With Minnesota, Fleck still rowing high-energy boat
P.J. Fleck has not stopped rowing the boat. If his appearance at the Big Ten media days was an indication, he is rowing even faster. Minnesota’s new football coach led off Tuesday morning ’s session with a highly caffeinated few minutes that might have set a record for words spoken in a 15-minute interview.
Fleck wore the school colors in a gold plaid sports coat and matching maroon tie, pocket square, socks and pants. Oh, he also had a freshly shaved bald pate. Fleck said he lost a bet with his wife, but he wouldn’t tell what the bet was. And he said so much more. “Every head football coach in America is self-promoting at some point,” he said. “We’re all selling ourselves and showing what we’re like and recruiting our cultures and developing our cultures.”
He was referring specifically to the reality show Being P.J. Fleck, which is set to air next month on ESPNU. But he spent the session — as he does every public appearance — pitching himself and the Minnesota football program. It’s a significant part of his job, he said, to “bring national exposure, national attention for the University of Minnesota.”
Fleck, who left Western Michigan after a 13-1 season and a berth in the Cotton Bowl, brought his catchphrase with him to Minnesota (though wresting the trademark away from Western Michigan cost $50,000). He brought the energy, too.
While Fleck noted, “the honeymoon stage is coming to an end,” kickoff is still a few weeks away. Tuesday, he was still in full talk mode, at 2X (the word count, by the way, was 2,903; for comparison, Ohio State’s Urban Meyer had 1,601 on Monday).
About the reality show: “I don’t know if this is going to be the Kardashians, and they spin it that way, or if it’s going to be a bit tamer,” he said. “But it will be a little interesting to see what comes out.”
About Minnesota’s quarterback competition, which he said is ongoing:
“I’m not one of those people for secrets,” he said. “Secrets, secrets are no fun. Secrets, secrets hurt someone. That’s what we tell our kids — my children, not our players.”
On what he found at Minnesota:
“We love the chaos. We love the dirty water, we call it. Some people like that; some people don’t. I’ve had people that asked, ‘Why would you take that job?’ It fits me.
“I’m king of the ‘toos’ — too small, too short, too inexperienced, too young, whatever. That’s who we are.”
There was much more, but Fleck finished with this: “Row the boat. Ski-U-Mah. Thank you” — or actually, “Row the boat ski-u-mah thankyou.”