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Pub. from Montana for Glanville and the Viks

forestgreen

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http://www.missoulian.com/articles/2007/07/30/sports/sports03.txt



FRITZ NEIGHBOR: Good idea, even if it wasn't his
By FRITZ NEIGHBOR of the Missoulian



Leaving tickets for Elvis Presley wasn't Jerry Glanville's idea. Nor was it is his idea to leave tickets for D.B. Cooper. To hear him tell it, coaching the Portland State Vikings wasn't his idea.

“Two guys I love asked me to go there,” said Glanville, while holding court at the Big Sky Conference Football Kickoff in Utah a couple weeks ago. “That was June Jones and Mouse Davis. Or I wouldn't have even applied for the job.”

Glanville applied and was hired to replace Tim Walsh, who left to join the Army football program, and it's been no looking back, only forward. OK, there's been some looking back. Glanville's history is just too good.


Asked about leaving tickets for Presley, Glanville reminds those present that it only happened once - “It's sort of got a life of its own,” he said - and that it was Jones' idea. They were with the Houston Oilers, and were set to play an NFL exhibition game against the Patriots in Memphis, complete with a halftime show about Presley.

“We were driving to practice in a pickup truck in Texas, and it comes over the radio that Elvis was spotted at a Burger King in Michigan,” Glanville said. “June says, ‘Geez, we ought a leave tickets for him at the game.' ”

The tickets left for Cooper, the daredevil skyjacker, came the same season in Seattle.

“The FBI had to have agents out there and all that, so we got in trouble, because they had to pay people to see if he showed up,” Glanville said. “And that was Nick Saban's idea.”

I know what you're thinking: Nick Saban has a sense of humor? Apparently so, and Glanville was witness to it.

He's been witness to a lot, from an on-field confrontation with Pittsburgh coach Chuck Noll, to an NFL strike that had him, in his opinion, on the way to the Super Bowl.

“Everybody knew, ‘This (the strike) is over,' ” he said. “I had a kid named Brent Pease, a quarterback out of the University of Montana, and he comes in and learns everything in a week, plays good.

“They had to end the strike, or I was going to win the Super Bowl. Because who wins in a strike? The best high school coach.”

When Portland State opens its season Sept. 1 at McNeese State, it will be Glanville's first head coaching job in the college ranks. It will be interesting to see what a 65-year-old former NFL coach brings to the table.

Portland State wasn't broken when Walsh left, having gone 7-4 in 2006. The Vikings will have new uniforms, a new offense - or old, since Davis returns with his run-and-shoot - and probably a new demeanor on the field and off.

Glanville doesn't have contact during practice, he says, but come Saturdays the architect of Houston's “House of Pain” will want some hitting.

And some fans.

“I think the city could make the school the best job in the country,” he said. “We've got 2.5 million people. What if I get two percent of the people to love what we're doing?”

He would have 50,000 fans, more than will fit in PGE Park.

“I want the guy who never went to college,” he said. “I want the guy who went to Texas.

“Not everybody who goes to a Notre Dame game went to school there.”

Glanville says, “I loved the Big Sky when I never thought of being in it,” and talks about checking the league scores on bus rides to NFL games, wondering how the Bobcats did, since he started his collegiate career at MSU in 1959.

Now the Man in Black is back in the league. Even if it wasn't his idea.
 
This from Idaho:

http://www.journalnet.com/articles/2007/07/26/sports/sports02.txt


Easy to buy what coach sells


Commentary by Dan Thompson

When a coach says he wants to give beer tokens to students, hoping it will draw bigger football crowds, it's hard to take him seriously. When a coach says the Run-and-Shoot offense isn't dead, that his team will perfect it, it's hard to believe he's not living in the 1980s.

When a coach says the Portland State job can become as prominent a program as Notre Dame, it's a laughable comparison. When any coach says such things about a college football team, it's tough to think he's not a kook.

Unless it's Jerry Glanville who's saying it. Glanville, now the football coach of the Portland State Vikings, is a man who can spin a yarn better than the Mustard Seed Dreams Yarn Boutique in Old Town. He said all those things two weeks ago at the Big Sky meetings in Park City, Utah, and for some reason, they sound plausible. Though, the part about Notre Dame is not just a stretch; it's an impossibility.

But there's nothing wrong with dreamin' big. Glanville will make Portland State a better football team.

Immediately he will do so. That's a scary prospect for the rest of the Big Sky, because even though few in Portland noticed, the Vikings were a 7-4 football team last year. This is not to slight Tim Walsh, the last Vikings coach who was responsible for nearly one-third of Portland State's wins since the program's inception in 1947. But Walsh didn't carry an NFL pedigree. He didn't enter a room and instantly become its gravitational center. He didn't excite donors the way Glanville does.

And on the football field, he didn't have a Portland State legend as his offensive coordinator, either. Mouse Davis, who won 42 games in six seasons while coach of the Vikings from 1975 to 1980, will call the shots for Portland State's offense this season. Like Glanville, Davis coached in the NFL - though never as a head coach - and spent time in Hawaii before taking the offensive coordinator job at Portland State.

Davis is the mastermind behind the Run-and-Shoot, and his presence means that, when the Vikings are on offense, Glanville can lower the Aviators and take a nap. Essentially, Portland State has two head coaches: one for the offense, the other the defense. Perhaps that's all it is. Maybe Glanville is just confident and therefore persuasive. He might be nothing more than a charlatan. Next year the Vikings could go 3-8, and fans could be calling for Glanville's head, sunglasses and all.

Not often, though, does a former NFL coach take a mid-level college job like this. Dennis Erickson did so at Idaho and immediately made the Vandals at least competitive in the WAC. How did he do it? By changing an attitude. The Vandals were accustomed to losing. Erickson made them believe they could win.

Glanville doesn't even need to do much of that. The Vikings know they're good already. What makes him unique is that he is not just a coach. He is an ambassador.

He brings a swagger to Portland, something the team hasn't boasted since Davis left. Now both icons wear the Viking green, and Portland State season tickets are no longer the white elephant gifts they may have been in the past.

Glanville says the fans will come. He says Portland State can matter again. He says a national championship is on the way.

And the thing is, nobody's laughing.
 

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