STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Sitting in his office overlooking Penn State's practice fields hours before the team's first spring workout, offensive coordinator Ricky Rahne grabs a stack of papers from his desk. Each page displays the heading "Meeting Notes."
While serving as Kansas State's tight ends coach in 2009 and 2010, Rahne painstakingly prepared notes from each position meeting he led. Before each practice, he'd turn them in to head coach Bill Snyder, college football's most successful stickler.
"I told myself it was stupid and crazy and I never wanted to do it," Rahne said.