’s father was part of his
life, too, and a role model. Al Brewster, who was on the
sidelines last Saturday night watching his son coach against Ohio State,
is now 70 years old but works six days a week in a shipping warehouse.
“Every time I feel sorry for myself I think about my dad who works 12
hours a day, six days a week,” Brewster said. “And he’s 70 years old and
he’s had cancer.”
Brewster was asked about negative thoughts
that may go through his mind. “I am always thinking of not the problem
but the solution,” he answered. “We all have problems that are
presented to us but a lot of people dwell on the problem itself and I
don’t. I am immediately thinking about the solution and how to fix it.
…When in the face of the storm, in the face of adversity, I think
about leadership. I think about (how) everybody is watching me to
see how I am going to respond, to see how I am going to act. And they’re
going to feed off me and so I always want to handle things the right
way. Particularly now in the position I am in.”
For Brewster, happiness is going to work
every day. “I love football,” he said. “I loved playing (the) game and
then the opportunity to get into coaching. To me, my dream in life was
to be a head football coach. Everything I’ve ever done has been wrapped
up with my goal and intention of being a head football coach. And then
to be the head football coach at a place like the University of
Minnesota, such a storied football program, such tremendous tradition
and history (six national titles, 18 Big Ten championships). I feel
such a responsibility to the state of Minnesota and to all Minnesotans
to make this place, make this program, special again. I mean each and
every day I am going to drive myself and drive our football team and
those around me to make this a special program again. …”