Around The Nation’s 2005 review

Football fans and/or those who have read everything there is to read about D3basketball:

Keith McMillan here. Thanks for stopping by the football site still. Some of you have long anticipated this year’s installment of our Year in Review. Thank you for patiently waiting. I can finally confirm that it is up and awaiting your perusal and/or feedback.

If you want to skip right to it, go ahead. If you’re interested in the process, read on:

I turned in the year-in-review to Pat earlier this week. It took him a couple days to format and edit for publication, not to mention fill in a few items I left unfinished when I gave it to him (Hey, there were 108 categories, can you blame me?)

Perhaps you’ve already seen it, and maybe even read through half of it. It is so long Pat broke it into three parts, but we’d like to think it’s longer because we cast our net wider this year and our coverage was more comprehensive.

The year-in-review itself took no less than 25 hours to compile (a normal ATN takes about 6-10), so that’s where the delay came in. Opening up 55 of last year’s categories to fans and readers helped us cover some things we would not have thought of ourselves (like the Marietta/Baldwin-Wallace game, for instance), but it meant that I was working an hour or two a day until about Jan. 10 (we usually take a break from the Stagg Bowl and start up on this project sometime after New Year’s) simply cutting and pasting from people’s e-mails — including those solicited from d3 staff members — into different category headers. Once I got to there, I started writing … and chopping, re-organizing, etc. Pat offered to help write categories a few times, and although Gordon, Pat and Pat Cummings included their input, and several fans contributed quite a bit, I was still hardheaded enough to think I could do it all myself. Perhaps I bit off more than I could chew, as I told Pat at least three times that I was finishing up, and it went on for days and possibly weeks after that.

The first year we reviewed, 2003, Pat wrote half and I wrote the other half, which may have been why it was up by Jan. 6. Last year I believe it posted Jan. 27, and this year my goal was the 15th, which we missed by a few days.

But for good reason. Even after chopping down fan submissions and other writers’ submissions, and getting rid of a few categories that didn’t fit this year or we didn’t have anything for, it apparently reached Pat at more than 14,000 words. We tried to break it up into parts and make it as readable as possible, as half that would have been a lengthy read.

A couple things you should know about the year-end, if you cared to read this far into this post:

1. Some e-mails and quotes were edited for clarity, grammar and length.

2. I’d love to have a research assistant or two next year, either all season or just for this project. I spent hours just charting how all 231 teams did in comparison to our preseason prediction, for example. We also spent some time researching where Justin Beaver’s season fit among the great D3 rushing seasons.

3. I wrote most of the capsules, or tried to source the quoted material where I didn’t. But there are some parts written or re-written by other D3 staff, for the record. (That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t have liked to write it … just means that some capsules, like No. 88, were sent to Pat with an unfinished idea, and Pat did the wording … so if you e-mail me asking why I’m dissing this guy or that guy, forgive me if I know not of what you speak 🙂

4. The beauty of the internet is that mistakes can be fixed quickly and even the print edition is not final. As a habit, we don’t like to change things after publication, but if you do spot something, you have the choice of e-mailing one of us and having us fix it quietly or blowing us up on the board and pointing while you laugh. Choose wisely.

That pretty much covers it. I think I’ve said enough. Time to open up the floor to you all. I’ll be answering questions, I guess, and considering your comments here and on the blog for the next week or two, depending on interest.

Hope you enjoyed your insight into the process.

6 thoughts on “Around The Nation’s 2005 review

  1. Keith-Thanks for all your work, but mostly for number 29; the Six Ways Larry Kehres Awed us with his Coaching. Beyond the obvious facts, you gave some insight into Larry the man. Having had the opportunity to watch him since we were both 19, I am more in awe than most: in awe of what a good, decent, quality human being he is. He is the model of what a coach should be. And for the record, one of the funniest guys you’d ever want to meet.

  2. Evidence of the above from this week’s Alliance Review; Addressing critics of his delegating play calling to his assistants, “All I have to say about that is, I called every play that worked this season,” Kehres joked.

  3. I thoroughly enjoyed the read—it turned out to be a great cure for my insomnia. As a Mount fan, I’m glad the emphasis of this tome was not MUC. There are many programs across the country that have interesting success stories and I for one am glad their stories are being heard. There are certainly many more than D3 had room to print, but this is a beginning.

    I agree 100% with 70’s remarks. I rarely take a second to realize how lucky I am, as a football fan, to be alive and living in Alliance during the the era of Larry Kehres. And of all those seasons, I enjoyed this one the most because they were challenged as they never have been before and they still came out on top.

    Thanks Keith, for what must have been more research and work than I can imagine.

  4. Ditto. LK is a class act, a great coach and an even better man.

    And though MUC has been the King of D3 since the early 90’s, it’s great to see Keith bring to light that D3 football is so much more than just Mount Union.

  5. What I like most about this column every year is some of the under-publicized performances which Keith brings to light. In this year’s column, the best true freshman guys (other than Kmic) are people who had great seasons but got very little notice for them. The under-the-radar game is one even I hadn’t really known about. This column recognized a strong finish by Howard Payne which we didn’t deal with after the upset of Mary Hardin-Baylor. The standings oddity in the SCIAC was something that wasn’t going to get any notice otherwise. Tabbing Simpson’s Ricky Gales as the “true” single-season rushing record-holder was a good piece of detective work that came out of a discussion Keith and I have had multiple times.

    It’s good stuff and people should make sure to read all three parts.

  6. One other note on Kehres…his winning percentage is beyond staggering but when asked about it ultra-success on the field he generally moves the conversation toward academics. He states that a better measure of success might be the fact that his players graduate at a higher % rate than their record on the gridiron. That tells me all I need to know about the Coach and the program in Alliance, Ohio.

Leave a Reply