--- NSAN 2008 SS SPORTS GOLF TEAM FINDS SUCCESS IN MEET THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The men's golf team turned in a third-place finish at Nebraska. GOLF | 4B WWW.KANSAN.COM SPIKES HOPES TO REPLACE COLLINS SPECIAL PROTECTION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2008 The redshirt freshman looks to make a statement on the offensive line. FOOTBALL | 4B FOOTBALL PAGE 1B Rival coaches share common roots BY TAYLOR BERN tbern@kansan.com Mark Mangino, Bob Stoops and Jim Leavitt walk into a room. It's not a joke, just the roots of three future head coaches growing at the same time in the same place. All three spent early portions of their careers as assistant coaches at Kansas State under now-retired coach Bill Snyder. During 16 years in Manhattan, Snyder's Wildcats played in 11 straight bowl games thanks in large part to the best assistant coaching staff this side of Hayden Fry. After all, Snyder was once an offensive coordinator for Fry's Iowa Hawkeyes, so of course he understood the importance of piecing together a first-rate staff. Five current D-I coaches served under Snyder in his time as a Wildcat. His coaching legacy has spread across the country, from Bob Stoops at Arizona to Leavitt at South Florida, and several places in between. On Friday, two of those former coaching mates will face off for the second time in two years. Mangino and Leavitt don't talk every day — college coaches don't exactly have a lot of free time — but Mangino said he still had a bond with his fellow assistant coaches. "Any time you have a relationship or friendship with somebody that you worked with somewhere, you want those guys to do well," he said. "Late in the evenings, when we get home after our game, you look at the scroll at the bottom of the television and check out all your friend's scores." Mangino has said that Saturday was his day to reap the benefits of the week's hard work, and that included taking some time to sit down and watch a friend's game. "If you play an early game and they play a late game, you watch it," Mangino said. "And vice versa. If we're playing a late game and somebody that I worked with and have been in the trenches with are playing, I'll watch a little bit of it before I get into my pregame routine." Kansas' coach remembers Leavitt as an intense figure both on the practice field and in the film room. Not a lot has changed in that department, as Leavitt is often hoarse during media interviews from yelling at his team. In 1989, Fry gave Leavitt his first chance at coaching as a graduate assistant at Iowa. One year later he moved on to join Snyder's staff at Kansas State. He stayed there five years, four of those working side-by-side with Mangino, then left to start a football program at South Florida. Leavitt said he knew that his team in Tampa Bay wouldn't go anywhere if he didn't hire the right guys around him. "There are a lot of great coaches out there and they just need an opportunity" Leavitt said. "When they get an opportunity, if they're smart, they understand that they were part of a good staff earlier and they better assemble a good staff because it's so critical." Snyder laid out the perfect road map for building success at a downtrodden program, but Mangino said it was more important to learn how to write your own map than how to follow another one. "There are so many things that are different that you can't just say, 'OK, I'm going to run up and take this blueprint from this program and apply it here.'" Mangino said. "You've got to find your own way, you've got to understand what the hurdles are, where the challenges are, what the limitations are, and then design your program within those parameters." Mangino, Leavitt and Bob Stoops took notes during their time in Manhattan as each has turned around a struggling program — in Leavitt's case, a nonexistent one. While these coaching minds were being forged, Leavitt and Mangino said none of them had time to think about the future. "A lot of us were just a bunch of young guys, working hard trying to stay employed." Mangino said. "Nobody had time to sit back and think about, 'Well, maybe I'll be a head coach someday,' or 'When will that happen?' Heck, you're trying to win games, get a paycheck, take care of your family and just keep at it." Said Leavitt, "In those days, you don't know about that kind of thing. You just try to do what coach Snyder tells you to do and be on time." So many programs have felt the effects of a coach from the Bill Snyder school of football, and in some cases that effect is a conference or national title. Success breeds success, and championships don't fall far from the coaching tree. College coaches don't generally like to look back, but Mangino said every now and then he liked to reflect on his early coaching years. "The way things have worked out," Mangino said. "It's been awesome for a lot of guys." Edited by Kelsey Hayes Graphic by Peter Soto Five current Division I football coaches have worked under former Kansas State coach Bill Snyder. Among these are Kansas coach Mark Mangino, South Florida coach Jim Leavitt and Arizona coach Bob Stoops. Mangino and Leavitt will meet Friday when Kansas plays South Florida. COMMENTARY Doing whatever it takes to win Freshman forward Kortney Cliffton helped lead the University of Kansas to a 2-1 victory against Auburn on Aug. 31. Cliffon scored her first goal of the season against UAB Friday. She came to the University after a strong high school record at Andover High School in Wichita. I must begin by calling myself out on my penchant for calling EAST Carolina "Eastern Carolina" in Monday's column. I also had every intention to continue this newspaper's and my own crusade to criticize the Jayhawks running game heading into tomorrow's trip to No. 19 AP/No. 18 USA Today South Florida - the first test and real start of Kansas' season. What I actually meant was... ah forget it. It was a boneheaded mistake and not a very good start to sounding like a genius in my pick for a Jayhawks-Pirates BCS clash. But maybe Kansas can save my ass this week. I am banking on it. Instead I have just one wish from Mark Mangino's squad: score enough points however you can to put away the Bulls on national television. SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE 4B SOCCER Freshman forward steps up after stellar high school career BY JAYSON JENKS jjenks@kansan.com Wearing a neon orange practice jersey, freshman Kortney Clifton receives a pass down the far side of the field, dribbles past a teammate-turned-defender and quickly rifles a shot. Goal. True, it may have simply been an end-of-practice scrimage, but the scene perfectly illustrates Clifton's growing offensive confidence. Jon Goerina/KANSAN "I feel more relaxed now that I finally got the ball in the back of the net," said Clifton, who is from Wichita. "I can just relax and play and have fun." That enhanced self-assurance has translated into on-field success. Clifton scored three goals in two games last weekend, pushing the Jayhawks record to 4-0. Clifton's first goal of the season — and of her career — did more than give the Jayhawks an early 2-1 lead against UAB; it shed any doubt as to whether Clifton could score at the D-I level. "As a forward, once you get that off your chest, it's kind of like 'I can just do whatever now,' coach Mark Francis said. 'I think that's how she's playing." Clifton's ability to score, though, comes as no surprise to Francis and his staff. It was a significant reason she was recruited and a significant reason she's seen so many minutes so early in her career. For proof, look at Clifton's achievements at Andover High School in Wichita. Her statistics are, well, freakish. She's the all-time leading career (256) and single-season (80) goal scorer in Kansas, was selected All-State four times, and her 77 goals as a sophomore led the nation. Let that soak in for a moment. Still, even with that lengthy list of accomplishments, Clitton needed time to adapt to the college game — the speed, skill level and intensity. "It wasn't as much pressure." Clifton said. "It wasn't as competitive and the speed of play wasn't as fast. Going in there was more relaxed and just for fun". Part of the adjustments dealt with the SEE SOCCER ON PAGE 4B