Zips willing to risk it for Mr. Football
By Marla Ridenour
Beacon Journal staff writer
Feb 03, 2010
New University of Akron football coach Rob Ianello considers himself a ''calculated risk-taker,'' although his wife, Denise, might beg to differ.
''My wife would say I'm conservative,'' Ianello confessed.
But Ianello was not risking anything Wednesday, when Ohio's two-time Mr. Football Erick Howard of North Canton Hoover signed a national letter of intent with the Zips.
Offering the 5-foot-11, 225-pound running back a scholarship had nothing to do with Ianello sticking his neck out and everything to do with taking the program to the next level.
Howard might not qualify academically, telling the Canton Repository recently that he needed B averages in four of his five classes to be able to join the Zips for fall practice.
Hoover coach Don Hertler Jr. said Wednesday morning that Howard's status won't be known until June 1, when Howard's final transcript is available.
It could go longer than that. The NCAA allows an athlete to enroll in one summer class to apply to his GPA.
''He's taking the ACT at least one more time,'' Hertler said. ''He's got to have a great second semester. We'll have to wait and see how he finishes.''
But who wouldn't wait on one of only two Ohioans to repeat as Mr. Football, joining future Ohio State and NFL back Robert Smith of Euclid in 1988-89?
Who wouldn't wait on a player who finished with 6,013 career yards and 79 touchdowns, including 2,056 yards and 27 touchdowns as a senior?
Who wouldn't wait on a Parade All-American ranked the 24th-best prospect in the state by Scout.com?
The Zips wouldn't have even been in the picture for Howard if academics weren't an issue. If the NCAA clearinghouse had declared Howard had a 2.2 grade-point average (he was reportedly less than three-tenths short), Ohio State's Jim Tressel would have been banging down Howard's door, not Ianello and Toledo's Tim Beckman, a former Buckeyes assistant.
If Howard's last-gasp academic push fails and he's declared a Proposition 48, he could attend UA this fall but would have to pay his own way and not participate in football. Or he could attend a junior college or a prep school like Fork Union Military Academy, which would open the door for the Tressels of the world to go after him. That would happen next year in the case of a prep school, or in two years after Howard graduated from junior college