Tracy Claeys spelled out reasons he should remain as Gophers football coach Sunday for WCCO (830-AM), including the team's academic success, on-field gains and "very minimal" off-field instances over the past six years.
Claeys is expected to meet with Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle on Tuesday, preceding any announcement about the coach's future, three sources said this weekend. Claeys told WCCO he's not sure the Tuesday timing is "set in stone" but said he looks forward to meeting with Coyle.
"We feel like we continue to get better," Claeys said. "We feel like this has been the best year since we've been here. The kids — our team's GPA is above a 3.0 and has been six of the last seven semesters.
"And our graduation rate is as high as it's been since they started keeping it, and the same with the APR [Academic Progress Rate] — to be the highest public school in the country with the APR. So not only are we getting better on the football field, the kids are going to class, they're graduating."
The Gophers went 9-4 this season in their first nine-win season since they went 10-3 under Glen Mason in 2003. But the on-field performance has been clouded with the continuing fallout from an alleged Sept. 2 sexual assault involving players.
Hennepin County has reviewed the case twice and declined to press charges. But Coyle suspended 10 players from the team indefinitely on Dec. 13, after an internal investigation by the university's office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action.
"I think our instances have been very minimal," Claeys said in his weekly WCCO appearance. "And obviously, on some things, one is too many and we're trying to avoid them all the time. But we need to deal with 17- to 22-year-old kids. Every now and then you're going to have something that you have to deal with.
"But we feel like those are very minimal instances, if you look over the last five or six years, so we feel very good about where we're going."