Kansas’ Charlie Weis works on another long-term project
LAWRENCE – Charlie Weis saw it as a long-term project, a commitment he was willing to keep. It would not be completed in one day, one week or one month. It would require time and vigor, and a heap of resolve. The project — no, the promise — would also call for patience.
That’s what Weis said at the beginning, and that’s what he’s saying now, as he begins his third season at Kansas on Saturday night. This is for his family, he says. For his team. For his future and quality of life.
“I told them that in February,” Weis says now, “I would drop 100 pounds.”
All his life, Weis has battled weight issues and processed a complicated relationship with his body. In his 2006 book “No Excuses,” Weis called himself a “pudgeball” kid while growing up in New Jersey. During his days as an NFL assistant in New England, he straddled the 300-pound line, sometimes ballooning well above. On a summer day in 2002, he entered a hospital in Massachusetts and underwent gastric bypass surgery. He nearly died a few days later, the scary complications from the procedure leaving him with limited feeling in both feet and a slow and labored gait.
More than a decade later — after hip replacement surgery in 2011 and four professional stops — Weis prepared for another football season with a new motivation. His son, Charlie Jr., a student assistant at KU, was about to begin his senior year of college. It was time, Weis thought, to take on his weight demons again.
Nearly seven months later, his son has seen progress.
“He said he wanted to do it for us,” Charlie Jr. says. “He wanted to be able to one day see my kids and be alive for when I’m coaching football and doing all those types of things. So it’s pretty cool to see him make that promise and fulfill it.”
In the public eye, Weis often strikes a familiar posture. During news conferences, he is a combination of blunt, affable and grousing. He is often long-winded, and his answers can feel doused with coach-speak spin. But when the subject of his ongoing weight loss came up in July, Weis dropped the usual public guise.
“I do feel better,” Weis said, his words a little slower and more hesitant. “But I did it because I made a commitment to both the team and my family. That’s what I said.”
To this point, Weis has rarely discussed specifics. (He did tell a Rivals.com reporter in June that he was down 70 pounds.) And he has rarely brought up his weight-loss goals with his players. During fall camp, a few players noticed that their coach had shed some pounds. You can see the transformation most prominently in his face. Weis has mentioned it at least once, they say, but there were no grand speeches or announcements tied into his project. He may feel healthier and possess more energy for his coaching job, but it’s been clear this has been a personal mission.
“I was a mess,” Weis says. “I’m less of a mess now.”
Now one long-term project will bleed into another as the regular season begins. The Jayhawks open the season at 6 p.m. Saturday against Southeast Missouri State. And as football moves to the forefront, Weis’ other long-term plan certainly will be under scrutiny.
In two seasons at Kansas, Weis has recorded a 4-20 record and is just 1-17 in the Big 12. If Year 3 is not a full-fledged referendum on Weis’ rebuilding effort, then it’s at least a notable mile-marker after a key offseason.
“I think that Kansas football at this stage is not about being just respected,” Weis says. “I mean, we all want to win, starting in this building.”
Weis has relinquished control of the Kansas offense, giving the reins to new offensive coordinator John Reagan. The limited offensive duties, he says, has allowed him more time to be a head coach first and focus in on the Jayhawks’ special teams.
“Just minding my own business,” Weis says. “That’s what I’m doing.”
In one crease of Weis’ large office, the two projects often collide. Near the glimmering desk and widescreen view of Memorial Stadium sits a recumbent stationary bike. The bike, Weis says, is part of the plan. He can sit in that office, work up a sweat, and still study football at the same time. He can also go down the hall and talk to his son.
“He’s my dad, and I’m his son, so we still talk about all that stuff,” Charlie Jr. says “With all the weight he’s lost, and having to do all these different things and working out, it’s been really cool to see.”
Reach Rustin Dodd at rdodd@wichitaeagle.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rustindodd.
SE Missouri State at Kansas
When: 6 p.m. Saturday
Where: Memorial Stadium, Lawrence
Records: SEMO 1-0, KU 0-0
Radio: KFH, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM (joined in progress after Royals)
TV: Cox 22
Three things about SE Missouri State
1. Southeast Missouri coach Tom Matukewicz, a native of Silver Lake and a graduate of Fort Hays State, is in his first season. After spending the last two years as the defensive coordinator at Toledo, Matukewicz began his SEMO tenure with a 77-0 victory over Missouri Baptist last week.
2. The Redhawks rushed for 304 yards last week against Missouri Baptist. Junior DeMichael Jackson finished with 82 yards on eight carries.
3, Southeast Missouri has lost its last 13 games against opponents from the Football Bowl Subdivision. The Redhawks lost to Mississippi 31-13 last season.
Key matchup
Kansas receiver Nick Harwell vs. the Southeast Missouri defense. Harwell, a transfer from Miami (Ohio), is eligible after sitting out the 2013 season. He put up video-game numbers during his sophomore and junior seasons. Does KU finally have another game-breaking receiver?
Rustin Dodd's pick: KU, 35-13
Montell Cozart’s athleticism will be on full display against some lesser competition. Yes, senior running backs Brandon Bourbon and Taylor Cox were lost for the season during fall camp. Still, the Jayhawks’ new spread offense should maneuver easily past Southeast Missouri State. The defense should be solid. But here’s one thing to watch: How will the passing game perform?
This story was originally published September 4, 2014 at 11:10 AM with the headline "Kansas’ Charlie Weis works on another long-term project."