DULUTH
Just after Larry Goodwin announced that the College of St. Scholastica would consider creating a football team, he received an e-mail from a faculty member. "Dear Larry," it said, "I can only conclude that you have simply lost your mind."
Goodwin, in his 11th year as the school's president, wasn't so sure he hadn't. The 96-year-old college, begun by Benedictine nuns to educate women, had never had a football team. In the 38 years since it began admitting men, its student body remained nearly 70 percent female. The only on-campus spot for a football practice field lay right between the monastery and the cemetery.
But the more Goodwin thought about how to guide his school toward a vigorous future, the more he envisioned it in helmets and pads. Saturday, St. Scholastica's first football team will celebrate its first home game against Crown College with its first homecoming. As the Saints players and coaches continue to win over the skeptics, one of the first -- Goodwin himself -- will be cheering the loudest.
"I initially was resistant, but the evidence supporting this was pretty compelling," said Goodwin, who added that he got so excited listening to the radio broadcast of the Saints' opener that he nearly drove off the road. "We did it because it brought us 80 men who wouldn't have considered us otherwise, and it has brought a real sense of school spirit and energy to our campus.
"Our name has been in the paper so much more in the past two weeks. We might solve nuclear fusion in a back room, but chances are if we have a winning team, we're going to get more publicity."
A year-long recruiting effort by coach Greg Carlson brought 84 players to the hilltop campus overlooking Lake Superior. The Saints lost their first two games, both on the road, but have gained fans among faculty and students who worried what football would do to their school's culture.
"I'm so proud of these young men," said Carlson, whose team includes 57 freshmen and only two starters who had played in college before. "They took a leap of faith to come here. And they knew they would be under the microscope. They have worked so hard to explain what we're building, which is a football program that will fit in with everything this school represents."