Volume 89, No.5, July-August 2003

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Duke Magazine-Blue Devil Football:First and Long, by Jim Young-July/August 2003  

Double team: tackling a Terrapin
Double team: tackling a Terrapin
Photo: Jon Gardiner

The ensuing pursuit of the Seminoles was viewed as raising the level of ACC football by its proponents but termed an athletics arms race by its critics. From whichever side the race was viewed, it was apparent that Duke wasn’t much of a participant. One only needed to see back-to-back 0-11 seasons—in 2000 and 2001—to understand that. Now, though, through its construction of the Yoh Center—named for the former chair of Duke’s board of trustees, Harold “Spike” Yoh B.S.M.E. ’58, who donated $5 million to the project—and through its revisions of admissions policies, Duke is entering that race.

It’s a race that has spun out of control, according to William Friday, president emeritus of the University of North Carolina and former co-chair of the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. Friday directs no specific criticism at Duke or any other school in the NCAA. Rather, he faults a system that he says has become too concerned with winning seasons and financial bottom lines. As a result, universities have wandered too far astray from their academic core missions—some with disastrous consequences.

“ I know of one institution that was denied membership in Phi Beta Kappa for ten years because of its reputation in intercollegiate sports,’’ Friday says. “There are ways that judgment gets rendered. It doesn’t get done in seven-column streamers, but it gets done in ways that are costly.”

Duke football coach Carl Franks
Franks’ assessment: trouble began when Florida State joined ACC

Ole Holsti, the George V. Allen professor emeritus of political science, shares those concerns, but applies them more specifically to Duke. He views Duke’s recent changes in football as a misguided attempt to enter a contest it simply can’t win. “I think we’re headed in the wrong direction,” he says. To Holsti, Duke faces several options for its football future. It could try to become a powerhouse and court the off-the-field problems that have plagued universities like Oklahoma and Florida State. It could hold to its status quo and continue on with a failing team sticking out in an athletics program that is successful in almost every other scholarship sport. It could drop the sport. Or it could scale back its ambitions—the choice that makes the most sense to him.

“ The option I like, frankly, is the option that Davidson does,” says Holsti. After years of struggling in the Southern Conference, a powerful Division I-AA league, Davidson College dropped down to play Division III opponents in football. It also left the conference. The Wildcats were later readmitted to the league—except in football—during a period of expansion. As Alleva points out, however, one of the prerequisites for membership in the ACC is fielding a football team. According to conference spokesman Brian Morrison, no school has even brought up the idea of dropping football during the league’s fifty-year history.

(It is interesting to note that not all conferences require their college members to field teams in all sports. In the Big East, for example, Georgetown’s and Villanova’s football teams compete in Division I-AA; their basketball teams in Division I. That divergence reflects the fact that the conference was founded as a basketball league and only later added football. By contrast, football has been a part of the ACC since it was founded.)

Then there is the matter of ACC expansion—a move that most observers believe revolved around the desire to raise the conference’s profile in football. De-emphasizing football at Duke would run directly counter to that plan. Still, Holsti believes that Duke is valuable enough to the conference, thanks to its academic reputation and its men’s basketball team, that the ACC might be willing to accommodate the Blue Devils’ football wishes. “I think Duke holds some really important cards,’’ he says. “Obviously, this stuff is being driven by television money. What does the basketball contract mean if Duke isn’t in it?”

Holsti does not speak for the Duke faculty, but neither is he a concerned voice in the wilderness. Rather, he represents one of several viewpoints on football held by the university’s professors. “I have never attempted any scientific survey of the faculty, but I suspect the majority have little interest in football and no idea what Duke is doing, or why,” says law professor Paul Haagen, director of Duke’s Center for Sports Law and Policy. “Some people clearly believe that intercollegiate athletics has developed in ways inconsistent with the goal of the university, that Duke has already gone too far in making concessions to football, and that we should be going in the other direction. Some like to go to games and want us to win.”

Entering freshmen Zach Maurides and Aaron Fryer think they can deliver those wins for Duke. They aren’t interested in the athletic sins in Duke’s past. Nor are they worried about the obstacles the Blue Devils face in attempting to play football on a level field with their opponents. To them, and other incoming recruits like them, Duke is headed in the right direction in football; they want to be a part in its rebirth. “Schools have cycles on the football field,” says Maurides. “It seems like Duke is on an up cycle.”

Maurides, a six-foot-six, 250-pound offensive lineman from Glenview, Illinois, chose the Blue Devils over several Big Ten schools, including Wisconsin, Illinois, and Purdue. He says he considered the stellar academic reputation that Duke offered, and “it wasn’t comparable to any of these schools around here.” He did acknowledge that if Northwestern University, the academic star of the Big Ten, had shown more interest, his decision would have been more difficult. But he says he still would have chosen Duke “just because the facilities, overall, at the school are better.”

Fryer, a five-foot-eleven, 205-pound running back from Tampa, Florida, shared Maurides’ outlook. Rated as one of the best running backs in a state where talented runners seem to grow on trees, Fryer chose Duke over Boston College and the University of South Florida. He was impressed by the Yoh Center and saw Duke’s academic reputation as an opportunity, not a deterrent. “For me to pass up a chance to attend a school a lot of other people will get turned down from would not make any sense,” Fryer told The Tampa Tribune upon signing with Duke.

Those are the kinds of answers that Franks and his staff are looking for from the nation’s best high-school football players—or at least the ones who can meet Duke’s academic standards. Are there enough of those players out there? Will they be interested enough in Duke? Will Duke’s decision to allow Franks to recruit more academic “stretches” pay off? Will the move blow up in Duke’s face?

The answers to those questions are anxiously awaited by many at the university who lie somewhere between Franks and Holsti on the matter of Duke football. Those who fall into this category have at least a passing interest in the team. They agree that the Blue Devils’ recent performances have been an embarrassment at a school that prides itself on achievement in all areas. They agree that something needed to be done. For now, they’re biding their time, watching the recent changes and closely monitoring what impact the renewed emphasis on football might have on the university at large.

“ Football’s being given a chance,” says Kathleen Smith, a professor in the biological anthropology and anatomy department and chair of Duke’s Athletics Council. “Can you recruit the kids that will make a difference on the field and get through school?”

There are three steps the football team must take in order to answer that question affirmatively. The first—the construction of the Yoh Center—has already been taken. And while it is a marked upgrade from the football team’s previous home in the Murray Building, as well as the physical embodiment of the school’s commitment to the program, the Yoh Center has its doubters. Some look around the ACC, where many of Duke’s rivals are pouring even more money into grandiose structures, and wonder whether the Yoh Center will have any significant effect. Others look at the longstanding budget crunch in the school of arts and sciences and question the wisdom of raising millions for a football building—although it cannot be assumed that those who gave money for the Yoh Center would have given money to an academic program instead.

• continues on page three.