Posts Tagged ‘Debbie Yow’

February 9th, 2009 | 12:42 pm

The Family Man

As I led off with in today’s Diamondback story, “James Franklin was a wanted man.”

He could’ve picked up and left after his one season in College Park for some good jobs around the country, but towards the top of the list of things that kept Franklin around (in addition to the fact that he was named ‘coach in waiting’ Friday) was the desire to keep his young family in one place.

Franklin has bounced around the country since he landed his first NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision job as tight ends coach at Washington State in 1998. His travels have taken him to full-time gigs in Idaho, Maryland, Wisconsin, Kansas and NFL internships in Miami and Philadelphia before he returned to the Terps in December 2007.

Franklin’s wife, Fumi, who brought young daughters Ava and Addison to Friday’s press conference wearing Terp attire, spoke of this opportunity as “stability” for her family.

Franklin is from the Philadelphia-area, and his aunt used to work in admissions at this university, so he’s very familiar with the area, part of the reason he is such a great recruiter in the region.

Athletic Director Debbie Yow talked about how excited Franklin was to return to the Terps, and all the way back in August, Franklin told me he looked at this job as a long term opportunity. After the press conference concluded, Franklin expanded on his desire to be a Terp for the long haul.

“If you look at my resume, I haven’t had the opportunity to stay places a long time,” Franklin said. “So being able to be here and have deep roots in this community and not have to move my family, and hopefully I can come in and be head coach and what I’d like to do is retire here and be able to retire as one of the winningest coaches in college football and never have to move my family.”

That’s a pretty ambitious list of career goals, but Friday’s announcement was the first step toward achieving it.

edetweilerdbk@gmail.com

February 7th, 2009 | 01:59 pm

More on Franklin

Sitting behind a raised table at the Gossett Teamhouse in their Sunday best outfits, Athletic Director Debbie Yow, football coach Ralph Friedgen, and offensive coordinator James Franklin joined together Friday for an announcement meant to provide stability and continuity to a Terp football program that has slowly earned credibility during Friedgen’s tenure.

Franklin, entering the second season of his second stint with the Terps, has been designated the coach-in-waiting when the soon-to-be 62-year old Friedgen steps aside.

“I just want to thank everybody for this opportunity,” Franklin, 37, said as part of his opening statement. “I can guarantee I won’t let you down.”

Friedgen’s contract runs through the end of the 2011 season, and Franklin’s new deal calls for the situation to be re-evaluated if Friedgen’s contract is extended past January 2, 2012.

Friedgen, who has led the Terps to six bowl appearances in his eight seasons, spoke of his deep connection to Franklin and the desire to name his successor for the sake of his other coaches and recruiting. Both Friedgen and Yow were clear that Friedgen’s health is not an issue in the timing of the announcement.

“Obviously, I wouldn’t have agreed to it if I didn’t think that James was the right person,” Friedgen said.

What was motivation for the announcement was trying to keep Franklin in College Park. According to Yow, there was discussion about putting this clause into Franklin’s contract when he came to this university from Kansas State in December 2008.

This offseason Franklin, noted for his recruiting abilities, said he had “probably three different opportunities at well-respected NFL organizations and colleges.” One of those opportunities was believed to be with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and new coach Raheem Morris, who Franklin called one of his best friends.

“For us it’s been a year’s type of conversation,” said Yow, who called the move a “common sense decision. “[It was] an occassional thing and not a focus by any means, but we weren’t going to stand by and let a professional team take him away at this point.”

Franklin, who is African American, would be the first minority football coach at this university. There are currently just seven coaches at the 119 Football Bowl Subdivision schools and just one at BCS schools, Miami’s Randy Shannon. Shannon is the second African American coach in ACC football history.

Naming successors has become a trend in college sports where recruiting continues to begin earlier and earlier. Schools such as Florida State, Texas and Purdue have named coaches-in-waiting behind successful head men to lock-in promising assistants and avoid negative recruiting related to coaching questions.

“Coach Friedgen has established a foundation these last eight years,” Yow said. “That foundation is going to be protected.”

More on this story in Monday’s Diamondback.

edetweilerdbk@gmail.com

February 6th, 2009 | 12:08 pm

Franklin named Friedgen’s successor

Terp football offensive coordinator James Franklin will be named the successor to head coach Ralph Friedgen at a press conference today at 3 p.m., according to the Terp athletic department.

Franklin, 37, is entering his second season as offensive coordinator after coming to the Terps from Kansas State last December. Franklin previously worked as receivers coach with the Terps from 2000-2004. He is noted for his recruiting abilities and held the position of recruiting coordinator during the final two years of his first stint with the team.

Friedgen, who will turn 62 in April, is entering his ninth season as Terp coach.

Check back for more updates after the press conference which will include Franklin, Friedgen and Athletics Director Debbie Yow.

edetweilerdbk@gmail.com

March 25th, 2008 | 01:59 pm

Class is in session

Late March means the beginning of spring football practice around the country, and today was the Terrapins’ first day.

Coach Ralph Friedgen kicked off the day with a long press conference, but it felt more like a classroom. Friedgen spent a half hour dictating about four pages of handwritten notes from a legal pad about the upcoming season. The local media got to hear about every player that is returning on both sides of the ball, among many, many other things. It nearly put me to sleep, but then Friedgen pulled out his bug gun: a powerpoint presentation.

No joke. Professor Friedgen paused from his lecture and turned his attention to a big overhead screen behind him. Lo and behold, the local media was then treated to a five-minute presentation that was the absolute highlight of the day.

It was a visibly stunning powerpoint that Friedgen apparently put together to tout his accomplishments since he’s been here. Friedgen isn’t exactly a technology wiz (he refers to Internet blogs as “bogs”) so I was impressed. In the presentation, he compared his current seven-year stint to the two decades of Terp football before he was hired; he showed us how well his athletes do in school; he promoted the expansion of Byrd Stadium; he poured his heart into on-field success, using the phrase “tradition of excellence.”

Remember, this is the local media gathering for this press conference. This isn’t boosters or the Maryland Gridiron Network or fans. It brought back memories of when I was a high school senior taking a tour of the campus.

Well, I wondered if Friedgen was doing this because questions of his job security have been raised after three losing seasons in four years. I figured this might be a chance for Friedgen to make a presentation with Athletics Director Debbie Yow in the room. So I glanced at Yow to see if she was as visibly stunned with what was going on as I was. Yow was on her blackberry.

You can’t make this stuff up.

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