David Cutcliffe's office is simple but not bare, coated with dark mahogany, covered with posters of Cutcliffe's quarterback protégés and accentuated by a 52-inch plasma television across from his desk. When I visited him there in the beginning of September, sunshine poured through the wall-length windows that allows Cutcliffe to peer into Wallace Wade Stadium at will.
The topic of the day, his 2005 brush with death, was grim, and to mollify the tension, we extended the small talk and chatted as human beings, rather than with the awkward strain that seems to plague introductory interviews. I wanted to delay the inevitable, but his curiosity in learning more about me was genuine, and I was rather alarmed by it, even though I felt comfortable with him and our chitchat flowed organically. Cutcliffe said his wife's affinity for Broadway shows put him in a delicate situation because he would rather watch a football game at a New York City sports joint; I told him I felt the same way, but passed on a few musicals I happened to enjoy.
He was gracious in our subsequent discussion, which ranged from shoulder pain to bypass surgery. Fear of death was the conversation's undercurrent, invisibly lurking and powering discussion, as it has a habit of doing. After about 30 minutes, I reached for my recorder to cut the tape. "You see that photo over there?" I remember Cutcliffe said, motioning behind me to an enlarged print equidistant from the window and the television and, in the process, rebuffing the tide.
It was the picture of fandom: Rows and rows of Duke students, their emotions bleeding through the canvas, cheering as if they were in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Except they were outside on a late summer night having just witnessed Cutcliffe win his first game, and the bliss that had been bottled up for an offseason of veiled expectation and years of futility finally surfaced. It was the essence of sport's beauty, and Cutcliffe must have understood, even if he would never admit it, that he had inspired such splendor.
It's remarkable what a difference one year makes. Last December, Duke was floundering. As the calendar turns to 2009, Duke isn't exactly flourishing, but it's a hell of a lot closer to gridiron prosperity than poverty, and it would be foolish to credit the turnaround to anyone but Cutcliffe. Former head coach Ted Roof, Cutcliffe's predecessor, had planned for 2008, telling boosters that it would bring the Blue Devils their first bowl game since 1994. Roof was canned before he could make good on that promise, though, and Roof's confidence became Cutcliffe's burden, even if he never publicly looked at it that way.
He made sure no one else viewed in that vein, either, by exuding a public display of confidence that bordered on swagger. There was no reason for anyone to buy into what he was saying, except for the fact that he seemed to believe his own rhetoric, too. When Cutcliffe said Duke would put up 30 points per game, the prediction reeked of preposterous hopefulness, but we took him seriously. Same scenario with the elusive prize-the bowl game-that Cutcliffe and his team consciously strove for, even if everyone outside the program deemed it impossible. In the end, the Blue Devils fell short of their goals, but does that matter?
The picture of the program is a whole lot brighter, and because the view from Cutcliffe's office hasn't been this sunny in a long time, he is my nominee for Duke Sportsman of the Year.
This is the first in a series of nominations for Duke's Sportsman of the Year. At the end of the series, you will be able to vote for one of the nominees, and your votes will determine The Sports Blog's final choice. Stay tuned over the next two weeks for more Chronicle writers' nominations.
Get The Chronicle straight to your inbox
Signup for our weekly newsletter. Cancel at any time.