‘Keeper of the
Game:’ Don Swanson
A couple of years ago
Don Swanson
asked me to speak to a luncheon group that he was involved with. I
almost turned him down because it’s a toss up as to what bothers me
more: public speaking or having a car accident.
I accepted the invitation and I am
grateful for that decision. I knew “Swannie” for 30 years and he did
far more for me than I ever did for him. He used to emcee the prep
all-star football game banquet in the early 1980s and never asked for
compensation. Years later he okayed a consultant’s role that
contributed to my income.
In recent years Swannie was supportive of
my Web column. He took an interest in the column and what I was doing
even though he didn’t have a computer. Swannie’s friend Jim
Dotseth printed out the columns for him.
I was reminded of all this on Monday at
Swannie’s funeral. I listened to his close friend
Ron
Stolski eulogize him. Stolski told a large gathering of friends and
family at Mount Olivet Lutheran Church how Swannie, a former educator
and coach in the Minneapolis public schools, gave to others. He
listened to people, helped and encouraged them. “It was never about
him,” Stolski said.
Reverend Paul Youngdahl reminded
the audience that Swannie was a Minneapolis guy with a capital M. He
was born in Minneapolis, attended South High and made much of his
reputation at Patrick Henry where he was the football coach and athletic
director. He regularly attended church at Mount Olivet in south
Minneapolis and in recent years mentored city high school football
coaches and players.
Each spring he helped organize a coaching
clinic for prep coaches in the state whose roster of speakers has
included the likes of Brian Billick and Tim Brewster. The
clinic is promoted by the Minnesota High School Football Coaches
Association, an organization that Swannie was helping when I met him,
and he was still assisting in his final years.
Condolences to Swannie’s family
including wife Barb, their children and grandchildren. Rev.
Youngdahl talked about the importance of the grandkids on Monday. He
was reminded that grandpa Swannie even took an unusual challenge once
and ate a minnow.
Swannie was pleased, too, about his
Swedish heritage and being a graduate of Gustavus Adolphus College. “He
called me 'Pollock',” Stolski said. “I am half Swedish. I have never
been prouder.”
The last time Stolski saw Swannie was on
Saturday, September 12. Swannie was weak from his fight with cancer,
almost unable to speak, and would pass away within a few days. Swannie
asked Stolski, the head football coach at Brainerd High School, about
the result of the game the night before.
“We lost,”Stolski said.
“Win the rest of them,” Swannie replied.
Always teaching and encouraging. Right to
the end.
Thanks, coach, for your integrity, caring
and devotion to football and beyond. You were, as Stolski said to
Swannie’s friends and family on Monday, a “keeper of the game.”