Bruce Smith was Minnesota's lone Heisman Trophy winner as a Gophers halfback in 1941. A few months later, Columbia Pictures cranked out a 66-minute film titled "Smith of Minnesota," with the quiet and humble Smith playing himself in what was actually a secondary role.
Smith died of cancer at age 47 on Aug. 26, 1967. As he went through that ordeal, Smith was responsible for many kind acts in visiting children in hospitals. His companion on those visits, Rev. William Cantwell, would start a campaign to have Smith canonized as a saint in the Holy Roman Church.
Father Cantwell didn't succeed, although sainthood truly is an area where it's an honor just to be nominated, right?
It is unlikely that Mitch Leidner, the current Gophers quarterback, will receive similar backing from Steve Frederickson, with a good reason being that Frederickson practices the Lutheran faith.
Beyond that complication, there's not much more in the way of praise that Frederickson could offer for Leidner as a young man — particularly for one that he's never met.
This all started when Jonah Pirsig, an enormous lineman from Blue Earth, Minn., was a junior being recruited by a number of big-time schools in the winter of 2010-11. Pirsig had played for Steve Frederickson in middle school, and for Steve's son Jay, an assistant with the Blue Earth Area High School program.
Jerry Kill, the new Gophers coach, came to the school for a visit with Pirsig. The Fredericksons were impressed with Kill's country charm and found themselves privately hoping that Pirsig would choose Minnesota.
Pirsig announced for the Gophers in the summer before his senior season. Lakeville South's Leidner also committed to the Gophers, and was an early enrollee for the spring semester of 2012.