Hang in there Grigsby, hopefully we can put together a good season soon. We were close this year
I was at Memorial long before the Holmoe years kiddo.DavisBear said:
Why would apathy set in next year. We are going to a bowl for the second year in a row, we got college gameday, lost 4 games by 9 points. If you want apathy, you should have been there for the Holmoe years. Also, look at next years schedule, a lot of winnable games. Plus we have a QB coming off a 3,000 yard year.
Grigsby said:DavisBear said:
If you feel that way, why are you even on here?? #losermentality
I'll be dead soon enough. Stage IV cancer kinda does that. Before I die it would be nice to see Cal be competent rather than completely be dropped from FBS and lose most of its athletic programs
MinotStateBeav said:
I predict apathy is going to set in next year, I think if Wilcox returns, people just won't care anymore...and that's worse than anger. Cal has a decision to make very quickly, because I fear that the program will have a fading pulse. It just feels like to me like this is a decisive moment in Cal football. When fan apathy hits, even good seasons will struggle to draw support, you're already seeing it. I felt like the Miami game was the moment to turn it around, and Cal really blew that opportunity.
Cal is not taking the opportunity to show it's serious to be a candidate in the B1G. We look like the other Pac-12 members made the right choice to ditch this sideshow. The ACC was not good this year, we really blew it.
DavisBear said:
I'm just being realistic, you are not. I know perhaps it makes you feel better to whine about the coaches, but unless you can pay the buyout it is worthless energy. If you want to help the team, contribute so that we can get better players. All I'm saying is you can do something productive or you can cry about the coaches. I can't afford to fund the buyout, but I can make an impact on adding more talent to the roster.
DavisBear said:
Wrong…we had the players we could GET. If we had more money we could have gotten better players. Look at SMU, they brought in a different level of talent on the offensive and defensive lines. We brought in guys from FCS schools. Yes we should have won more games, but no we didn't get all the players we wanted
WalterSobchak said:
LOL at people equating giving to NIL with supporting Wilcox. Only at Cal...
LunchTime said:DavisBear said:
I'm just being realistic, you are not. I know perhaps it makes you feel better to whine about the coaches, but unless you can pay the buyout it is worthless energy. If you want to help the team, contribute so that we can get better players. All I'm saying is you can do something productive or you can cry about the coaches. I can't afford to fund the buyout, but I can make an impact on adding more talent to the roster.
Asking for money from "me" to "get better players" while maintaining this coaching is realistic?
I would say you are not being realistic.
Legends should pay you to stop doing marketing.
LunchTime said:WalterSobchak said:
LOL at people equating giving to NIL with supporting Wilcox. Only at Cal...
I agree. Wouldn't it be better to say, "these are separate problems" vs "unless you can pay to fire him, STFU"
Something like "if we have a healthy NIL, we can attract a better coach"?
oskidunker said:
I Think Harris might be better than Rogers. At least he is not a run first guy. Thoughts?
golden sloth said:MinotStateBeav said:
I predict apathy is going to set in next year, I think if Wilcox returns, people just won't care anymore...and that's worse than anger. Cal has a decision to make very quickly, because I fear that the program will have a fading pulse. It just feels like to me like this is a decisive moment in Cal football. When fan apathy hits, even good seasons will struggle to draw support, you're already seeing it. I felt like the Miami game was the moment to turn it around, and Cal really blew that opportunity.
Cal is not taking the opportunity to show it's serious to be a candidate in the B1G. We look like the other Pac-12 members made the right choice to ditch this sideshow. The ACC was not good this year, we really blew it.
Stanford and the Cal fandom gave Wilcox a statement turnaround on a silver platter, and he took that opportunity and gave it away. He had the players, he had the schedule, he had the media coverage, he had the fan interest, and he squandered it.
Cal will not have this opportunity again.
calumnus said:oskidunker said:
I Think Harris might be better than Rogers. At least he is not a run first guy. Thoughts?
Rogers was never a "run first guy" before coming to Cal.
golden sloth said:LunchTime said:DavisBear said:
I'm just being realistic, you are not. I know perhaps it makes you feel better to whine about the coaches, but unless you can pay the buyout it is worthless energy. If you want to help the team, contribute so that we can get better players. All I'm saying is you can do something productive or you can cry about the coaches. I can't afford to fund the buyout, but I can make an impact on adding more talent to the roster.
Asking for money from "me" to "get better players" while maintaining this coaching is realistic?
I would say you are not being realistic.
Legends should pay you to stop doing marketing.
You could give Wilcox the best roster in college football, he would still lead them to a .500 record. Any money spent on players when Wilcox is the coach is money wasted.
It's a business. He got a paycheck. Good for him.Big C said:calumnus said:oskidunker said:
I Think Harris might be better than Rogers. At least he is not a run first guy. Thoughts?
Rogers was never a "run first guy" before coming to Cal.
Rogers had a really solid season passing the ball at N. Texas last season. It's surprising to me that he doesn't seem to have much arm talent. Not super accurate and not a strong arm... seems to struggle finding the most open receiver. I appreciate his efforts but was expecting more.
DavisBear said:
So you want us to be terrible? I don't, I want us to win as many games as possible. We have a great new chancellor and I am confident that he will move on from Jimbo at some point and we should be able to move on from Wilcox when the buyout moderates. But until then I support funding NIL with as much money as we can raise. There is no salary cap, it is a great opportunity to be able to get talent that we wouldn't have been able to get in the past. It just takes desire to build our NIL resources
Meanwhile Spav's new team has gone 8-4 and 6-3 in conferencecalumnus said:golden sloth said:MinotStateBeav said:
I predict apathy is going to set in next year, I think if Wilcox returns, people just won't care anymore...and that's worse than anger. Cal has a decision to make very quickly, because I fear that the program will have a fading pulse. It just feels like to me like this is a decisive moment in Cal football. When fan apathy hits, even good seasons will struggle to draw support, you're already seeing it. I felt like the Miami game was the moment to turn it around, and Cal really blew that opportunity.
Cal is not taking the opportunity to show it's serious to be a candidate in the B1G. We look like the other Pac-12 members made the right choice to ditch this sideshow. The ACC was not good this year, we really blew it.
Stanford and the Cal fandom gave Wilcox a statement turnaround on a silver platter, and he took that opportunity and gave it away. He had the players, he had the schedule, he had the media coverage, he had the fan interest, and he squandered it.
Cal will not have this opportunity again.
Exactly. This was a critical year. He needed to go out and put together the best offensive staff possible from the entire football world, not just his friend circle. Instead hen Sbav left, he didn't even do search and just gave the OC duties to the OL coach, because he was once a co-OC working for an offensive Head coach at a lower level. Worse, he expected him to do double duty. Unforgivably, even after it was a disaster in the bowl game he made no changes and squandered this opportunity.
cal83dls79 said:
Wilcox, stoically walking the sidelines ……tears
DavisBear said:
He's a fan. He attends the games, engages with Cal fans on Twitter. Leads cheers at games. We finally have someone that cares!!
Big C said:calumnus said:oskidunker said:
I Think Harris might be better than Rogers. At least he is not a run first guy. Thoughts?
Rogers was never a "run first guy" before coming to Cal.
Rogers had a really solid season passing the ball at N. Texas last season. It's surprising to me that he doesn't seem to have much arm talent. Not super accurate and not a strong arm... seems to struggle finding the most open receiver. I appreciate his efforts but was expecting more.
DoubtfulBear said:Meanwhile Spav's new team has gone 8-4 and 6-3 in conferencecalumnus said:golden sloth said:MinotStateBeav said:
I predict apathy is going to set in next year, I think if Wilcox returns, people just won't care anymore...and that's worse than anger. Cal has a decision to make very quickly, because I fear that the program will have a fading pulse. It just feels like to me like this is a decisive moment in Cal football. When fan apathy hits, even good seasons will struggle to draw support, you're already seeing it. I felt like the Miami game was the moment to turn it around, and Cal really blew that opportunity.
Cal is not taking the opportunity to show it's serious to be a candidate in the B1G. We look like the other Pac-12 members made the right choice to ditch this sideshow. The ACC was not good this year, we really blew it.
Stanford and the Cal fandom gave Wilcox a statement turnaround on a silver platter, and he took that opportunity and gave it away. He had the players, he had the schedule, he had the media coverage, he had the fan interest, and he squandered it.
Cal will not have this opportunity again.
Exactly. This was a critical year. He needed to go out and put together the best offensive staff possible from the entire football world, not just his friend circle. Instead hen Sbav left, he didn't even do search and just gave the OC duties to the OL coach, because he was once a co-OC working for an offensive Head coach at a lower level. Worse, he expected him to do double duty. Unforgivably, even after it was a disaster in the bowl game he made no changes and squandered this opportunity.
Golden One said:DavisBear said:
He's a fan. He attends the games, engages with Cal fans on Twitter. Leads cheers at games. We finally have someone that cares!!
It takes more than leading cheers, attending games, and engaging with Cal fans on X to demonstrate that he cares when our football program is in the toilet. Caring means finding the money to fire Knowlton and Wilcox.
I disagree that putting money into the players is implicit approval of the coaches. I'm not qualified to comment on the coaching. I am qualified to see that an offensive line that can't block for runs and gives up umpteen sacks is a huge handicap. Whose fault is that? Bad coaching? Bad recruiting? Injuries? Maybe all of the above? But the line has been overmatched all year.TouchedTheAxeIn82 said:So here's the problem. Yes, a healthy NIL fund can get some good players into the program, and that can directly translate to better results. But with Wilcox as the HC, there is no evidence that he can build a program where seven wins is seen as a disappointing season. With Wilcox all we get is years and years of grinding mediocrity. If we get enough good players in to improve our results, what we're going to see is Wilcox hanging on with consistent 6-6 and 7-5 seasons where being bowl-eligible is enough to keep him employed, because the standards and expectations for this program are so low.JimSox said:pingpong2 said:
Pouring more money into the players is an implicit approval for the program and the coaches. You better bet if someone dropped $1B into the NIL fund that Wilcox would get a big fat extension.
Disagree. No money, no players. No players, no wins.
That's why some (a lot?) of us no longer want to support being OK with a coach who can be relied on for consistent 5-7 and 6-6 seasons.
JimSox said:I disagree that putting money into the players is implicit approval of the coaches. I'm not qualified to comment on the coaching. I am qualified to see that an offensive line that can't block for runs and gives up umpteen sacks is a huge handicap. Whose fault is that? Bad coaching? Bad recruiting? Injuries? Maybe all of the above? But the line has been overmatched all year.TouchedTheAxeIn82 said:So here's the problem. Yes, a healthy NIL fund can get some good players into the program, and that can directly translate to better results. But with Wilcox as the HC, there is no evidence that he can build a program where seven wins is seen as a disappointing season. With Wilcox all we get is years and years of grinding mediocrity. If we get enough good players in to improve our results, what we're going to see is Wilcox hanging on with consistent 6-6 and 7-5 seasons where being bowl-eligible is enough to keep him employed, because the standards and expectations for this program are so low.JimSox said:pingpong2 said:
Pouring more money into the players is an implicit approval for the program and the coaches. You better bet if someone dropped $1B into the NIL fund that Wilcox would get a big fat extension.
Disagree. No money, no players. No players, no wins.
That's why some (a lot?) of us no longer want to support being OK with a coach who can be relied on for consistent 5-7 and 6-6 seasons.
I do agree that "a healthy NIL fund can get some good players into the program, and that can translate into better results." How much better? I'd like to find out. And soon. I'm old!
chunkybear said:
Does anyone know why Mendoza didn't play? I have a hard time believing it was an illness if he was walking around the sidelines talking to people without a mask.
oskidunker said:chunkybear said:
Does anyone know why Mendoza didn't play? I have a hard time believing it was an illness if he was walking around the sidelines talking to people without a mask.
A friend brought this up.. we dont know how sick he was. Im sure he would have played if he thought he could. Might have looked better if he stayed in the hotel.
Agreed. And for all we know, it could have been a stomach bug (or food poisoning, alergic reaction, etc.) that left him weakened but not contagious.01Bear said:oskidunker said:chunkybear said:
Does anyone know why Mendoza didn't play? I have a hard time believing it was an illness if he was walking around the sidelines talking to people without a mask.
A friend brought this up.. we dont know how sick he was. Im sure he would have played if he thought he could. Might have looked better if he stayed in the hotel.
I disagree it would've been better had he stayed in the hotel. Nando has been all about the team. That he showed up to support his boys even though he was sick just goes to show his strength of character. His boys supported him when he was buried on the depth chart and they supported him when he was QB1; he returned the love by supporting them when he's unable to play. That's a sign of leadership and putting the team first.
DoubtfulBear said:
Meanwhile Spav's new team has gone 8-4 and 6-3 in conference