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Showing posts with label kirk lowdermilk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kirk lowdermilk. Show all posts

Monday, June 10, 2013

OSU roots run deep for Iowa’s John Lowdermilk






June 7, 2013

By Scott Dochterman

IOWA CITY — John Lowdermilk’s first on-field experience with the Iowa Hawkeyes was not a positive moment for Coach Kirk Ferentz.

Lowdermilk, Iowa’s co-first-team strong safety entering fall camp, grew up in Kensington, Ohio as the son of former Buckeyes center Kirk Lowdermilk. In 2009 he was dressed in scarlet-and-gray at Ohio Stadium when Ohio State beat Iowa 27-24 to claim the Big Ten title in a winner-take-all game. Two years later, he joined the opposite side.

“That was Vandy’s (Iowa quarterback James Vandenberg) first start,” Lowdermilk recalled this spring. “I was actually there rooting for Ohio State against Iowa in a game that went into overtime. I actually rushed the field and everything. It’s weird how things work out.”

This year Lowdermilk gets his only opportunity to play at the renowned “Horseshoe” in Columbus. The Hawkeyes travel to Ohio State on Oct. 19 (2:30 p.m. ABC) in the teams’ only scheduled meeting until at least 2016.

“It’s going to be weird because growing up I was an Ohio State fan and went to a lot of Ohio State games throughout,” said Lowdermilk, a junior. “It definitely will be pretty cool. I’ll have a lot of family there watching. It will be a weird feeling.”

Lowdermilk (6-foot-2, 203 pounds) is listed alongside fellow junior Nico Law at strong safety after spring drills. Lowdermilk played in 11 games last year for Iowa and registered six tackles. He backed up Tanner Miller at free safety and played on a majority of Iowa’s special teams. He likes the move to strong safety.

“I’m definitely getting a better feel of it,” Lowdermilk said. “The game’s slowing down, and I like the physical part of it. You’re a little closer to the line of scrimmage, not as much in pass coverage as the free. I probably like that a little bit more.”

Lowdermilk doesn’t look to his father for advice on playing his position, however. Kirk Lowdermilk played 12 seasons in the NFL with the Minnesota Vikings and Indianapolis Colts. He started every game in his last six seasons, 150 overall. He retired after the 1996 season.

“We talk about it, but he doesn’t really know much about defensive backs,” John Lowdermilk said with a laugh. “He thinks that if you cover a guy, you did a good job. So he talks more about just working hard and spending extra time in the film room and things like that.”

That is advice John Lowdermilk embraces every day. He’s also learning from defensive coordinator Phil Parker, who regained control over the secondary this offseason.

Parker had coached defensive backs from 1999 through 2011 before relinquishing those duties last year. Parker now coaches the secondary and uses video to break down the errors from both last season and this spring. Lowdermilk said he’s picked up a great deal from Parker.

“In spring ball during install we’ll go like how that mistake was made and in cover-2 get your shoulders turned and things like that,” Lowdermilk said. “Just so you don’t make the same mistake twice.

“We really struggled on the back end of the Michigan game. I’d say you’d have to remember it a little bit. You just can’t repeat it and make the same mistakes. We definitely remember it.”

A typical response from a player with a scarlet-and-gray pedigree to remember a bad performance against Michigan. He’ll get his chance to prove himself against both the Wolverines (Nov. 23) — and his heritage — this fall.

Friday, April 25, 2008

This superagent is the real deal

 





With a personal touch, Cornrich represents the best of his business 

By Jodie Valade

March 30, 2008


















Beachwood-born Neil Cornrich has gained a reputation of being a top sports agent. Says Robert Smith, former OSU star: “His creativity and intelligence are why his contracts end up being better than anybody else’s.” Photo: Scott Shaw | Plain Dealer


In the beginning, Neil Cornrich wasn't always so smooth or savvy or worthy of the label of superagent to the stars of the football coaching world.

Fresh out of Ohio State's law school, and only a handful of years removed from his University of Michigan science degree, the man who is now praised as profoundly personable hung up on his first client.

It wasn't because Cornrich didn't want to represent Kirk Lowdermilk, the Ohio State center projected to be drafted in the early rounds of the 1985 NFL draft. It was because the Beachwood-born and -based Cornrich simply didn't believe his good fortune. He thought his friend David Medich, another Buckeyes football player, was playing a prank on him when the voice on the phone said it was Lowdermilk, and he wanted Cornrich to represent him.

“Dave, I’m busy,” Cornrich scoffed before slamming down the phone.

It rang again.

“Uh, this is Kirk Lowdermilk,” the voice said again. “I’d like to meet with you.”

Cornrich doesn’t know why Lowdermilk called back after that first hang-up, or why he didn’t hang up on his first client a second time. Or why Lowdermilk wanted to take a chance on an unproven and untested recent law school graduate to manage his life’s worth.

Lowdermilk, as far as he can remember 23 years later, just had a feeling.

Simple as that.

“Neil was young, but you could tell he was a very quality, stand-up person,” Lowdermilk says. “He’s a very trustworthy person, and in this business you’d better have somebody you can count on to give you good advice.”

Lowdermilk might have been the first, but in the years since that signing, the 50-year-old Cornrich has become one of the most coveted sports agents around. 











He is particularly sought by college football coaches who seem to pass his name around like a favorite, from one to the other until most of the top names have his number on speed dial. 

They want him to tell teams how much money they deserve, find clever ways to earn incentives, and see the whole negotiating process in his fresh, inventive way.

Lowdermilk was the first to put full faith in Cornrich when the agent told his only client not to report to Minnesota’s training camp after the Vikings drafted him. Cornrich calculated that Lowdermilk deserved more than Minnesota was offering, based on contracts others in similar situations had signed.

Cornrich’s first client took his first big gamble in 1985, missing the first 10 days of training camp.

Keeping a close watch on all the negotiations was Ohio State offensive line coach Glen Mason, who was skeptical of Lowdermilk’s decision to hire the inexperienced Cornrich.

“Do you know what the heck you’re doing?” Mason asked the agent.

“Trust me,” Cornrich said.

“Neil was right,” Mason says now.

“He’s very smart. I don’t think he blinks easily. He does his homework and has a firm belief of what someone’s going to demand in the market.”

Lowdermilk’s contract when he finally signed with the Vikings included a $210,000 signing bonus, far ahead of other Minnesota draft picks, including second-round pick Issiac Holt, who earned $85,000 for signing.

But the greater impact that signing made was instilling Mason’s faith in Cornrich. The coach then hired the agent to represent him, and that was when Cornrich discovered the untapped market that he has cornered now: agent to coaches.

When Mason needed help with his head coaching contract at Kansas, he consulted with Cornrich. Then, with word-of-mouth recommendations, the snowball began to grow, and coaches — college coaches in particular — began hiring Cornrich to represent them.

“The word ‘agent’ used to be a bad word in our business,” Mason says. “When I first used Neil, I said, ‘I have an attorney. He’s an attorney who represents my legal interest.’ Now, everybody’s got agents — assistant coaches, everyone.” 



























Almost everyone with any kind of Ohio connection ends up as a Cornrich client, including Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops (from Youngstown), Arizona coach Mike Stoops (from Youngstown), Nebraska coach Bo Pelini (also from Youngstown), Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz (former Browns assistant coach), and on the pro level, the Patriots’ Bill Belichick (former Browns coach).

Cornrich and Memphis-based agent Jimmy Sexton represent the bulk of major college coaches in an era where salaries routinely top $1 million annually, and are as high as the $6 million Bob Stoops will receive this year — with the help of a Cornrich-negotiated $3 million bonus earned for his 10th season coaching the Sooners.

“He’s had coaches hire him who have never met him, they just hire him over the telephone,” says Sidney Cornrich, Neil’s father and a lawyer who shares their Beachwood office at Cornrich & Cornrich LPA. “He didn’t start writing letters to every coach in the country saying he wants to represent him.”

He collects athletes with Ohio ties, too, though in smaller numbers, including former Ohio State players such as Miami Dolphins receiver Ted Ginn Jr., New England linebacker Mike Vrabel, Buffalo safety Donte Whitner and retired Minnesota running back Robert Smith.

That is in addition to the other Northeast Ohio clients he has, a list that includes Browns offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski, Browns defensive coordinator Mel Tucker, and Browns general manager Phil Savage.

The one blemish on Cornrich’s record is a one-year NFL Player’s Association mandated suspension in 2005-06, a year he couldn’t negotiate NFL contracts as punishment for serving as an expert witness against the estate of former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Derrick Thomas.

Cornrich was paid $1,000 per hour by General Motors to testify in a deposition what Thomas’ earning capacity would have been had he not been killed in a car accident in 2000. Another high-profile NFL agent, Leigh Steinberg, testified on behalf of the Thomas estate.

“Simply from the perspective of an agent testifying against a player, a deceased player, there are some issues there,” NFLPA executive director Gene Upshaw said then. “It is upsetting that he got paid $1,000 an hour to do it.”

Cornrich says now that he learned from the experience, and is particularly more aware of how consideration of the NFLPA must influence his decisions.

“In retrospect, I wish I would have spoken to the NFLPA once General Motors requested my expert opinion. . . . I should have been more sensitive to the Association’s views of my involvement as an agent,” Cornrich says.

Despite the transgression, players and coaches alike, from Ohio and outside the state, continue to seek out Cornrich because of his undeniable results. His contracts — like the recent extension making Indianapolis tight end Dallas Clark the highest paid at his position — are consistently among the top paying.

“He has a very unique approach and thinks about things differently,” says Smith, a former OSU star. “His creativity and intelligence are why his contracts end up being better than anybody else’s.” 
















Smith’s rookie year in 1993 was the first of a new collective bargaining agreement for the NFL. Smith says Cornrich’s understanding of the CBA led to both him and another client — San Francisco defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield — signing two-year contracts instead of longer-term deals that would have locked them into their original deals — a move that was innovative at the time.

“That’s something that the union didn’t even consider,” Smith said. “It was an unprecedented deal, an unprecedented change in the collective bargaining agreement.”

Cornrich is more proud of his successful challenge of Smith’s “franchise player” designation by Minnesota in 1997, a challenge that allowed the running back to become a free agent after two years instead of chaining him to the Vikings.

“There were some anxious moments negotiating that,” remembers Jeff Diamond, then the Vikings general manager and now CEO of the Ingram Group, a consulting firm in Nashville, Tenn.

“[But] whenever I dealt with Neil, it was never antagonistic. He was always creative, he was innovative, he was willing to work with me on different ideas.”

Once, Diamond says, Cornrich even negotiated from a prone position — stretched out flat in a hotel after his back went out. Diamond laughs at the memory.

“He keeps things at an even keel, and it doesn’t get overly intense,” Diamond says. “He’s the kind of guy you can have some fun with when you’re talking to him.”

Athletes and coaches also praise Cornrich’s personal touch, an approach that leads him to call his clients “friends” — a sentiment they echo. For instance, former Ohio State linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer stopped playing football after suffering a neck injury with the Patriots in 2001, but his mother, Diane, still calls Cornrich a couple of times a month.

“When you meet somebody exceptional and you find that you have a great deal in common with that person, and you agree on a philosophy of life, that person needs to be a friend,” Diane Katzenmoyer says.

And when Sidney Cornrich threw his son a surprise 50th birthday party last year, coaches and athletes from across the country flew to Cleveland to celebrate. “A lot of guys need a friend when they hire an agent,” Vrabel says. “I knew I had enough friends, and I needed a really good agent. But that said, we are friends.”

Clients as friends isn’t always unique among agents, but Cornrich’s clients still say there is something different about their agent.

Smith also serves on the NFLPA’s committee for agent regulation and discipline, and has seen first-hand other issues with agents.

“We’ve had cases where agents are the worst stereotype,” Smith says, “and he’s about as far as you can get from that.”

  

Monday, September 25, 2006

Lowdermilk Becomes Highest Paid



THE BLIND SIDE

Evolution of the Left Tackle

By Michael Lewis

Excerpted from September 25, 2006 issue


…The new market officially opened on Feb. 1, 1993, the day after the Super Bowl. The real shock was the dollar value the new market assigned to offensive linemen. Just a few years earlier the Bengals had told Munoz that no offensive linemen was worth half a million dollars a year. Now the Denver Broncos quickly signed a couple of free agent linemen, Brian Habib and Don Maggs, for three times that amount. A few days later Vikings center Kirk Lowdermilk moved to the Indianapolis Colts for $2 million a year, then groped for the adjective to describe his feelings. “Stunned is not the word,” he said. “There is no word in the English language to describe it…”

Monday, March 29, 1993

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