Loel Schrader left a job as a columnist at the Long Beach newspaper in California to become the sports editor at the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch at the start of the 1980s.
He brought with him an immense fondness for college football, based to a significant degree on time spent covering the Trojans of Southern California, coached by John McKay and then John Robinson.
Schrader was stunned along with most college football followers in 1982, when Texas A&M — tired of its secondary status in comparison to the Texas Longhorns — lured 38-year-old Jackie Sherrill as its coach away from the University of Pittsburgh.
Sherrill's contract would total $1.6 million for six years, an unheard-of average of $267,000 per season. The Aggies also added the title "athletic director'' to make the contract more palatable.
Sports Illustrated wrote about the contract under the headline: "Jackie Hits The Jackpot.'' The deal was described as "breathtaking.''
That was certainly the case for Schrader. On arrival, he had done wonders to increase the PPD's travel budget, yet it came as a surprise when I was called into his office and told to make arrangements to be in College Station, Texas, for Sherrill's first game:
Sept. 4, 1982 — an evening game vs. Boston College.
This was at a time when BC was known as a mediocre Eastern independent. The Eagles were scheduled to provide early victories for major conference teams.