I think Lyons will be supportive - but Tien had the appearance of support and being visible - while, reportedly, away from the public eye, he was not supportive in providing resources and support.Nofado said:
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C-yebTRyF_0/?igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
Nofado said:
But he played high school football
it's a very good fact that Lyons played football in HS (I wonder if he played BB?)Nofado said:
But he played high school football
golden sloth said:Nofado said:
But he played high school football
It's easy to be supportive when addressing the team. It's much harder to be supportive when you have a budget to balance and 20 different departments asking for help.
bluehenbear said:
Who was the last chancellor to show up at a football *practice* and address the team?
Golden One said:
I'll believe he is truly supportive when he fires Knowlton.
ncbears said:
I'm not supportive of Knowlton - but, it is just possible that Knowlton took his cues from Christ and perhaps even was constrained by her. Perhaps Lyons will give Knowlton a chance to correct course and to be aligned with Lyons' goals (assuming Lyons' goals are in line with this message board).
If Phil Knight wants an Oregon AD out, he's out. Buyout paid, press release issued thanking him for his service, etc.Golden One said:
I'll believe he is truly supportive when he fires Knowlton.
Shocky1 said:
doug goldman stopped using his floor seats at haas pavillion when knowlton ignored him re: the mark fox vs joe paternack hire
knowlton is not well regarded by the mega donors, the fact that lyons included him on the not well received "time share sales pitch" zoom call is not a good sign for the future
Econ141 said:Shocky1 said:
doug goldman stopped using his floor seats at haas pavillion when knowlton ignored him re: the mark fox vs joe paternack hire
knowlton is not well regarded by the mega donors, the fact that lyons included him on the not well received "time share sales pitch" zoom call is not a good sign for the future
Very disheartening. Do you or anyone have any grain of insight into why the Lyons is not listening to the mega donors? What on earth does it take to fire this guy? The McKeever scandal couldn't do it, the horrible job performance couldn't do it, a new Chancellor couldn't do it. This guy is invincible!
Carol Christ - Nice lady, good heart, brilliant Victorian scholar. Unfortunately, she lacked any understanding of how sports or business work. She probably still thinks Knowlton is an elite level athletic directorcalumnus said:Econ141 said:Shocky1 said:
doug goldman stopped using his floor seats at haas pavillion when knowlton ignored him re: the mark fox vs joe paternack hire
knowlton is not well regarded by the mega donors, the fact that lyons included him on the not well received "time share sales pitch" zoom call is not a good sign for the future
Very disheartening. Do you or anyone have any grain of insight into why the Lyons is not listening to the mega donors? What on earth does it take to fire this guy? The McKeever scandal couldn't do it, the horrible job performance couldn't do it, a new Chancellor couldn't do it. This guy is invincible!
Carol Christ gave him an 8 year contract extension with a guaranteed $1.3 million per year payout. He has a full Army pension. He has a house flipping business with his sons in Colorado. He can afford lawyers so firing for cause is expensive, even if we have a great case. We could pay off his contract, but it is tough to ask donors to give you $6 million to give to a guy they don't like and had no input in his hiring, just to make him go away, especially when the department is in a huge hole and needs donor money for everything else, including the potential need to pay Wilcox $15 million if this season is sub .500 (thanks to Knowlton's fiscal irresponsibility).
BearBoarBlarney said:
I have absolutely no idea if new Chancellor Rich Lyons will be supportive of Cal and the revenue sports, but I'd rather take my chances with a guy who once played some high school football, went to Cal undergraduate, understands the business angle (by his academic training and Haas experiences), and was supposedly the guy who helped Haas brand its core principles.
My gut tells me that UCLA enjoyed a pretty stellar run under its outgoing Chancellor Gene Block, and I'd like to think that our new Chancellor knows and loves this place enough to actually accomplish some things on his watch.
BearBoarBlarney said:
My gut tells me that UCLA enjoyed a pretty stellar run under its outgoing Chancellor Gene Block, and I'd like to think that our new Chancellor knows and loves this place enough to actually accomplish some things on his watch.
Ooof, I think I was giving Block too much credit. Obviously, UCLA has gotten extremely popular and it's gotten uber-competitive to get in there, but I had no idea that their football doldrums were so pronounced and prolonged.ColoradoBear said:BearBoarBlarney said:
My gut tells me that UCLA enjoyed a pretty stellar run under its outgoing Chancellor Gene Block, and I'd like to think that our new Chancellor knows and loves this place enough to actually accomplish some things on his watch.
UCLA football was 73-78 in conference games during Blocks's 2007-2023 tenure. The biggest athletic accomplishment under block was keeping the lid on the Big Ten move so they could ride USC's coattails.
Terry Donahue (1976-95) was 98-51-5 in the pac.
Bob Toledo (1996-02) was 32-24.
Karl Dorrell (2003-07) was 24-19.
That bolded part has nothing to do with football. If you're looking for major factors behind the under 10 percent acceptance rate at UCLA, start with the guarantee of four years of university housing.BearBoarBlarney said:Ooof, I think I was giving Block too much credit. Obviously, UCLA has gotten extremely popular and it's gotten uber-competitive to get in there, but I had no idea that their football doldrums were so pronounced and prolonged.ColoradoBear said:UCLA football was 73-78 in conference games during Blocks's 2007-2023 tenure. The biggest athletic accomplishment under block was keeping the lid on the Big Ten move so they could ride USC's coattails.BearBoarBlarney said:
My gut tells me that UCLA enjoyed a pretty stellar run under its outgoing Chancellor Gene Block, and I'd like to think that our new Chancellor knows and loves this place enough to actually accomplish some things on his watch.
Terry Donahue (1976-95) was 98-51-5 in the pac.
Bob Toledo (1996-02) was 32-24.
Karl Dorrell (2003-07) was 24-19.
Cal88 said:
Wow, their undergrad acceptance rate is down to 9%, vs 11% at Cal. USC is at 12%, Furd 4%...
BearSD said:If Phil Knight wants an Oregon AD out, he's out. Buyout paid, press release issued thanking him for his service, etc.Golden One said:
I'll believe he is truly supportive when he fires Knowlton.
So, what do the largest 2 or 3 donors to Cal athletics think of Knowlton?
UCLA gets more applicants than Cal. It's probably viewed as an "easier" school, so there is some self-selection going on by students who apply to UCLA rather than Cal.Anarchistbear said:Cal88 said:
Wow, their undergrad acceptance rate is down to 9%, vs 11% at Cal. USC is at 12%, Furd 4%...
Los Angeles is very cool especially if you are out of state. I think the conference move will only enhance this
ncbears said:UCLA gets more applicants than Cal. It's probably viewed as an "easier" school, so there is some self-selection going on by students who apply to UCLA rather than Cal.Anarchistbear said:Cal88 said:
Wow, their undergrad acceptance rate is down to 9%, vs 11% at Cal. USC is at 12%, Furd 4%...
Los Angeles is very cool especially if you are out of state. I think the conference move will only enhance this
Anarchistbear said:ncbears said:UCLA gets more applicants than Cal. It's probably viewed as an "easier" school, so there is some self-selection going on by students who apply to UCLA rather than Cal.Anarchistbear said:Cal88 said:
Wow, their undergrad acceptance rate is down to 9%, vs 11% at Cal. USC is at 12%, Furd 4%...
Los Angeles is very cool especially if you are out of state. I think the conference move will only enhance this
I think it's more like this wouid be a very cool place to go to school even though I won't get in.
Cal88 said:
Also it seems that demand for college is completely inelastic, tuition skyrocketing has not reduced the number of applicants, at USC for example the number of applicants was up 60% the last 10 years as tuition kept rising.
calumnus said:
There are a ton of kids in SoCal that don't apply to Cal (or Davis or Santa Cruz….). All the kids that end up at UCSB, UCR, UCSD, UCI, Northridge, CSLB, SDSU…. probably had UCLA as their "stretch" school. Everyone who applies to USC too. Plus everyone who went to Cal or Davis probably also applied to UCLA because the admissions are seperate and you never know.