From the many articles in Thursday's paper regarding the hiring of a new University of Minnesota athletic director, the old boys' club is alive and kicking. It is also clear no amount of money is too much to spend on the program. Buyouts, private jets — the court of public opinion got a previous U president fired for spending $42,000 on a desk. What will it say and do about $500,000 to buy out the contract of a guy who left his job after 10 months? New athletic director Mark Coyle has said he would not have left Syracuse for any other job. Supporters of the U's athletic programs have heard that before (Lou Holtz and Notre Dame). Is there another rung on his career ladder? If I were still a student at the U, I would be very distressed at the blatant waste of funds, but as a ticket-paying fan for more than 40 years, I am appalled. All the boys — University President Eric Kaler and Star Tribune writers Jim Souhan, Chip Scoggins, etc. — agreed that interim AD Beth Goetz did great job, but did she really get a fair look? Not likely!
Linda Ruth Beauvais, St. Paul
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Am I the only one dismayed to read Coyle's remark that one of the perks of his former position as director of marketing was Goldy Gopher's presence at his 3-year-old daughter's birthday party? ("New Gophers AD comes home to many challenges," May 12.) Isn't this just one more instance of U athletic officials being tone-deaf? One has only to ask: Does every 3-year-old celebrating a birthday have favored access to Goldy Gopher's presence?
Though seemingly innocent, isn't this the same sense of privilege and entitlement where the much larger indiscretions of former athletic director Norwood Teague, current men's basketball coach Richard Pitino and others perhaps began? Please tell me that my too-sensitive brain has been overly saturated with the many recent headlines about university officials at all levels using poor judgment.
Judith Monson, St. Paul
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The $850,000 annual salary of the new Gophers athletic director is more than seven times that of the governor of Minnesota. Maybe that's the first place the University of Minnesota (and college athletics in general) needed to look at to reform their athletic department(s).
Wayne Martin, Plymouth
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How enlightening to learn that the university coaches are entitled to travel by private jet ("Pitino's jet use $175K over budget," May 11). Any corporate manager has to make do with commercial air travel, mostly in economy class. Every day I learn something new about the University of Minnesota that staggers me. Where is the urgency for Pitino to go anywhere?