It's a new dawn in the land of the Golden Buffaloes. After the longest and darkest night in the history of the Colorado football program, a light has begun to show on the horizon. The view outside is beautiful and so is the weather. The flatirons loom above campus and snow in the hills and high country complete the wondrous sight. Yet another of the more than 300 days of sunshine we enjoy every year, without the high heat of the desert or the crushing humidity of the south.
As an old coach here once said, the University of Colorado and Boulder have EVERYTHING that money can't buy. It is stunningly gorgeous. The town itself is the fittest in America, and Boulder is also the most highly educated city in the US. World class skiing and snowboarding, cycling and mountain biking, hiking and mountain climbing, hunting and fishing, tubing and camping are all right here. And CU itself is a world class school.
What has been missing for much of the last decade is a decent football team. Those of us who were fortunate enough (or, as some would say, old enough) to watch Bill McCartney take a program in shambles and build it into a national powerhouse have longed for the school to regain the glory. The new man in town, the new Big Man on Campus, appears to be the man the Colorado faithful have been waiting for. He's sincere, he's knowledgeable about the game as the son of a college coach, he's trained at the side of coaching great Bill Parcells, and most importantly, he and the staff he has assembled have done the job before. And since he has been able to do it before, he has a plan to do it again.
To be more specific, Mike MacIntyre and his staff know how to turn around a program. They took a very down program at San Jose State and turned it from a team with one win in a season into a team that won 11 games last year and came up just short of downing Pac-12 champion Stanford. And this turnaround happened in only 3 years. More importantly for those involved, the new Coach Mac has done it the right way. He stresses academics and accountability. It is the discipline that young men need to succeed in life. He stresses stength and knowledge both on and off the field. And he and his staff of assistants excel at teaching their young men how to do things right.
The Universty of Colorado is my family university, and I am proud that no one in Boulder is willing to sacrifice our community and our reputation by being willing to lower our standards and expectations. Coach MacIntyre goes after young men who are not only good athletes but also good students and citizens. I am glad that he won't be willing to dismiss a prospective recruit's multiple arrests or horrible grades just because he runs a 4.3 forty yard dash. Being fast can only help you in life if you know where you are going.
As a fan for 30 years, since I arrived in Boulder to marry my sweetheart and attend CU, I look forward to watching these young men represent themselves and my university with honor and integrity. And I look forward to them learning that you can win at the highest levels without sacrificing those values. Go Buffs!
How could anyone not want to come to Boulder after reading that?! I love BoulderDevil's enthusiasm and positive outlook for the program.
ReplyDeleteHow about that Oregon game last night!?
Go Buffs!
Thanks David. I hope to get a post in about the awesome job done by the Basket-Buffs against the Ducks.
ReplyDelete