August 12, 2013
Number 1, where it counts
Football, like every sport, is a numbers game. The team that scores more points wins more games and, ultimately, celebrates more titles.
By that standard, there’s a lot of hooting and hollering going on in the College of St. Scholastica Saints’ locker room. In just five years, Coach Greg Carlson has taken the school from no program to one to be reckoned with.
In 2008, the team’s inaugural season in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference (UMAC), the Saints won one game, going 1-7. But by 2011, the team went undefeated during the regular season, losing in the play-offs to the College of St. Thomas, a perennial powerhouse in Division III ball.
The Saints came back strong in 2012, going 7-1 in conference play, and again, making it into the first round of the play-offs.
Students first; athletes second
Yet, as good as those numbers are, there are others that light up this seasoned coach even more. Especially when you consider that few, if any, of his athletes at this level, will go on to play pro ball:
- 5 – the number of players on the team with a 4.0 GPA in the fall of 2012.
- 30 – the number of Saints with a 3.5 GPA or higher.
- 27 – the number of players who made the 2011 UMAC Fall Individual Academic All-Conference Team.
- 2 – the number of Saints named to the Capital One 2012 Academic All-American Division III Football Team.
- “There are only 24 players in the entire nation who make the first team,” Carlson says, proudly. “And we were the only school with two.”
- And, finally: 2.97 – the team’s collective GPA.
“Our goal is 3.0,” says Team Co-Captain Keaton Rush. “We’ve never made it, but we’re getting there.”
An Academic Game Plan
So how, in this sports-first world of ours, does a winning team on the field manage to be a winning team off the field?
Well, first off, because St. Scholastica academics are so demanding, the coach only recruits players who can compete in the classroom, too.
Second, the team gives each player a study guide – called, playfully enough, the Academic Game Plan – a binder that helps them get and stay organized.
Third, the team organizes study groups – called Study Tables – that kick in whenever a player’s GPA dips below 2.5.
And, fourth, Carlson emphasizes academics so much that his assistant coaches spot check the players, making sure they’re in class.
Bragging rights
Carlson harnesses something else in his ongoing campaign to keep academics first – his guys’ competitiveness.
He challenges each of the positions – like the linebackers, running backs, wide receivers, etc. – to compete against each other for the best collective GPA.
“We do it simply for bragging rights,” the coach says. “But you’d be surprised how serious these guys get about it.”
The coach also gives a shout out, after each semester, to the 10 players with the best GPAs. One by one, in a team meeting, he has them stand for a round of applause.
“I’m not a spotlight kind of guy,” says Co-Captain Cory Gebhard. “But my mom and dad certainly appreciated the letter that Coach sent them.”
Higher math
But back to those all-important numbers. Here’s a few more that touch a coach who’s resume includes stops at higher levels – including Division I and even pro ball:
- 8 – the number of new players coming in for next season from outside the Midwest – a key goal for a small college looking for diversity.
- 112 – the number of players the team has swelled to because of its growing success (there were 58 the first year).
- And, finally, 18 – the number of players from the team’s first year who hung in there for all four years, and in the process, laid the groundwork for the program’s success.
“I give real credit to those kids,” the coach says. “They believed in the program. They bought into the system. We call them the pioneers. But, really, they were the survivors. They put St. Scholastica football on the national map.”