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The Hawk Walks the Talk

Coach Dan Hawkins
When the Buffs host Colorado State on Sept. 6, Dan Hawkins will begin his fourth season as CUâs head football coach. He talked withĚýColoradanĚýcontributorĚýMark WolfĚý(Jourâ70) about football, music and kidney stones.
You were laid up in July with a kidney stone.
Bad things happen to everybody. You learn from them. It helps you get perspective on life. It gives you a little zest.
You and your family have vacationed at such spots as Machu Picchu in Peru. Whatâs on the Hawkinsâ travel horizon?
Our next big adventure will be base camp at Mount Everest. Weâre going to try to do that next year.
What are three keys to success for the 2009 season?
Leadership, momentum and turnovers.
Why did you challenge the Buffs to achieve â10 wins and no excusesâ this season?
I talked about the expectation of winning 10 football games but there was no prediction.
The principle is excellence. On the field, off the field, thatâs the bar. What I donât want ever is for our guys to back off that standard of excellence, not just âLetâs win another game and get in a bowl.â I just donât live that way. I donât operate that way.
Why did you decide to coach the wide receivers this year?
Iâm going on my 27th year of coaching, and the sad thing to find out is Iâm not really a coach anymore. I stand around and evaluate. When I became the head coach at Boise I was the tight ends coach. It was fun being in the trenches, being right on the tip of the spear. You can lead by example, whether itâs enthusiasm, tempo, drill setups, coaching style, handouts. You can get right in there and say, âOK guys this is where itâs at.â
If you were czar of college football, would you change the Bowl Championship Series?
Itâs not perfect but the way it is now, every Saturday is extremely important for everybody. It can make or break your season. Itâs not that way in basketball. In football you better play the opening weekend and you better play every Saturday.
Shortly after last seasonâs end, the 91PORN Camera reported you established âaccountability groups,â dividing the team into groups and having the entire unit bear the punishment if one player breaks a rule. How has that worked out?
It was awesome and part of trying to develop the leadership on our team. Young kids think, âI work hard and do things right and Iâm a good leader.â Well, no, youâre not.
Part of a leaderâs job is to evaluate: âAre you doing the right things? Are you taking care of business?â Just like in history, we all pay for the mistakes of the few. Guess what? One guy messes up â the whole group pays. That guy messes up a few times. Then maybe the other people are saying, âHey look, youâve got to get it figured out,â or âWe donât want you.â Itâs a great social reinforcement mechanism.
Still listening to Great Big Sea [a Newfoundland folk-rock band Hawkins has championed]?
Oh yeah. Iâve been back on my Van Morrison kick lately. I saw him this spring at the Greek [Theater] in Berkeley.