Nice bit by Shooter this morning on Maturi.
http://www.twincities.com/ci_15263894?source=most_viewed&nclick_check=1
Joel Maturi is completing his eighth year as University of Minnesota athletics director.
"I love my job, but I'm not having any fun," he said.
That's a favorite expression of his. He made sure to clarify.
"People think that's a contradiction," he said. "The old adage is 'I've never worked a day in my life.' I've never gone to work because I truly love this."
Maturi, 65, is in his office most days at 5 a.m. He leaves for home most days between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m.
"I don't do that because I'm not happy; I enjoy it," he said. "This is my safe haven. This is the place I enjoy being. I love being with the student-athletes, with the coaches, with the staff and trying to make this place better."
Maturi was speaking in his office on a late afternoon this week. One hour earlier, he had met there with a handful of lawyers on a matter. Then more lawyers on other matters. Routine, he said. Happens regularly.
"I'm not having any fun because there are so many things ... the challenge comes in the external passion, and sometimes external misunderstandings of who we are and what we're trying to do."
Maturi, who has two years remaining on his contract, has done much during his eight years in charge. He successfully merged the Gophers men's and women's athletic departments, which was a major challenge. He orchestrated plans and fundraising for a 50,000-seat on-campus football stadium. Fundraising for a new on-campus baseball stadium is under way. He hired Tubby
Smith and Tim Brewster. Graduation rates among Gophers athletes are the highest in school history. His department has incurred no major NCAA violations, and that's a change from previous administrations.
Overall performance of Gophers athletics (25 teams) this school year ranks No. 10 nationally among 335 programs. Meanwhile, Maturi annually meets a $74 million budget.
A year ago, Maturi made the final four for SportsBusiness Journal's National College Athletic Director of the Year Award.
The Chisholm, Minn., native has had to make some tough decisions of late, such as whether to allow basketball players Trevor Mbakwe and Royce White to play in games while they faced legal issues.
I believe Maturi made the right calls.
"A lot of people don't (feel that way)," he said.
And Maturi receives daily e-mails letting him know that. That's all right with him.
"If they sign their name and they're polite in their question, I answer it," he said. "I say 'I respect your disagreement; I made a decision that I believe was right, and I stand by my decision.' I don't try to get confrontational; I don't tell people to go fly a kite. That's not my style.
"They (decisions) are not easy, but I've tried to be consistent with not only who I believe I am, but who this university is. I'm not naïve to the job. I know what it entails, and I know how visible athletics are here at the University of Minnesota. I don't want to say I didn't anticipate that, but I have to say that I think there have been far more external challenges I've had a challenge to deal with, at a greater number than I anticipated."
Maturi lives by the do-right rule — he tries to do what's right.
"I can put my head on the pillow at night knowing that I worked really hard and have done the best I could," he said. "We always don't win the race. We always don't win the game. We always don't do this ... but you know what — you know how hard you've tried with what you've tried to do. And I try to live by that because only I know how hard I've tried to do the right thing.
"Somebody else can judge that wasn't good enough. And I'm respectful of that."
http://www.twincities.com/ci_15263894?source=most_viewed&nclick_check=1