4thGenCal said:
Shocky1 said:
4th gen, that's just another foxcuse rebundled by knowlton & sold to the remaining donors
hoopers have been paid forever, jaydn told me he was offered 200k from georgia when fox was the head coach there among the dozens of under the table financial inducements
ivan got similar stories as does the bird, marcus lee, etc.
the primary reason there is no practice facility is because knowlton is trying to build a facility that will require almost ten $10,000,000 donations, what do you think the odds of that happening are with donors?
and it's only a ridiculously overpriced facility because knowlton is trying to include other sports instead of a simple basketball only practice gym
do you think jim knowlton is doing a good job & is he the right person for this job?
Great questions Shocky and thoughts as usual - but the practice facility request has been from All of the previous HC's. Yes on recruits being offered major $'s in select instances - Leon Powe was offered $100k by a SEC school and that was 24+- years ago. But those "deals" were illegal and could severely impact schools. Without including other sports there would be virtually zero chance to get it approved within campus and all of the necessary approvals and then the Chancellor sign off etc. Have to have a facility that benefits multiple uses (ie women sports too). Yes its ridiculously expensive, but I am in the commercial real estate business and see first hand the escalating construction costs - several factors: union required work, supply chain issues, inflation and California related tax/expenses. Its brutal - I upgraded a house for the football team and spent $550k on fairly basic needed upgrades (foundation, electrical, new bathrooms, new kitchen, new carpeting, new windows, painting, needed repairs as well) but that same work as an example was $250k+- 4 years ago. Have to give Knowlton big props for working all the necessary channels and being relentless to get the project to where it is. He has a very good relationship with the Chancellor and that was also key in getting support for the campus committee approvals.
Regarding some posters thoughts on some sort of "simple upper level/ inexpensive facility" air tight no frills etc. Far more expensive than the #'s thrown out, would not serve multiple sports, would likely be more difficult to gain approvals and the end product IF it could get built, would be cheesy and substandard. Do I think enough money will be raised? I don't know, but yes it is a Huge need and it has ongoing value/use and politically is acceptable. Interesting how the people who often don't put money up, criticize any progress. I do think with a HC that would connect better to the key financial donors, that would increase the likelihood of the necessary funding being raised. Joe P has deep/important relationships for example. However He is content where He is.
Thanks for the clarification. I was recently advised to be more pressing and ask tougher questions so I am going to do that-
Why not build two courts on top of RSF; one for men one for women --> Equality. Be clear to chancellor that we cannot raise funds (or will take way too long) for the multi-sport facility, much simpler to at least solve MBB/WBB practice court issue. How evil would the university have to be to force the department to pursue a goal that won't be reached just for the sake of theoretically helping a couple more teams?
Why would a light court on the RSF "likely be more difficult to gain approvals"? Do you mean by campus or by CEQA/CA legislation? I can't imagine a light court is more onerous to get thru regulatory stuff (if anything it would be way easier than a 120M facility) so I assume you mean campus approvals-- again, can't Knowlton make a really simple pitch that we cannot raise 120M for a facility, if we build 2 courts we
equally help the MBB/WBB team. what psychos in campus admin would reject that because it doesn't help out the volleyball team or something?
Regarding it being more expensive than the #s we are throwing out- makes sense, was using 10-20M because i'd seen those figures elsewhere but I understand your expertise lies within real estate-- comparatively the light court has to be way cheaper than a full fledged multi-sport facility right? Even if the light courts would be 30, 35M then 80M must be WAY underselling the pricepoint even if done with p3. The point I'm getting as is that I just don't see 10+ donors giving away 10M dollars for a
practice facility where they wouldn't even get their name on it or something. For a tenth of the share of funding, they're giving 10M dollars to make a practice facility... that doesn't sound enticing at all and I would assume most 8-figure donors would only want to sign sizable checks if it's going towards getting their name on a building/stadium, building something meaningful/extraordinary (which ours is not).
Finally you said that if we did build the light courts then it would come off as "cheesy and substandard" --> again I really want to ask if a practice facility does anything other than check a box in the post-NIL world. It really seems like we're trying to fight a battle meant for 10 years ago. What recruit is choosing a school with a super nice practice facility but giving them 20k in NIL over a school with an okay practice facility that essentially gives them a court to work on their game at any point, but 100-150k in NIL. They're choosing the latter I think.
I can't help but think we are going about it in the wrong way-- I think it would be so much easier if we dedicated 1M (yes I know easier said than done but this is comparatively NOTHING compared to the figures we're looking at for this practice facility) to NIL, paid 10 players 100k each over say 3-4 classes. With this we likely get top 30 recruiting classes for 3-4 years, we're making the tournament, donations are much easier to come by, and donors are much more willing to pony up for a practice facility.
Appreciate the work you're doing as always