Rickey Bustle doesn't always believe in fate, but this seemed to be more than coincidence.
When Virginia Tech's longtime quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator interviewed for the head coaching job at Louisiana Lafayette last December, he learned that the school fight song ended this way:
You will hear the rage of the Cajuns,
So let's give a yell.
Hustle up and bustle up
And fight on to victory. Go UL!
"The people here kind of said it was an omen," Bustle said. "I sure hope so."
Bustle, who turns 49 next month, came to the heart of Cajun Country for his first college head coaching job. He hopes to bring stability and success to a low-level Division I program in the Sun Belt Conference's fledgling football league.
"We know where we are," Bustle said. "We have to work harder to sell some tickets and generate a spark than we did at Tech. I didn't come here thinking we were going from Virginia Tech to a situation just like it. All the things aren't in place yet. But when we went to Virginia Tech in '87, things weren't in place there, either."
Louisiana Lafayette used to be known as Southwestern Louisiana. The school's most notable athletic alumni are Brian Mitchell, NFL kick returner and utility back extraordinaire, ex-New York Yankee pitcher Ron Guidry, former Philadelphia 76ers guard Andrew Toney and for real hoops junkies, a high-scoring gunner from the '70s named Bo Lamar. Thirty-three former Ragin' Cajun football players have suited up in the NFL.
Enrollment is approximately 15,000. The football stadium, 31,000-seat Cajun Field, is known as "The Swamp" because it's situated two feet below sea level. The city of Lafayette (pop. 110,000) is located 40 miles west of Baton Rouge and just 30 miles north of the Gulf of Mexico.
"You can walk outside and get wet if you're not careful," Bustle said.
Bustle wasn't entirely unfamiliar with the state or the region. He spent three years at Northeast Louisiana in the mid-80s - his primary recruiting area was New Orleans - before joining Frank Beamer at Tech in 1987.
Louisiana Lafayette also called him the last time its head coaching position was open, three years ago.
"There was no conference affiliation and no bowl tie-in at the time, so I really wasn't interested," he said. "Now they're in a conference and there's a bowl tie-in."
The Sun Belt Conference has existed in various incarnations for years. ULL, an independent football program from 1996-2000, became a competing member last year in the league's first football season. The league champion goes to the New Orleans Bowl.
Though the Ragin' Cajuns have endured six consecutive losing seasons, Bustle didn't inherit an empty house. Sixteen starters return, 10 on offense, including the quarterback, one of the Sun Belt's better tailbacks and probably the league's best receiver tandem.
"We have some guys who could play just about anywhere," Bustle said. "The difference between here and Virginia Tech is numbers. We don't have the same number of talented players that we did at Tech and one of the things we're working on is getting our numbers up. But I guarantee you there are some guys here we'd have loved to have at Tech."
As quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator at Virginia Tech, Bustle oversaw the top seven scoring offenses in school history and five of the top seven total offenses. He coached three of Tech's top four career passing leaders: Will Furrer, Maurice DeShazo and Jim Druckenmiller, in addition to NFL No. 1 draft pick and human lightning bolt Michael Vick.
Thus far at ULL, Bustle's energy has been split between on-the-field and off-the-field duties. He figured he has spoken 65-70 times to alumni, boosters and anyone else who would listen. He and the staff spent a week away from recruiting last winter, piled into three motor homes and took what he called "The Bustle Tour" of southern Louisiana, stopping five or six times a day to speak to folks or do local TV and radio spots.
"The response has been tremendous," he said. "The football program here was pretty good for a while, but it kind of got caught on the downside lately. One thing I've learned is that people here are really hungry for a winner."
"Hungry" is an appropriate choice of words in southern Louisiana, where the cuisine can grab you in a hurry. Bustle, who isn't exactly built like a marathoner to begin with, figures he's put on 15 pounds since he's been there.
"I'm hoping that two-a-days save me," he cracked. "I told some people that I was standing in line the other day at the grocery store and my beeper goes off and a little boy standing behind me says, 'Watch out, mama, he's backin' up.' "
He doesn't back up often. Nearly all of his days are spent hustlin' and bustlin'.
Dave Fairbank can be reached at 247-4637 or by e-mail at dfairbank@dailypress.com
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