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Day after….

The loss sucks but putting things into perspective…

-Unlv football has been on a meteoric rise. We are 2-1 vs p4 teams and the lone loss was in OT. In two short years, we’ve shown we belong at the P4 level.

- National media has been talking a lot about unlv the last two weeks. Lots of eyeballs on unlv, aside from Utah Tech game, we’ve been on national tv for every game.

- there’s some guys on unlv that WILL play on Sundays.

- CBO’s staff got a lot of attention this year, especially last night. It will be interesting to see what happens down the road, they are young coordinators and that alone will appeal to other schools.

- Recruiting should be much easier now that some barriers have been blown up and the fact unlv has a winning culture now. The loss sucks, it hurts but in years past it would’ve just been another game. CBO changed the mentality and culture here. Recruits will notice that immediately and want to be part of it.

- 31.5k is a good showing for Friday night. We need to get to 40k to get the p4’s attention. The average attendance for p4 is something like 41k. So we’re close but we need to be better on attendance. Certainly better than where we were under Sanchez and Arroyo with 15-18k diehards, sometimes less than that.

Why none of this may matter.

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All the realignment nonsense, arguments of go to the PAC don't go. Position ourselves for the BIG12 etc could be just wasted energy.


I'm not trying to be doom and gloom. But this isn't the first time something like this has been floated as an idea. Now there could be legs behind it (or something like it) if that type of money is getting thrown around. Not saying it will happen either. Only that it's a real possibility.

UNLV and the rest of the G5 would essentially get relegated to a subdivision, and play for their own Championship. But who would really care at that point.

If I'm reading this right the current model UNLV would be in? It's pretty convoluted with a relegation aspect to it. My God that's what they do in Europe and Soccer! They want to bring communism to America!

There is a difference

Whenever there is a tie game each team can look back on a dozen or more plays that would have tipped the regulation score in their favor. These are INTERNAL issues. Both Syracuse and the Rebels had them. A fumble, missed interception, dropped pass, bad coaching decision. Each one of these could have swayed the game. But in this game there were several EXTERNAL issues (15 yard drive extending or drive killing penalties). I read a number of posters who are trying to downplay the EXTERNAL factors by saying all we needed to do was complete one internal play or extinguish one internal mistake. But either team could say this. Just UNLV had multiple questionable calls that essentially stacked the deck against them. Could we have overcome these injustices with one or two timely plays? Yes. But that doesn't take away the fact that the REFS jobbed us big time on a huge stage.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL AND THE PORTAL

Love it or hate it I think we may see more days with crazy results like we saw yesterday because of the portal. They rich will always be the rich but the portal has given everybody including G5s a little more of a chance. A former CUSA QB just lead Vandy over #1 Alabama.

We are see higher end prospects transferring 'down' as well.

I thought originally it would kill mid level P4 and G5 programs but it's not working out that way.

This one sucked (personal)

Sorry, a little long …

I’m sure many here knew Rich. He and I have known each other for a long time, we bonded during baseball. Early in life, I hated playing against him because he was so competitive. A really good guy, as kind as a person could be, but very competitive and always coached by his father, Elton. The apple didn’t fall far from the three because Elton scared the shit out of me. So intense.

I remember as a young kid having a game against them, I played centerfield at the time. I made a great catch for the final out with runners on in a tight game. Elton beelined for me. I thought it was going to be a Woody Hayes situation. The look in his eyes, I thought he was going to deck me. He shook my hand, gave me a hug and said great catch kid, you won the game. Of course, that changed the way I viewed him a little bit.

He drafted me the following year. I was previously (this is little league) an All Star center fielder, remember, as kids, we took baseball very seriously. Ate it, drank it, slept it. Elton was so pissed when I told him I wanted to play second base. He specifically wanted me for centerfield. But the last game of the season before, our coach (go figure, Whitaker, who’s sons I played with and went on to coach at Silverado) let the older players choose a position. I chose second base and we turned two double plays very smoothly and it felt very natural to me. So I wanted to continue at second.

Elton gave me a shot, put me through the wringer, later admitted he made it tough so I’d fail and go back to centerfield. We had an assistant who played low level minors judging my footwork, I remember that specifically. But I was flawless. It felt so natural. So he gave me my shot.

Richard was the shortstop. Second base and short go together like pitcher and catcher, like QB and WR. When the chemistry is right it’s powerful. Rich and I had that. Simple glimpses or glove turns or whatever else, we knew what each other was going to do in the field. Got to the point where no words had to be spoken, we were same page. It was really awesome. We turned so many double plays. Rich was flamboyant, I was fundamentally sound. Fire and ice. I led off slap hitter, never struck out, high OBP, Rich batted second (or third) and it was the same thing with batter/baserunner. We could read each other. We had a green light most times to do what we needed to do, we both knew the game and knew coach Ebarb wanted. A lot of steals, a lot of hit and runs, Rich always led the league in RBIs and me with runs scored.

Hard to explain the chemistry unless you’ve been through the same.

As a teammate, Rich was always one of the best players … didn’t matter if you were good or sucked, made a great play or screwed up, he was always uplifting everybody. Wasn’t a blamer and didn’t waste time mulling over mistakes, it was forge ahead. And socially, he was just fun. Loud and fun. Everyone liked Rich. He was just that everyone’s All American type of kid. Kept everything fun even though he was intense.

Unfortunately, it was a huge rift between my parents and I, I was forced to go to Gorman. My heart was set on Valley with Roger Fairless, Richard, and everybody else I grew up playing ball with, traveling with. Second base was easily mine. It was a real blow to me but i understand why my parents did that.

Richard and I remained in contact throughout the years, texting, phoning, we’d hang out publically …

In around 1998-99, he asked me to be an assistant to him when he took over the Chaparral program. I was just a couple years in being a tech, had some time on my hands, no kids at that time, I seriously contemplated it. At the same time, the internet was in its infancy … and a company named rivalsnet offered me work. I wrestled with the decision. Obviously, you know what I chose. I’ve always wondered whether I made the right decision. I don’t have regrets in that regard, but it certainly was a crossroads moment, when the decision is made, your life is on a unique path. In terms of what I should be doing, I really think I made the wrong choice … I love coaching, I love teaching, I love and know baseball. But it wasn’t going to pay the bills the way I wanted (not that I’m rich).

I’m really going to miss Rich and I have nothing but great memories with him. Every memory is good, there was no bad. What a great guy. I’ll miss him.

Ah, you can cue in the Al Bundy and Polk High stuff when you want.



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PAC….terrible leadership!

When you set back and reflect on what has happened over the last month so with the PAC 2 it’s no surprise that it all ended for the PAC 12. Their leadership is very questionable. First, the total settlement with the departing schools left OSU and WSU flush with approximately $255 mill to split between them. Any university can do a lot with an approximately $120 mill plus in a windfall to their athletic department. So instead of the reverse merger and using the funds to strengthen their own athletic departments, they raid the MWC in an attempt to break it up. But they failed. So instead of a reverse merger and requiring new members to make significant infrastructure improvements and mandatory minimum athletic department budgets, they don’t even invite the top 4 programs and then out of desperation they offer USU (who has to pay its own exit fee). So now the PAC owes the MWC (their competitors) approximately $90 mill in exits fees and potentially another $45 mill in poaching penalties. Thats a truely remarkable turn of events. Now the MWC can use the PAC 2’s money to strengthen it’s athletic programs
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