Bob Berezowitz harbored no illusions of beating St. John's and Mount Union when he scheduled games against those football giants in 2002 and 2003. As strange as it may sound, that wasn't the point.
The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater coach had presided for 22 years over a program that was very good, but not at the level of the teams competing for the NCAA Division III championship. To get there, he needed a clear understanding of what separated the Warhawks from the Johnnies and the Purple Raiders -- and nothing could provide a better comparison than a couple of games.
"We didn't think we were that far away," Berezowitz said. "If we were, we would have never taken them on."
The Warhawks were beaten soundly in all three games. Two years later, they got a rematch against Mount Union in the Division III championship game. As confident as Berezowitz was in the program's potential, he never envisioned it would go on to play for the national title in six consecutive years, winning three championships and riding a 43-game winning streak heading into Saturday's NCAA semifinal against St. Thomas.
Berezowitz set things in motion by pushing for facility upgrades that helped attract top recruits. Lance Leipold, who played for Berezowitz in the 1980s and succeeded him as coach in 2007, further raised the bar with a detail-oriented style that has produced a 70-3 record and NCAA titles in 2007, 2009 and 2010.
An administration willing to invest in football -- and an athletic director who models his department after Division I institutions -- provided resources and support. Together, they have made top-ranked Whitewater the program others aspire to emulate, including St. Thomas.
"Whitewater and Mount Union are the standard-bearers in Division III football right now," said Glenn Caruso, coach of the No. 3 Tommies. "We're working hard to be in the position they're in. They're dominant."
UW-Whitewater athletic director Paul Plinske said the Warhawks' success has pushed their regular-season attendance to 8,040 per game, the highest in D-III. Corporate sponsorships have tripled, alumni donations have increased and football has gained national publicity for a growing campus of 11,600 students.