SportsThursday CU game helped save Solich Given that it’s awfully tough to be caught dead in this state with out an opinion on the Husker _ T tv/uiuou ivaiii) a wonder what John most fans are Gaskins thinking about good ol’ Frank Solich right about now. I wonder, but that doesn’t mean I care. See, like most, but not all, of you born and bred Comheads, I don't really know a damn thing about NU football, I because, you see, I’ve never been on the team (thank God for you). Granted, I’ve been following ' NU since the week before I came out of my mother's womb, when Jim Pillen recovered Billy Sims’ fumble on the three-yard-line that gave Tom Osborne his first win over Barry Switzer in six tries. But I can’t tell you diddly squat about strapping on a helmet, strapping on a jock, towel-snap ping, or being flattened to the ground like a pancake by a 300 pount mammoth in pads com ing at me like a dump truck out of Iowa. But, like everyone else, I have an opinion on things. And I find it a very interesting time to have an opinion on how Frank Solich has performed so far as a coach.. My rating? About fair to part ly cloudy. We all know about his 21-5 start and No. 1 spot in the polls. Certainly the man is no program destroyer. But like it or not, he is still fly ing on Tbm Osborne’s borrowed wings and blockbuster recruits. The pipeline system is still oper ating smoothly. He had a genius defensive coordinator. I could go on. But you can't argue with 12-1. You can’t argue with a Big 12 Championship. You can’t argue with consensus preseason No. 1, no matter if Solich or Gerry DiNardo is your ring leader. So I would assume most logi cal people are happy. Just not quite doing the Frank Solich trib al dance quite yet Which brings up a point: How would we be rating Solich had he gotten a couple of bad breaks and NU ended up, say 10 2, or 9-3 last season? Probably not calling for his head, but probably a little skepti cal, like people were of Osborne before he finally beat Switzer. And Solich would have received a lot more blame for losing than the praise he receives now for winning. See 1998. mats couege iooiDau. inais the fickleness of the media and fans - especially in this state. The dreaded "H” game - the hypothetical game - is meaning less to coaches and players. What happened, happened. But the game is fun and can make you think. Let’s travel back in time to Boulder, Colo., the day after Thanksgiving, 1999. Nebraska Colorado. If you recall, NU had the game in hand, up 27-3 late in the third quarter. Solich, or should we say Nebraska, put their feet up on the coffee table and fell asleep on the couch. When they woke up, it was 27-27 and Dan Alexander fiunbled, giving way to a mean Colorado attack at a victory. On the last play of regulation, CU kicker Jeremy Aldrich let a straight-away, 37-yard field goal my cocker spaniel could have made sail just inches wide left Overtime. NU prevails. Big 12 Championship. Fiesta Bowl. 12 1. No. 1 preseason ranking. We like this Solich guy. What happens if it is made like it should have been? No Kg 12. Hello, Holiday Bowl II. Billy Warbucks Byrne's wallet growls out of starvation. 1 know, that s purely hypo thetical, but talking with players and media this week, it’s a strong point: This game, and sports in general, is fickle. We know the dich£ - die ball can bounce both ways. After all, no Matt DaVison catch, no Miracle in Missouri, no 1997 National Championship. No tipped two-point pass against Miami, 1983 National Championship. Thousands of examples can be given. The point is that when you watch, follow, live and die by every play this season and judge Frank Solich, remember that sometimes the outcome has very r Nebraska Head Coadi Frank Sotidi speaks to the assembled press at this yeart Nebraska FootbaRMedb D»y>tape recorders catch ing his every BY JOHN GASKINS We’ve seen the routine for three years now. Frank Solich, sitting in front of a microphone, or huddled by reporters, or on the set of his TV show. Rigid. Stiff. Bland. Plain. Devoid of all things remotely amusing. We’ve read it and heard it all before: certainly this and tremendously that, sometimes pleased, sometimes disappoint ed, never too high or low. All of it is said in a tone of voice comparable to Ben Stein reading an obituary list. We know the drill, and it gets tiring. It’s not that Solich is eva sive or chilly, a la Bill Snyder. It's not that he has nothing to say, either. It’s just that, well, Frank Solich is... Frank Solich. "Frank is not exactly the type of coach that’s going to fill up a reporter's notebook or be the first quote in a story,” Kansas City Star sports writer Blair Kirkhoff said. He s not a good 01 ooy like Bobby Bowden and he doesn’t do card tricks like Lou Holtz. He answers questions very thor oughly- We’re not expecting him to let his hair down or get down and get funky anytime soon.” Get down and get funky? No, not Frank Solich. But certainly the man can’t really be who he is in front of the microphones and cameras. Can he? Dig a little deeper, though, beyond the spotlight, and Solich is neither the talking stiff most of us see nor the closet table-top dancer we wonder he might be. He’s Frank Solich. “With Coach Solich, what you see is what you get," kicker Josh Brown said. “He doesn’t pretend to be anything else." Still, going beyond that spot light is worth a shot, isn’t it? *** So, Matt Davison, one of the more outspoken and laugh-trig gering members of the NU foot ball family, is enlisted in the hope he will provide an unashamedly, witty way to spin his coach’s lack of spice. But it doesn’t happen. Davison, d 'spite understanding the angle of approach, goes the opposite way. He says Solich, outside of practice and games, is just one of the guys. He lets his guard down more frequently than most of us would imagine. Frank Solich? Guard down? Right on cue, Solich strides down the hallway. He smiles jovially. He laughs. He jokes around. Seems as if he just left a blowout fraternity party from his college days at UNL in the mid-1960s, back when he was a bulldog All American fullback for media But an NU sports informa tion official makes it clear that Solich doesn’t want to talk. He’s busy. Besides, the coach already told the official that “he’s too boring for 15 minutes” of talking about himself. On the surface, it is a valid argument. Solich, much more the Osborne vanilla flavor than the Rocky Road Devaney, set the tone for his public persona, or lack thereof, the very second he was introduced to the world as Osborne’s successor. It was Dec. 10,1997, at the same press con suit, plain red tie, plain parted hair style and plain face with an occasional plain smile. And, like his predecessor, Solich spoke in plain words. No blockbuster quotes, no barn burning jokes, just straightfor ward statements reporters could have penciled into the post-conference transcript before he even opened his mouth. And that's the way he likes it “When I took this thing over, the last thing I felt I wanted to do was be flamboyant” Solich said. Three years since, little has rnenaiy cnangea. case party-man in point: early Bob August's Big 12 Devaney. Media Day Frank 2000 in Kansas S o 1 i c h ? City, Mo. Smiling Solichwore jovially? another plain Laughing? suit and was Joking the only one of around? 12 coaches, Yep. including the That’s morbidly Frank placid Snyder, S o 1 i c h . who cracked Believe it. nary a joke, “ I story or dabble think he’s of anything got a little that raised •<7* ? Behind the public image £?dviw8 lies the same Solich p“ !he got a side only thing that maybe story by John Gaskins “bucKm none of us regular Husker see. beat writers “Every was Solich’s once in a while, he shows flashes of what he’d be like to hang out with on a fishing trip. So, maybe years down the road, I can go on some kind of vacation with him and see what he’s like, because I think there’s a side to him that would get along with my other side.” So, Davison hasn’t actually seen the side, but is intrigued. Frank Solich? Intriguing? *** It’s time to talk to Frank, to find out about this “other” side. ference that Osborne announced his retirement The passing of the torch crossed more than just a football philosophy plane. Down stepped Osborne, whose sto icism lulled reporters for 25 years. Up stepped Solich, who immediately offered little rea son to believe there would be any great awakenings in the excitement department from NU’s football coach. Solich sported a plain gray rampant use ot the words cer tainly” and “tremendous.” In a nail-biter of a race, “tremendous” eked out the win in a legendary late-conference, tremendously-dominated para graph. But both words came away winners, each having been said more than 15 times. “I don’t try to come up with any clever terms or big words or funny jokes or spend time giving something that is entertaining,” Solich said. “I don’t prepare or work tremendously hard on JoshWoHe/DN dealing with the media. My time is spent on football. “In the long run, it serves you better to be direct and just answer the questions.” *** i So Solich, and his players, defend his “tell it like it is” mm ner. But that's just the football family. Surely sports pundits, state-and-nationwide, get side of hearing the same old song and dance. Wrong. Most sports writers and broadcasters accept it “Frank has coachedln an era where there’s general hesitancy toward the media,” said Jim Rose, a long-time Nebraska sports broadcaster and talk show host. “People are writing and talk ing about everything you say, and as a result, these guys are very generic in news confer ences. "I don’t think he’s bland. When Osborne got the job, he was bland, and he always was media shy. I know (Solich), and he’s got a great personality, one of warmth and sincerity that comes out at different times.” But the Solich media, players and coaches don’t just like him simply for saying things they already know. There’s more to it It’s called openness. Ttust Care. And it’s something invisible in Solich until he looks you straight in the eye. "Compared to any other col lege coach in the country, by far he is the most accessible,” Kirkhoff said. "If he walked into the back of a room filled with reporters and had to make his way up to the podium, he wouldn’t mind stop ping and chatting with them a bit. He understands their job and wants to help them with it" Simply put, "he’s one of the nicest, greatest guys you could deal with in college football today,” Rose said. Frank Solich? One of the nicest, greatest guys? To a Please see SOLICH on page 13 Missouri hopes airing it out leads to Big 12 success ■Coach Larry Smith junks ground attack to emulate aerial offenses like K-State BY DAVID DIEHL Call them conformists. Accuse them of being followers. Go as far as to call them sheep, lust don’t call them boring. Entering the 2000 season, Missouri has adopted a similar, pass-happy offense to the aerial attacks already employed by the likes of Oklahoma, Texas Tech and Kansas State. The new Tigers offense will feature radical passing sets with things like five wide receivers and a sandlot football type flair. Such unconventional offens es are emerging in the Big 12, and across die nation, and are * W becoming more, well, conven tional. “(Coach) Larry Smith has accepted it,” said Associate Coach Rickey Hunley at the Big 12 media days, sitting in for Smith who was recovering from blood dots. “He’s accepted it just like he learned to accept e-mail, computers and losing the type writer. “It’s the future.” Missouri is looking for a change this year after an anemic offense was outscored by an average of 13 points per game in route to a 4-7 season a year ago. Tight end Dwayne Blakely, an honorable mention All-Big 12 pick last year as a sophomore, said he and his teammates had some bigger responsibilities to carry this fall. “The offense has a lot of * weight on its shoulders,” Blakely said. “There were some games last year we didn’t even score. I mean, that's the whole goal, to score.” Last year’s offense was bal anced, but neither rushing nor passing was satisfactory. Mizzou ranked eighth in the Big 12 and No. 79 nationally with a 337 yard-per-game average. This year, Blakley said that figure should be about 60/40 on the passing side. “The good thing about this offense is you can’t key on any one guy,” Blakley said. “We’ve got five wide receivers and numer ous tight ends - sets where any body can get the ball at any time. “It not only gives me, but everybody, the chance to make big plays.” Defensive end, and All V America candidate Justin Smith said the offense was beginning to make the defense do double takes in practices. "After spring ball and seeing all the sets they threw at us and all the screens they threw, it was different. Not all of it worked, but some did, and that’s a real differ ence from last year. "We’ve got some good play ers and if our offense is clicking this year it'll be one of the top in the North Division. If so, that offense could in turn help out the defense, too, Blakleysaid. "This is what has been thrown at them by other teams,’’ he said. “It'll help them stop other teams that pass a lot. It’s not only going to help us score points, but also help our defense prepare, too.” Big XII Preview Missouri Tigers Preseason Rank: 6th ” (North) 1999:4-7 (1-7 Big XII, w 6th in the North) Offensive Starters Returning: 7 Defensive Starters Returning: 7 Prognosis: Snappy ^ nawoffansa won't keep Mizzou from hanging out In the cellar. D«ian Lonowski/DM * ! 1