Kansas loses out on feel-good moments by keeping football scholarship talks private

photo by: Chance Parker/Journal-World

Kansas coach Lance Leipold during practice at David Booth Memorial Stadium on Aug. 20, 2022.

When Kansas redshirt sophomores Jared Casey and wide receiver Quentin Skinner were awarded scholarships by coach Lance Leipold in the spring, they were told of the decisions in straightforward conversations without hoopla and pizzazz.

Casey, a tight end, received word of his in Leipold’s office in late April. Skinner, a wide receiver, was told of his via phone call after he had already left campus for the summer.

“I think (offensive coordinator) Andy Kotelnicki, he’s the only one that has (Casey’s offer) on film, so you’d have to talk to him to see what his price is to release that,” Leipold joked.

These days, social media is full of video clips of walk-ons receiving scholarships — many of them designed as if they’re entries in a perpetual game of one-upsmanship. It happens especially often at this time of the year, the weeks leading up to the start of the season, when coaches decide to reward hard-working players for their commitment and performance in recent years.

Auburn coach Bryan Harsin awarded a scholarship to linebacker Jake Levant during Saturday’s open practice by tricking him into thinking he had made a mistake during a special teams drill. Maryland coach Mike Locksley gave scholarships to punters Anthony Pecorella and Colton Spangler during the Baltimore Ravens’ preseason game against the Tennessee Titans on Aug. 11.

UConn coach Jim Mora gave scholarships to linebacker John Bechtle and wide receiver Jacob Flynn at the end of a recent practice by singling them out and saying, “Y’all know what’s about to happen.” South Carolina coach Shane Beamer also presented a scholarship to wide receiver Payton Mangrum during a team huddle, leading to cheers and hugs.

And then there are Leipold’s understated conversations with Casey and Skinner. Casey said he was able to speak to his parents via FaceTime as part of the conversation with Leipold, and Skinner called his mother and sister into the room once he got off the phone — his father was at work — and they all started crying.

But that’s it. There was no discussion of either player receiving scholarships for more than three months until Casey was asked about it after a recent training camp practice. Leipold, when asked days later about Casey, used the question to share Skinner’s news.

Leipold said his approach to those conversations is born out of the desire to keep the moment special for the player involved and to avoid any kind of uncomfortable emotions from others that may result from them.

“When young men earn scholarships like that, it’s twofold for me,” Leipold said. “One, I think that’s really neat and well deserving. I think I’ve tried to keep it in a good spot. But I also know there’s a lot of other walk-ons that work extremely hard in our program that could be on the cusp or whatever, and I try to keep that in the back of my mind as well when we do that.

“The other part is, I think sometimes that the awarding of a scholarship has taken away from the individual and it becomes a scripted act of some sort. That’s my opinion. And everybody can do what they want to do, but it’s not about how the guy gets it and who told them and all of that. It puts more light on other people than it does the young man who really got it, in my estimation, many times. So, that’s why we didn’t have a bunch of cameras there when we did it and that’s kind of where we went.”

One thing Leipold has shown during his 16 months as the Jayhawks’ coach is that he does care about his players’ well-being. That’s a tone he set immediately upon his hiring in April 2021, when he asked many of them to compile a list of attributes and traits that they wanted from their coach — and then set about trying to adapt the ones he didn’t already embody.

Perhaps he’s right, that the awarding of a scholarship has become a cliche, much like high school seniors’ signing day ceremonies and the elaborate hat-in-a-bag-in-a-box dance that died off a decade ago (and has since been replaced by intricate social media videos).

But even if they are a cliche, they still provide a measure of much-needed warmth and excitement in what has steadily become a cutthroat, no-nonsense business. Viewers almost certainly have not heard of the players involved, especially if they’re a fan of another school, yet it’s easy for anyone watching to get caught up in the emotion. And after all, at their core, aren’t college sports supposed to be fun?

Mora was a walk-on defensive back at Washington in the early 1980s before he was put on scholarship. When asked Tuesday about the decision to share the moment with Bechtle and Flynn via social media, he said he wanted to do so because it showed “the raw joy that our players had.”

“I think it gives everyone hope,” Mora said. “I think it gives every walk-on on your team hope that if they work hard, if they have a good attitude, if they just stick with it when they work hard, because it is not easy being a walk-on … emotionally, they know, ‘Man, these guys have a scholarship and I’m a walk-on, and I think that’s hard.’ When you reward them, I think that uplifts the whole team.”

That’s similar to what Kansas senior tight end Mason Fairchild, who is on scholarship, said when he found out Casey was awarded a scholarship: “We’ve got a lot of guys that are in that situation right now that were in the situation he was in, and they’re working their tails off, too, so I’m praying for them and hoping they can be put on scholarship eventually.”

Ultimately, what’s important is not how it happened, just that it did happen. Skinner, who played more special teams snaps than any of his teammates last season, certainly didn’t mind.

“I was very grateful Coach Leipold had that moment with me,” Skinner said. “It was big. I cried to him on the phone and just thanked him — thanked him, thanked him, thanked him.”

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