After Mike Hebert's retirement last winter, the protracted coaching search that followed gave the local volleyball community plenty of time to speculate on a replacement for the Gophers coach. A handful of folks wondered whether the U might pluck an empire-builder who happened to work just a few miles from campus: Brady Starkey, coach of four-time Division II national champions Concordia (St. Paul).
The Gophers aimed for one of the highest-profile candidates possible -- U.S. women's national team coach Hugh McCutcheon -- and got him. Last weekend, while interim coach Laura Bush directed them to two victories over No. 4 Texas, Starkey watched his Golden Bears dispatch three ranked opponents in a season-opening tournament at Gangelhoff Center. Even he was blown away by how easily top-ranked Concordia handled the country's No. 2, No. 9 and No. 25 teams, sweeping all of them as it ran its home-court winning streak to 52 matches.
Starkey wasn't contacted about the Gophers' job, but he was OK with that. As a Gophers fan, he thinks the U hired the right person. As a guy who loves where he is -- working with players he has to chase out of the gym, who have won the past four Division II titles and 72 consecutive matches in the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference -- he still feels blessed every day.
"We had a really good preseason, but I wasn't expecting [the opening weekend] to be quite like this," said Starkey, now 276-24 in nine seasons at Concordia. "We tend to start a little slower and work our way into things. But this is probably the most advanced class of young kids we've had, and they were able to jump right in.
"The teams we had here earlier built this culture. They love to play, they love to compete and they continually want to get better. We're kind of spoiled with the athletes we have. They're awesome kids, and we're lucky to coach them."
That culture has come to define the Golden Bears' program. After Saturday's victory over No. 25 Northern Michigan, senior Megan Carlson and junior Cassie Haag were told they never had lost a home match. Both seemed surprised, not because they didn't believe it, but because they just hadn't thought about it.
Streaks and records aren't part of the conversation during Concordia's legendary practices. There are some good-natured jibes as players push each other to the mat for 2 1/2 to three hours, then beg the coaches to let them to play just one more game. Were it not for NCAA rules limiting workout time, Starkey said, he might never get some of them to go home.
When they're not in the gym, they're hanging out together. The Golden Bears' friendships and love of the game shine through on the court, in their flawless teamwork and the hugs and smiles that celebrate every point won.