My last sane Saturday

Seven days from now we’ll be waist-deep in incoming scores, press releases and commentary. But for now, it’s a final Saturday of sanity.

The first full Saturday of football kicks off a stretch of craziness in the Coleman household that lasts until the end of March. Between D3football.com and D3hoops.com, the season lasts seven months (and never mind the overlap between seasons). That doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy it — the only thing worse than the seven-month season is that pesky five-month offseason.

Here’s hoping for a successful, exciting and competitive 2005-06 season.

Kicking off the 2005 season

Phew, that’s finally done. The Kickoff 2005, first conceived back in the first week of April, is posted.

If you have password issues, contact ryan@cwis.biz for help. There are also instructions available on the Kickoff login page regarding that. Hope you’re as thrilled as we are!

Typical San Antonio coverage

The San Antonio Express-News hasn’t exactly done the Trinity (Texas) football team too many favors in recent years. Game coverage is almost non-existent. Occasionally there’s a feature. Even, on occasion, the facts are right.

I was reading a story in the paper this evening when I thought my opinion was going to change. Here was a well-written, useful story about the Tigers’ consecutive first-round exits, when there was a glaring error.

“Leading by five going into the fourth quarter, Mary Hardin-Baylor used a punishing ground game to drive 80 and 71 yards for touchdowns, outscoring the Tigers 14-0 down the stretch.

“The Crusaders went on to play in the D-III title game, losing to Findlay, Ohio.”

Thanks for playing.

Still, it’s not as irresponsible as the way the paper blew up Roy Hampton’s run-in with the law after the national semifinal win against St. John’s in 2002. That story, which, let’s face it, pales in comparison to what Division I athletes in the state have been connected with, was a major story in their newspaper for days. Eventually the school suspended Hampton for the Stagg Bowl.

An Express-News columnist after the fact wrote, “I just hope that our sensational headlines on the subject didn’t play even a small role in the decision to oust the star player.”

I’m afraid those hopes were unfounded. Trinity deserves better, and so does Division III.