Joel Maturi should be ashamed of himself. He has been on the job as Minnesota's athletic director since July 2002, and Siebert Field -- home of his baseball team -- remains a disgrace to the memory of the coach for whom it is named.
There were vague suggestions in recent months that some improvements would be made to the worst facility imaginable for Big Ten baseball for this season, but a visit Saturday afternoon showed that was bad information.
The two sets of ramshackle bleachers are receiving a coat of paint before being assembled, which is definitely putting lipstick on a pig.
The Gophers are not scheduled to play at the field named for the legendary Dick Siebert until April 9 against Northern Iowa. That game could be moved to the Metrodome, which would make the April 18-20 series against Illinois the season debut of Maturi's blighted ballpark.
The Dome bailed out the Gophers for this weekend, when they started the Big Ten schedule with a four-game series against Indiana.
Minnesota started playing early-season games in the Dome in 1984. The Gophers went into this weekend with a 25-11 record in Big Ten games and a 170-77-1 record in all indoor games.
John Anderson has been the coach since 1982. His teams have won eight Big Ten tournaments and played in 14 NCAA regionals in the previous 26 seasons. And, in the 20 years since the Big Ten stopped using an East-West format, the Gophers have finished first or second 14 times.
When Anderson started, the Twin Cities dailies still covered the Gophers' Big Ten home series and a sunny day at Siebert would produce a drove of fans. Reporters and TV cameras drop by only occasionally now, and spectators come out in dribbles rather than in droves.