When former Gophers athletic director Joel Maturi hired Jerry Kill as head football coach, he relied on the recommendations of a number of trusted sources including Barry Alvarez, the former Wisconsin football coach and current athletic director, before making the decision.
So when the Gophers and Badgers clash on Saturday for the right to face Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game, Alvarez will be on the opposite side of the coach he recommended.
Maturi worked at Wisconsin as assistant athletic director and associate AD from 1987-96, and was part of the hiring process when Alvarez was named the Badgers football coach in 1990. Maturi then watched Alvarez go 1-10 his first season, only to eventually lead his team to three Big Ten titles and victory in three Rose Bowls.
Pat Richter was the athletic director when Alvarez was hired at Wisconsin, while Maturi was associate AD. So Maturi was instrumental in rebuilding the football programs on both sides competing for Paul Bunyan's Axe. But on Saturday, he said he will be definitely be pulling for the Gophers.
"I had a long conversation with a lot of people before I hired Jerry Kill," Maturi said. "But I have a lot of confidence in Barry Alvarez and he's a good friend of mine. I confided in him about a lot of things."
Alvarez had been impressed with the performance of Kill's Northern Illinois team when they almost upset a good Badgers team in 2009, losing 28-20 in Madison.
"[Alvarez] just said that [Kill's] team was very well prepared, they were fundamentally strong, and how he felt that he had developed the program and his kids got better throughout the course of the year," Maturi recalled. "Obviously that is a blueprint that was important to Minnesota, and I think it's a plan that Coach Kill has had since he got here. Obviously we're seeing the fruits of all that labor and effort come true. Nobody is more excited than I am about where we are with our program."
However, Maturi said he told University of Minnesota President Robert Bruininks at the time that "we weren't going to win the press conference" when Kill's appointment was announced, "but that Kill is the best coach for Minnesota."