I got this note today. I think it really sums everything up nicely. Also we are getting some really nice responses from ALOT of colleges around the country:
http://northwestern.rivals.com/forum.asp?sid=901&fid=57&style=2
COACH. WALKER.
When a coach performs the impossible, you begin to
think he is untouchable.
Randy Walker's death is a stunner -- and that reaction
shouldn't be limited to super-intense Northwestern
football fans like me. (Frankly, I'm devastated.)
Winning football at Northwestern used to be the
biggest oxymoron in sports. Gary Barnett broke
through; Walker took it to the next level:
Consistency.
By the end of last season, when Walker led
Northwestern to its third bowl appearance under his
7-year tenure, one stat stood out:
He was the first NU coach to lead the program to four
seasons with at least six wins since the turn of the
century -- the 19th Century.
That might not sound like much to a fan of Notre Dame
or USC or Oklahoma or Penn State, but to
long-suffering Northwestern fans, simply being a
perennial contender for bowl eligibility was like
becoming a national power.
After the high of Barnett's tenure, Walker delivered
year-over-year stability, even as he imported a wild,
high-octane spread offense that produced endless
dramatic, you-never-know finishes.
That offense was showcased in one of the most
entertaining games of the last decade (2000: NU 54,
Michigan 51); in the 2nd-best bowl game last season
(Sun Bowl: UCLA 50, NU 38); and was even analyzed by
some of the top programs in the country (Urban Meyer
has called it an influence).
Year after year, Walker had college football's
longtime laughingstock in the hunt for a bowl game;
week after week, he kept the team IN games.
How does a coach whose heart carried a historically
horrible program to the fan's bliss of weekly
competitiveness die of a heart attack?
It's a result as impossible as his on-field
accomplishments.