A must read article on Oregon footbal coach Dan Lanning.

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Gobears49
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A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024

jy1988
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Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.
calumnus
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jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"
ColoradoBear
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calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time without a full share unless they want to fund 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.
BearSD
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ColoradoBear said:

calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time withoit a full share unless they want to find 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.


UW is really squeezed at the moment. They are taking out loans against future earnings from both Fox and the Big Ten.
ncbears
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ColoradoBear said:

calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time without a full share unless they want to fund 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.
Phil Knight is 86. That said, I have no idea how much of an NIL endowment he might leave to Oregon.
juarezbear
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ncbears said:

ColoradoBear said:

calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time without a full share unless they want to fund 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.
Phil Knight is 86. That said, I have no idea how much of an NIL endowment he might leave to Oregon.
I would imagine his son Travis would continue the legacy.
CNHTH
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I think Oregon more than any other school is going to struggle (probably not this year but down the line). People forget how many recruits they pulled from the Bay Area and Sacramento. They still might but certainly not to the same degree that they once did.
And it's not just an oregon problem it's a big 10 problem. Oregon, and most big 10 regions simply do not produce recruits. Yes, they still have LA but they traded the NorCal and Phoenix for Wisconsin and Nebraska. Whereas we essentially traded the PNW and Phoenix for Miami and Dallas.
And I know that everyone thinks Oregon's NIL will solve all but the truth of the matter is that a lot of these kids want a game in front of friends and family.
They are in a very precarious position from a recruiting position perspective imho as are most big 10 schools not in LA. They are banking on the notion that they'll have the money to buy any recruit they want and that any recruit they want values money over all else,
Too many hypotheticals for me to think it will work out better for them. And at this point i don't believe it will.
ncbears
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juarezbear said:

ncbears said:

ColoradoBear said:

calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time without a full share unless they want to fund 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.
Phil Knight is 86. That said, I have no idea how much of an NIL endowment he might leave to Oregon.
I would imagine his son Travis would continue the legacy.
Travis went to Portland State. But, maybe his inheritance is tied up with fealty to Oregon athletics, or Phil leaves a big endowment for NIL with Travis in charge.
golden sloth
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CNHTH said:

I think Oregon more than any other school is going to struggle (probably not this year but down the line). People forget how many recruits they pulled from the Bay Area and Sacramento. They still might but certainly not to the same degree that they once did.
And it's not just an oregon problem it's a big 10 problem. Oregon, and most big 10 regions simply do not produce recruits. Yes, they still have LA but they traded the NorCal and Phoenix for Wisconsin and Nebraska. Whereas we essentially traded the PNW and Phoenix for Miami and Dallas.
And I know that everyone thinks Oregon's NIL will solve all but the truth of the matter is that a lot of these kids want a game in front of friends and family.
They are in a very precarious position from a recruiting position perspective imho as are most big 10 schools not in LA. They are banking on the notion that they'll have the money to buy any recruit they want and that any recruit they want values money over all else,
Too many hypotheticals for me to think it will work out better for them. And at this point i don't believe it will.


Most recruits think they can make it the NFL and want to play in a league and conference that will best prepare them for that goal. Right now, there is no arguing that the B1G and SEC have the best chance of doing that. It doesnt hurt that those two conferences will offer the most NIL and have the most TV visibility. Basically, players want to play in the big time games in the big time conferences, and the B1G and SEC offer that.
concernedparent
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CNHTH said:

I think Oregon more than any other school is going to struggle (probably not this year but down the line). People forget how many recruits they pulled from the Bay Area and Sacramento. They still might but certainly not to the same degree that they once did.
And it's not just an oregon problem it's a big 10 problem. Oregon, and most big 10 regions simply do not produce recruits. Yes, they still have LA but they traded the NorCal and Phoenix for Wisconsin and Nebraska. Whereas we essentially traded the PNW and Phoenix for Miami and Dallas.
And I know that everyone thinks Oregon's NIL will solve all but the truth of the matter is that a lot of these kids want a game in front of friends and family.
They are in a very precarious position from a recruiting position perspective imho as are most big 10 schools not in LA. They are banking on the notion that they'll have the money to buy any recruit they want and that any recruit they want values money over all else,
Too many hypotheticals for me to think it will work out better for them. And at this point i don't believe it will.
Respectfully, I couldn't disagree more if the donor and institutional investment continues.

First off, NorCal prep football is in decline. It is not as important to their recruiting strategy anymore.

Second, Oregon is among the hottest brands in college football, and definitely the hottest on the west coast. They can and have been recruiting nationally for awhile now. Moreover, I bet there are almost as many or even more kids who grow up Oregon fans in our backyard (let's say this is somewhere from Monterey to Modesto, up past Sacramento and then to the coast) as there are that grow up Cal fans. Oregon will still have NorCal kids interested. I looked at their next two classes, 2 Bay Area kids each year and we offered 3 out of the 4 of them.

Third, some combination of money and the perceived potential to be developed into an NFL player seems to be the driving motivation for most 4 and 5 star recruits. Money buys a lot of things, including a flight to Eugene (of which there many direct flights out of SFO every week). For the more budget conscious, it's an 8 hour drive, which is light work for a special occasion.
Rushinbear
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Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024


From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
calumnus
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concernedparent said:

CNHTH said:

I think Oregon more than any other school is going to struggle (probably not this year but down the line). People forget how many recruits they pulled from the Bay Area and Sacramento. They still might but certainly not to the same degree that they once did.
And it's not just an oregon problem it's a big 10 problem. Oregon, and most big 10 regions simply do not produce recruits. Yes, they still have LA but they traded the NorCal and Phoenix for Wisconsin and Nebraska. Whereas we essentially traded the PNW and Phoenix for Miami and Dallas.
And I know that everyone thinks Oregon's NIL will solve all but the truth of the matter is that a lot of these kids want a game in front of friends and family.
They are in a very precarious position from a recruiting position perspective imho as are most big 10 schools not in LA. They are banking on the notion that they'll have the money to buy any recruit they want and that any recruit they want values money over all else,
Too many hypotheticals for me to think it will work out better for them. And at this point i don't believe it will.
Respectfully, I couldn't disagree more if the donor and institutional investment continues.

First off, NorCal prep football is in decline. It is not as important to their recruiting strategy anymore.

Second, Oregon is among the hottest brands in college football, and definitely the hottest on the west coast. They can and have been recruiting nationally for awhile now. Moreover, I bet there are almost as many or even more kids who grow up Oregon fans in our backyard (let's say this is somewhere from Monterey to Modesto, up past Sacramento and then to the coast) as there are that grow up Cal fans. Oregon will still have NorCal kids interested. I looked at their next two classes, 2 Bay Area kids each year and we offered 3 out of the 4 of them.

Third, some combination of money and the perceived potential to be developed into an NFL player seems to be the driving motivation for most 4 and 5 star recruits. Money buys a lot of things, including a flight to Eugene (of which there many direct flights out of SFO every week). For the more budget conscious, it's an 8 hour drive, which is light work for a special occasion.


Oregon recruits nationally and recruits SoCal better than Cal has under Wilcox. By my count Cal has 17 players from SoCal while Oregon has 25.

Cal has a lot of players from a Oregon, Washington and Texas, but are in line behind tge in state powers for players in those states.

Do not underestimate the combination of Nike, Uncle Phil's NIL and Tosh Lupoi and now B1G exposure. Oregon is on a path to full B1G payout.
Big C
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ncbears said:

juarezbear said:

ncbears said:

ColoradoBear said:

calumnus said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.


On the contrary, I think the former PAC-12 schools are going to become powers in their new conferences. A few years from now people will look back and say "Can you believe they all used to be in one conference?"


Washington will likely have a tough time without a full share unless they want to fund 20-30 million yearly deficits until 2030. Phil Knight basically said he'll put an unlimited amount of money into NIL, so Oregon won't be facing the same issue.
Phil Knight is 86. That said, I have no idea how much of an NIL endowment he might leave to Oregon.
I would imagine his son Travis would continue the legacy.
Travis went to Portland State. But, maybe his inheritance is tied up with fealty to Oregon athletics, or Phil leaves a big endowment for NIL with Travis in charge.

Phil Knight's son is so dumb he couldn't get into effing Oregon? And, again, he's Phil Knight's son?!? That is classic.

(Please, if there are explanatory circumstances on this, don't post 'em. I want to believe my version of this story.)

CNHTH
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golden sloth said:

CNHTH said:

I think Oregon more than any other school is going to struggle (probably not this year but down the line). People forget how many recruits they pulled from the Bay Area and Sacramento. They still might but certainly not to the same degree that they once did.
And it's not just an oregon problem it's a big 10 problem. Oregon, and most big 10 regions simply do not produce recruits. Yes, they still have LA but they traded the NorCal and Phoenix for Wisconsin and Nebraska. Whereas we essentially traded the PNW and Phoenix for Miami and Dallas.
And I know that everyone thinks Oregon's NIL will solve all but the truth of the matter is that a lot of these kids want a game in front of friends and family.
They are in a very precarious position from a recruiting position perspective imho as are most big 10 schools not in LA. They are banking on the notion that they'll have the money to buy any recruit they want and that any recruit they want values money over all else,
Too many hypotheticals for me to think it will work out better for them. And at this point i don't believe it will.


Most recruits think they can make it the NFL and want to play in a league and conference that will best prepare them for that goal. Right now, there is no arguing that the B1G and SEC have the best chance of doing that. It doesnt hurt that those two conferences will offer the most NIL and have the most TV visibility. Basically, players want to play in the big time games in the big time conferences, and the B1G and SEC offer that.


On that side it makes sense. I guess the point I'm making is that, say congress passes the limits on nil. Then it's an equal playing field and it doesn't matter how much nil money you have. Then, to your point it's about personal choice and goals.
Personally I think fox execs and strategists have massively misread the situation and have no grasp of what most of these kids want. I feel like they've place all eggs in one basket and are assuming there's no allegorical foxes out there waiting to pounce.
Just way too many moving pieces for me to say that the big will be successful.
It's like Japan in ww2. You simply cannot win a war with no oil just like you cannot be a successful conference with an incredibly diluted recruiting footprint. Money only solves so much.
Anyway that's my take. I could be wrong.
BearSD
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Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
wifeisafurd
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BearSD said:

Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
Cohen got Petersen to move to Udub (she was the reason he came), quickly fired Lake when it wasn't working and hired DeBoer. She is insanely good fundraiser. I'm kinda missing the part of SC's athletic leadership is lacking. This where she is at Washington.

Athletic Department Power Index: Pac-12 Conference https://athleticdirectoru.com/articles/athletic-department-power-index-pac-12/

I'm kinda wondering who in the former Pac 12 you think has a good AD and why? Who is better in the the B1G now that Gene Smith retired?
calumnus
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wifeisafurd said:

BearSD said:

Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
Cohen got Petersen to move to Udub (she was the reason he came), quickly fired Lake when it wasn't working and hired DeBoer. She is insanely good fundraiser. I'm kinda missing the part of SC's athletic leadership is lacking. This where she is at Washington.

Athletic Department Power Index: Pac-12 Conference https://athleticdirectoru.com/articles/athletic-department-power-index-pac-12/

I'm kinda wondering who in the former Pac 12 you think has a good AD and why? Who is better in the the B1G now that Gene Smith retired?



Under Leadership SC was #11, just ahead of Cal at #12.
kal kommie
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jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.
I'm wishing it on UCLA
southseasbear
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kal kommie said:

jy1988 said:

Somehow I have the feeling that things won't work out as well for UO and UCLA in the BiG as they hoped. Not wishing it on them, just a gut feeling.
I'm wishing it on UCLA
I'm wishing it on both of them.
BearSD
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calumnus said:

wifeisafurd said:

BearSD said:

Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
Cohen got Petersen to move to Udub (she was the reason he came), quickly fired Lake when it wasn't working and hired DeBoer. She is insanely good fundraiser. I'm kinda missing the part of SC's athletic leadership is lacking. This where she is at Washington.

Athletic Department Power Index: Pac-12 Conference https://athleticdirectoru.com/articles/athletic-department-power-index-pac-12/

I'm kinda wondering who in the former Pac 12 you think has a good AD and why? Who is better in the the B1G now that Gene Smith retired?



Under Leadership SC was #11, just ahead of Cal at #12.


Yeah, the last AD at USC (Bohn) was mediocre at best. Mullens at Oregon was much better. As for Cohen, fundraising may be great, which isn't hard at USC. I am not impressed with the coaching hires. (IIRC Gottlieb was hired before Cohen was AD.)
wifeisafurd
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calumnus said:

wifeisafurd said:

BearSD said:

Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
Cohen got Petersen to move to Udub (she was the reason he came), quickly fired Lake when it wasn't working and hired DeBoer. She is insanely good fundraiser. I'm kinda missing the part of SC's athletic leadership is lacking. This where she is at Washington.

Athletic Department Power Index: Pac-12 Conference https://athleticdirectoru.com/articles/athletic-department-power-index-pac-12/

I'm kinda wondering who in the former Pac 12 you think has a good AD and why? Who is better in the the B1G now that Gene Smith retired?



Under Leadership SC was #11, just ahead of Cal at #12.
Let's try some reading comprehension. Leadership Washington, where Cohen was at the time of the AD poll, was number 2 in the Pac, and as an AD Cohen was rated no. 2 behind Muir.
wifeisafurd
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BearSD said:

calumnus said:

wifeisafurd said:

BearSD said:

Rushinbear said:

Gobears49 said:

A must read article on Oregon football coach Dan Lanning.

https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/40781349/dan-lanning-journey-commitment-oregon-big-ten-2024
From a Cal perspective, it's notable how my interest in former P12 teams has decreased - other than recruiting, we have little in common.

From a CFB perspective, it's a curiosity how they transition into a whole new world for them. But, I think it's transitory. Both the PNW teams and UCLA will have more to manage than they realize (maybe only until now) and they will be treated like outsiders in more ways than they imagine. USC has always felt to me only as a mercenary, so nothing has changed with them. Realignment may come again, only as they finally get settled.

The same may be said about us, but there seems to be less at stake, at least in our expectations.
Oregon is much better positioned to succeed than UW or UCLA. Maybe even better than USC, given that USC's athletic leadership seems to be lacking.

As for who has less at stake? Oregon has far less at stake than Cal does. Oregon is already in the club. Our Bears are on the outside looking in. If you really want to ask who has more at stake, try to make a list, in order, of which ACC or Big 12 schools would be on the Big Ten's wish list for further expansion. Then think of what our Bears have to do in the next few years to try and get higher up on that wish list.
Cohen got Petersen to move to Udub (she was the reason he came), quickly fired Lake when it wasn't working and hired DeBoer. She is insanely good fundraiser. I'm kinda missing the part of SC's athletic leadership is lacking. This where she is at Washington.

Athletic Department Power Index: Pac-12 Conference https://athleticdirectoru.com/articles/athletic-department-power-index-pac-12/

I'm kinda wondering who in the former Pac 12 you think has a good AD and why? Who is better in the the B1G now that Gene Smith retired?



Under Leadership SC was #11, just ahead of Cal at #12.


Yeah, the last AD at USC (Bohn) was mediocre at best. Mullens at Oregon was much better. As for Cohen, fundraising may be great, which isn't hard at USC. I am not impressed with the coaching hires. (IIRC Gottlieb was hired before Cohen was AD.)
Listening to a bunch of guys on Cal sports talking about athletics directors is just surreal.

Cohen has basically had only one major hire at SC, in which she hired Eric Musselman, which the rest the world thinks is a great hire. Which hires are you talking about and why?

She has been the best fundraiser in the Pac at Washington only to Muir who has the built in advantages of Furd and also is great fundraiser. It is scary what she is doing in fundraising at SC.

But she got Petersen to move from Boise.
She hired DeBoer when he was fairly unknown.
She was instrumental in leading Washington into the Big Ten Conference (think about that a little bit more on the leadership side).
She was so good at fundraising at Washington she was promoted to be in charge of fundraising efforts on behalf of the office of undergraduate education
During her AD tenure she elevated Washington standing in the Directors Cup at a period were most Pac progress were going the opposite direction.
She was on the CFP Committee (think about that)


USC is finishing up a decade or so when the Trojan program hasn't exactly been setting the world on fire. But all of a sudden SC skyrocketed to number 13 in the NCAA with the athletic department under Cohen collecting $146 million in revenues last fiscal year (Stanford finished 15 and no other Pac 12 school made the top 25, which probably explains why the Pac no longer is in existence). How competitive is SC on the revenue list with a noncompetitive conference TV situation and the conference blowing-up and still improving like this? USC had revenues well beyond any Pac school and would have placed second to only Ohio State if it had been in the B1G. When they join the B1G and receive the B1g TV revenues the probably to top five. Do you guys even understand the critical importance of funrdraising at this moment to stay alive during conference realignment? What is about AD leadership right now that you think SC is lacking? Cohen seems prepared to make SC competitive in the current environment. Think about some compare and contrasts to some other ADs.

USC AD Jen Cohen's to-do list: The Big Ten move ...The New York Timeshttps://www.nytimes.com athletic 2023/08/22 jen-...

Jennifer Cohen backs Lincoln Riley, discusses NIL and moreLos Angeles Timeshttps://www.latimes.com sports usc story uscathl...

If she was in the running for Cal AD with JK, which AD do you think Sebasterbear would like to deal with?

Just tell me who you think was a better AD in the Pac and why?

Let me put this in the context of people who actually know what they are talking about:

https://www.johncanzano.com/p/canzano-usc-makes-scary-good-ad-hire?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
LawoftheBear
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They lost Bo Nix. Nevertheless, they recruited a five star and several four stars. And even though they lost Bo Nix, they think they will be better this year. This reminds me of Cal in 2005. We lost Aaron Rodgers. In recruiting we had one of our best years ever getting several five star athletes and many four star athletes. This included a five star quarterback known as the white Michael Vick! In retrospect, many of those recruits were awesome for us! But we definitely were worse off after losing our superstar quarterback.

2005 Cal < 2004 Cal
2024 Oregon < 2023 Oregon
LessMilesMoreTedford
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LawoftheBear said:

They lost Bo Nix. Nevertheless, they recruited a five star and several four stars. And even though they lost Bo Nix, they think they will be better this year. This reminds me of Cal in 2005. We lost Aaron Rodgers. In recruiting we had one of our best years ever getting several five star athletes and many four star athletes. This included a five star quarterback known as the white Michael Vick! In retrospect, many of those recruits were awesome for us! But we definitely were worse off after losing our superstar quarterback.

2005 Cal < 2004 Cal
2024 Oregon < 2023 Oregon
Dillon Gabriel is far more proven than Joe Ayoob or redshirt freshman Nate Longshore. He had the sixth best passer rating in college football last year, ahead of Caleb Williams.

Oregon is going to be good for the rest of our lives. Phil Knight has committed a good chunk of his fortune to ensure that the Ducks have the funds they need to succeed beyond him. The rumored trust is over $5 billion. Plus via Knight, Nike has strong relationships with the university via R&D, the track and field program, and other endeavors as the closest campus to HQ in Beaverton, so expect them to continue to support Oregon's best-in-class branding.

That is decades of assurance that will last far beyond Uncle Phil.
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