COACH HAWKINS: Good morning, troops! Day two, gotta finish. We've got three
guys here. Ryan Walters, our senior safety. Ryan has been a great kid for us and
a real leader for us and somebody I've hung my hat on since I've been there. And
George Hypolite, who is our senior defensive tackle, very good player. Also just
a great icon I think for our program. He's already graduated, tremendous
community service guy. And Daniel Sanders, AKA Girthy, you'll probably hear us
refer to him as Girthy. He'll be a guy 20 years down the road you won't be able
to remember his name but his nickname. Our senior center. Happy to have those
guys here. Opening comments. It's really great to be here. And I mean that
sincerely. I think I just asked these guys, Do we get one of those helmets?
Being in the Big 12 is a great privilege. And being a college football coach is
a great privilege. And being able to be a part of this conference and so much
tradition and so much excellence and I love the heartland of America and being a
part of something that's been around for a long time. Obviously the Big 12 is
somewhat new, but certainly the programs and the traditions in it are not. It's
awesome to be in a program who faces some of the best programs in the country
and some of the best players in the country. And I think so many people have
asked me about our schedule both in and out of conference, and I think, quite
frankly, that's why you do it. I think that's why you play, I think that's why
you coach. And certainly have a tremendous amount of affinity for the great
players in our conference and being able to compete against those guys, as well
as so many great coaches and legendary programs. So I'm always fired up and I'm
certainly fired up to get going again this year. I've told my wife many times
I'll know when it's time to retire because it just seems like every year my hair
starts on fire again, I'm fired up to be coaching. So I'm very blessed to have
this job and be at Colorado and be in this conference.
Q. Would you talk about the buzz in Boulder around Darrell Scott and any
sense of urgency that a coach might feel in getting a recruit like that on the
field very fast?
COACH HAWKINS: Well, you guys have been around sports a long time. And
there's a lot of great players and a lot of great athletes in a lot of sports
that never amounted to anything and to some degree were great tragedies. My
biggest talkings and dealings with Darrell have more to do with understanding a
quality balance of life and what it takes to be successful. And he's a
tremendous talent. He's a great player. He really is. And he is a good kid. I
think he's a very humble kid. But, to me, that -- to get his feet on the ground
academically and socially and really focus on those type of things. Because his
game will come around at some point, whether that's day one or week one or year
two, I don't know. I know that it will come at some point. But my biggest push
for him is just all the intangible factors, really.
Q. Touching on something you mentioned a minute ago, the schedule. Given
how difficult your schedule is this year, how big and what kind of improvements
does your program need to make for it to be reflected in the final record?
COACH HAWKINS: I said this many times. You guys know. So much of life is made
up of the details in the little things. And we were a scosche from winning 10
games a year and also a scosche from winning two, again, as horrific as it
sounds. But that's really how it goes. There were many games that we had an
opportunity to win and lose and we've got to be able to -- number one, there's a
turnover margin that's got to be adhered to. And you've heard every coach talk
about that and everybody thinks it's coach-speak. It's really not. I don't know
much about a lot of sports like lacrosse and some of those things. But I know if
you turn the ball over it's probably not a good thing. So the same is with
football. That's got to be an important thing. We've got to do a better job on
third downs on offense and defense. We gave up a too many few plays last year.
We've got to be able to pressure the quarterback back more and get back to
running the ball a little bit better. So in every area it's going to have to be
minuscule improvements to scratch and claw and be able to win some games.
Q. Coach, when you came to Colorado and you saw what you had, and you
probably have one-year, three-year, five-year plan in mind, is it going
according to Hoyle? Were there any big surprises?
COACH HAWKINS: It never goes as fast as you want to. I'm not a very patient
guy, like the rest of the country. And so I expected to win 10, 11, 12 our first
year out of the gate. So that's always a shocker. I always have those
expectations. I really do. They're not false. I really believe that if we're
able to reach down in the hearts and minds of young men and push the right
buttons and do the right things, you can develop that kind of chemistry and that
kind of magic and make that thing happen. And you never know exactly how long
that's going to take. I just don't think if you sit back and go, well, it's a
five-year plan or seven-year or three-year plan, why we should wait that long. I
think we just have to push as hard and as fast as we can as early as we can and
make it happen as fast as we can.
Q. Coach, with the plethora of great quarterbacks in this league, it
wouldn't seem like it's a great time to be breaking in two new cornerbacks. Is
it scaring you to death? Where do we stand?
COACH HAWKINS: I don't think it matters even if you have veteran guys, I
really don't. You're right, there are a tremendous amount of players in our
conference. And so we're going to have to do a lot of things that starts up
front and mixing things up and changing things up and giving people on the back
end a chance. Like I said, I don't think it matters whether you're veterans or
rookies, you're going to have some problems, with the talent we have in the
league.
Q. Given all the success you've had in Boise and given your own, as you've
just said, lack of patience, how have you coped with the fact that this is your
three and you're in kind of the middle right now?
COACH HAWKINS: It's hard on you. It grinds on you. I took a lot of years off
of my life I think in '06. And there's not a guy that does this, and you're
aware of this, that isn't extremely passionate about what they do. And that's
very hard on you. It is. But I think it's also to some degree why I came to
Colorado and why anybody does what they do. I just think there has to be a
certain amount of reinvention in a person in being able to put yourself up
against it and see what you're all about. So as my dad told me when I came
there, he said, You asked for it, buddy, and you got it. It's been great. It
really has been. And really fulfilling because I think there's so many great
things at Colorado and great people. And it's been nice to kind of roll up your
sleeves and jump in the garden and start weeding and watering and planting some
good crops.
Q. Question about Girthy. We don't write a lot about him because he's so
quiet, but what makes this guy so good? And I remember last year we asked you
about the snaps, 99 percent of the time his snaps were perfect, but there is
some inopportune moments. Is that something that a guy works on in the off
season?
COACH HAWKINS: Yes, he needs to. That's part of the turnover quotient and
every coach that gets in the gun knows that's an issue. One is having to catch
to have a snap that's catchable, and then also a snap that even gets better than
catchable and puts a quarterback in a position where can focus more on what's
going on down field. Girthy has been around. He's been a guard. He's had a lot
of snaps, seen a lot of things. I think he brings a lot to the O line that way.
And as you know we're pretty young up there to begin with. So having a veteran
guy that's been in a lot of stadiums and seen a lot of other teams play, I think
it's good to have that experience around.