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Sunday, April 29, 2007

KU offered pleasant surprise during ‘95 football campaign

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Max Falkenstien, the legendary Kansas University basketball and football announcer, has written a new book, "A Good Place to Stop, 60 Seasons with Max and the Jayhawks." Today the Journal-World is running another excerpt from the book, published by Power House. "A Good Place to Stop" is available today in the Journal-World lobby and on our Web site (www.store.ljworld.com), as well as at Barnes & Noble, Dillons, KU Union Bookstore, Jayhawk Bookstore, Walgreens, The Raven and Kansas Sampler.

From Chapter 12

Glen Mason - Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way

As fall rolled around to start the 1995 football season, I didn't feel much excitement. Like a lot of the fans and media, I was apprehensive about the Jayhawks' talent level. Mark Williams was untested at quarterback, and the Jayhawks would have a completely rebuilt defensive line.

Things got worse before the season even started. Linebacker Ronnie Ward, the team's top defender, reinjured a shoulder playing pickup basketball in the spring and was knocked out for the year. Defensive back Tony Blevins had not fully recovered from a knee injury the previous year and decided to redshirt.

Mason had made wholesale changes on his staff before the season. He fired defensive coordinator Bob Fello, a truly unique coach whom I had learned to appreciate, and secondary coach Mark Dantonio. Mike Hankwitz arrived from Colorado to be the Jayhawks' defensive coordinator, and David Gibbs, also a CU assistant, was hired to coach the KU secondary.

No one gave KU much hope for being anything more than a second-division Big Eight team. The Jayhawks were picked to finish fifth in the preseason writers' poll.

But Mason was quietly building a team.

The first couple of games didn't change anyone's feelings. The young Jayhawks, with 15 new starters in the lineup, were unimpressive in a 23-18 victory over Cincinnati in the season opener. KU moved its record to 2-0 with a 27-10 win over North Texas in Week Two.

People started believing a little the next week when the Jayhawks played inspired from the start in a nationally televised game at Memorial Stadium against TCU. KU raced to a 21-0 lead and held off a late rally for a 38-20 victory.

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Comments

Raydude (anonymous) says...

When are you going to finish he piece?

April 29, 2007 at 8:31 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

fabio (anonymous) says...

After that KU wins thier next 4, propelling them to #6 in the nation, then they get clobbered by KSU 41-7, and Nebraska I think 41-3. After that beat UCLA in the Aloha Bowl 51-30. They finish 10-2.
Im more interested in the parts of the book that will be talking about the years I wasnt around to enjoy.

April 29, 2007 at 10:48 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

KUGreenMachine (anonymous) says...

next sunday max is having his book signed at the 6th street hy-vee

April 29, 2007 at 12:45 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

yovoy (anonymous) says...

i didn't remember that we beat 'cla that badly, but i remember it being sweet!

April 29, 2007 at 6:52 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

bmcmich1 (anonymous) says...

Yeah, it was total whoopay-vous. I think that was when they had Karim Abdul-Jabaar as their RB, too.

April 30, 2007 at 10:14 a.m. ( | suggest removal )