Recruiting season finally ends Wednesday, and here's some of what Jerry Kill learned during the blur of the past eight weeks: One recruit's mom makes a terrific lasagna. The Cuban food at another recruit's house is fabulous. And the Flintstone-sized ribeye he had on one home visit? No steakhouse does it better.
Yes, along with the two or three dozen young football players Kill is bringing to Minneapolis once they sign their national letters of intent Wednesday, it's almost inevitable he'll bring home a few extra pounds, too.
"For two months ... you're either eating in kids' homes with their parents, or in the car, on the run, as you drive to the next city," the Gophers coach said. "You eat whatever and wherever you can."
NCAA rules prohibit Kill from talking about members of this year's recruiting class until players have officially signed, but he should have plenty to say. That's because, since the Gophers season ended in November, he's been criss-crossing the country as if he's running for president, flying to Dallas one day, Milwaukee the next, and the Florida panhandle after that, chasing between 40 and 50 potential recruits.
He hustles home on Fridays to act as ringmaster for three-day-weekend official campus visits, then gets in the TSA line at the airport first thing Monday morning, headed someplace else. He's on the road by 7 and usually checks into the next hotel after 10 and begins preparing for the next day's visits. Eventually, Kill said, it's all a blur of boarding passes, rental cars and Marriott lobbies, with a schedule that is sometimes rewritten mid-trip as he reacts to the whims of indecisive or hesitant teenagers.
"Sometimes I'll hear we're in trouble on a recruit -- maybe another [school's] coach has gone in and now he's changing his mind," Kill said. "So you go, 'OK, let's get me down there.'" Some visits are simply "flying the flag," reminding a player how much he's wanted by stopping by his high school to confer with his coach or attend his basketball game.
Some visits are more elaborate, with groundwork done well ahead of time by assistant coaches, each of whom is assigned an area to recruit. Head coaches are allowed to stop by each player's home only once, and almost all of those visits, some of which last for five or six hours, occur in December or January, as close as possible to signing day.
"You don't want to go too early," Kill said, "because some kids [make their choice] on their last impression."