Wintheiser came to Riminiâs office in Decio.
âNot many former players on the faculty, are there?â
Rimini might have said something unforgivable, his loyalties pulled between memories of those long-ago afternoons when he had been buffeted and knocked about by larger men and the ethereal ivory tower of academe to which one was admitted on the basis of brain, not brawn.
âNot many Renaissance men,â Rimini replied.
Wintheiser was looking at Riminiâs framed degrees, prominently displayed on what little wall space the office had.
âMy degree is from the University of Chicago,â Wintheiser said.
âDidnât you graduate from here?â
âI meant my doctorate.â
Doctorate? Chicago? âWhat was your field?â
âAncient languages. Hittite, mainly.â
âHittite! What do you do with that?â
âNot much. I helped my director put together his Hittite dictionary.â
âAnd then?â
âIâm a commentator on ESPN. Iâm surprised you didnât know that.â
Rimini felt as if he had flunked a test. ESPN! It was a channel Rimini loathed, all those chattering panels, old jocks breaking one another up, pontificating about coming games, at last above the fray where no umpire would throw a flag if they made mistakes. âOf course,â he said weakly, and then wished he hadnât.
âMy main income is from commercials.â
âSo youâre back for the game,â Rimini said, trying to regain his sense of ease with this giant of a man. Hittite, ESPN, commercialsâwhat was the world coming to?
âWhat do you make of all the agitation about the team?â Wintheiser asked.
The team. Our team. Rimini had put his guest in his reading chair, legs crossed, huge shoes on display, and himself at his desk. The whistles of yesteryear, the crack and thump of padded body hitting padded body, seemed to echo in the office.
âAdversity is a tough school.â
Wintheiser liked that. âAbsolutely. Those kids are playing their hearts out, and what thanks do they get? Self-appointed experts. Know-it-alls. Itâs like ESPN. You ever watch Kornheiser?â
It was a rhetorical question.
âSo what are we going to do about it?â This was not a rhetorical question.
âI suspect you have some ideas.â
Wintheiser had ideas. He knew about Lipschutzâs demand that football be dropped. He knew about Iggie Willisâs Web site.
âDonât forget the Weeping Willows.â
âWho are they?â
âConcerned alumni.â Rimini said it with a sneer. âTheyâre shockedâshockedâat the new Notre Dame. First it was the Vagina Monologues. â
âWhat a bunch of garbage.â
Wintheiser seemed to mean the play. Rimini let it go. âThen it was the percentage of Catholics on the faculty.â
âIs that a problem?â
âThey seem to think so.â
âI canât believe what has happened to the Catholic Church,â Wintheiser said through clinched teeth. âLibertine priests, annulmentsâ¦â He seemed to have run out of breath.
âNow they want to know how many Catholics are on the football team. And how many Irish.â
âYouâre kidding.â
âI wish I were. How many Catholics were on the team when you played?â
âWe always went to Mass together on Saturday mornings. In the chapel at Moreau Seminary.â
Rimini had forgotten that practice, which had apparently gone the way of many others that had once characterized football at Notre Dame.
âLou came. The whole coaching staff.â
âI wonder if there are any Catholics on the team now?â
âThere are no atheists in foxholes.â
They observed a moment of silence.
âSo what exactly are your ideas, George?â Or should he have said Dr. Wintheiser?
âThe best defense is a good offense.â
Rimini nodded. Even
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