Coaching Carousel - Madsen's Future

9,860 Views | 94 Replies | Last: 8 mo ago by CalLifer
HoopDreams
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There were several interview questions when he came on as coach and again when we played Stanford. There will be again when we play Stanford again

His answers showed his deep affection for Stanford and if replayed to a Stanford hiring panel would go over well

He did add a brief sentence about Cal afterwards but of course it was a cal press conference
calumnus
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HoopDreams said:

There were several interview questions when he came on as coach and again when we played Stanford. There will be again when we play Stanford again

His answers showed his deep affection for Stanford and if replayed to a Stanford hiring panel would go over well

He did add a brief sentence about Cal afterwards but of course it was a cal press conference


Yeah, he has done a better job embracing Cal than I anticipated but he REALLY loves Stanford. If that were the only criterion he is gone. Where we might beat that is if he is really happy with where his family is now living and doesn't want to upset that.
Big C
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I don't think Madsen would go to Stanford after only one year here, unless he feels like we haven't held up our end of the bargain. Furthermore, even though I know that these guys have to look out for themselves and their families, I feel like a move like that would be somewhat unethical. Obviously, Haase's time on the Farm is limited. If Madsen really wanted to be there, he shouldn't have taken the Cal job, seeing as the two schools are arch-rivals.

I love this Cardinal-turned-Bear like I loved Monty, but if he returned to Furd after only one season, I'd really despise him. Unless it were revealed that we had jammed him up on multiple fronts, like we did Cuonzo.
calumnus
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Big C said:


I don't think Madsen would go to Stanford after only one year here, unless he feels like we haven't held up our end of the bargain. Furthermore, even though I know that these guys have to look out for themselves and their families, I feel like a move like that would be somewhat unethical. Obviously, Haase's time on the Farm is limited. If Madsen really wanted to be there, he shouldn't have taken the Cal job, seeing as the two schools are arch-rivals.

I love this Cardinal-turned-Bear like I loved Monty, but if returned to Furd after only one season, I'd really despise him. Unless it were revealed that we had jammed him up on multiple fronts, like we did Cuonzo.


1. So if he left for Stanford after 3 years would it be better? Right now, there are no signed, incoming recruits. Most of the guys he brought in were one year guys. His commitment is less than it will be each year. Plus, moving his kids now is better than three years from now. If Stanford is his dream job he should leave now.

2. Monty was not a Stanford alum. He was a Stanford employee. Madsen is not a Cal alum, he is a Cal employee. He will do what he thinks is best for his career and his family.

3. He took the Cal job because it is a good job and he knows it. There was no guarantee the Stanford job would open up. It is like Taylor taking the Stanford job. If Wilcox resigned tomorrow, and we offered him the job, don't you think Taylor leaves Stanford for Cal? As I've said, I'm pretty sure the deciding factor in our favor is if he really likes the idea of raising his family in the same area he grew up in vs Palo Alto.

Big C
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calumnus said:

Big C said:


I don't think Madsen would go to Stanford after only one year here, unless he feels like we haven't held up our end of the bargain. Furthermore, even though I know that these guys have to look out for themselves and their families, I feel like a move like that would be somewhat unethical. Obviously, Haase's time on the Farm is limited. If Madsen really wanted to be there, he shouldn't have taken the Cal job, seeing as the two schools are arch-rivals.

I love this Cardinal-turned-Bear like I loved Monty, but if returned to Furd after only one season, I'd really despise him. Unless it were revealed that we had jammed him up on multiple fronts, like we did Cuonzo.


1. So if he left for Stanford after 3 years would it be better? Right now, there are no signed, incoming recruits. Most of the guys he brought in were one year guys. His commitment is less than it will be each year. Plus, moving his kids now is better than three years from now. If Stanford is his dream job he should leave now.

2. Monty was not a Stanford alum. He was a Stanford employee. Madsen is not a Cal alum, he is a Cal employee. He will do what he thinks is best for his career and his family.

3. He took the Cal job because it is a good job and he knows it. There was no guarantee the Stanford job would open up. It is like Taylor taking the Stanford job. If Wilcox resigned tomorrow, and we offered him the job, don't you think Taylor leaves Stanford for Cal? As I've said, I'm pretty sure the deciding factor in our favor is if he really likes the idea of raising his family in the same area he grew up in vs Palo Alto.



You're being too logical, rational and pragmatic for me. For example...

When Brennan Scarlett went to Furd for his 5th year, I thought it was a betrayal and he was scum. However...
When the Furd OT came here last season to play his 5th year, I thought it was an understandable decision. Honorable even.

If we're going to be 100% logical and pragmatic, we will need to figure out why we have an attachment to these guys, because, bottom line, we know that they are, as that other poster always notes, simply "laundry".

If Madsen goes to Furd after only one season at Cal, he can kiss my ass. (But I don't think he will; he's better than that.)
calumnus
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Big C said:

calumnus said:

Big C said:


I don't think Madsen would go to Stanford after only one year here, unless he feels like we haven't held up our end of the bargain. Furthermore, even though I know that these guys have to look out for themselves and their families, I feel like a move like that would be somewhat unethical. Obviously, Haase's time on the Farm is limited. If Madsen really wanted to be there, he shouldn't have taken the Cal job, seeing as the two schools are arch-rivals.

I love this Cardinal-turned-Bear like I loved Monty, but if returned to Furd after only one season, I'd really despise him. Unless it were revealed that we had jammed him up on multiple fronts, like we did Cuonzo.


1. So if he left for Stanford after 3 years would it be better? Right now, there are no signed, incoming recruits. Most of the guys he brought in were one year guys. His commitment is less than it will be each year. Plus, moving his kids now is better than three years from now. If Stanford is his dream job he should leave now.

2. Monty was not a Stanford alum. He was a Stanford employee. Madsen is not a Cal alum, he is a Cal employee. He will do what he thinks is best for his career and his family.

3. He took the Cal job because it is a good job and he knows it. There was no guarantee the Stanford job would open up. It is like Taylor taking the Stanford job. If Wilcox resigned tomorrow, and we offered him the job, don't you think Taylor leaves Stanford for Cal? As I've said, I'm pretty sure the deciding factor in our favor is if he really likes the idea of raising his family in the same area he grew up in vs Palo Alto.



You're being too logical, rational and pragmatic for me. For example...

When Brennan Scarlett went to Furd for his 5th year, I thought it was a betrayal and he was scum. However...
When the Furd OT came here last season to play his 5th year, I thought it was an understandable decision. Honorable even.

If we're going to be logical and pragmatic, we will need to figure out why we have an attachment to these guys, because, bottom line, we know that they are, as that other poster always notes, simply "laundry".

If Madsen goes to Furd after only one season at Cal, he can kiss my ass. (But I don't think he will; he's better than that.)


While he is a moral guy, I can assure you he does not share your Cal-centric morality. His Stanford friends and teammates would view it is a betrayal and immoral if he did NOT accept Stanford's offer. Utah Valley fans may have seen his leaving there for Cal as a betrayal.

As I said, IMO, it will come down to what he thinks is best for his family, and I think Cal has an edge here.

We will see.
stu
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This is a lot like the Winning Out thread. Maybe better to tone down the speculation a bit.
sonofabear51
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I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!
Start Slowly and taper off
calumnus
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sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
Bobodeluxe
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calumnus said:

sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
The Stanford life ring, in these turbulent waters, is much more buoyant than that of the UC Berkeley Bears.
calumnus
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Bobodeluxe said:

calumnus said:

sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
The Stanford life ring, in these turbulent waters, is much more buoyant than that of the UC Berkeley Bears.


Yes, if it is just the two jobs I'm pretty sure Madsen chooses Stanford. Those connections are very important to him. He'd have more security there. Our advantage is inertia. The Cal job opened up first and he is here.

What is the LDS life in Palo Alto like? Schools are very good.
4thGenCal
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calumnus said:

Bobodeluxe said:

calumnus said:

sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
The Stanford life ring, in these turbulent waters, is much more buoyant than that of the UC Berkeley Bears.


Yes, if it is just the two jobs I'm pretty sure Madsen chooses Stanford. Those connections are very important to him. He'd have more security there. Our advantage is inertia. The Cal job opened up first and he is here.

What is the LDS life in Palo Alto like? Schools are very good.
LDS in Palo Alto has 3 separate Wards (Church designations) The main one is Menlo Park "Stake Center", Palo Alto Ward and also an Stanford Ward (designed mainly for the younger LDS attending Stanford or working nearby) Plus Steve Young among several others, in the Church reside in Palo Alto, whom Coach knows. The local public schools are very good and there are some excellent close by private schools as well (Pinewood, Meno School, Sacred Heart, Castilija) So yes the HC job at Stanford offers multiple advantages. Cal has the advantages of being near his East Bay roots for growing up, would be a disruption for his 4 young kids(very important factor to him and his Wife), He clearly has very high integrity and leaving a Program after one year, would be very difficult for him to agree too. "Big C' hit on the key factor being his feeling on whether He can win here - meaning will the donor base step up to the necessary NIL fund raising the ACC level requires. That is really the key factor as coaches want to feel/see/trust that the Alumni base and Department are committed to winning. Personally I would be surprised if Coach Madsen were to leave after this season for Cal or another program. Now if He turns the program around (NCAA entrant etc) in 3 years, that would be more likely concern.
calumnus
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4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Bobodeluxe said:

calumnus said:

sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
The Stanford life ring, in these turbulent waters, is much more buoyant than that of the UC Berkeley Bears.


Yes, if it is just the two jobs I'm pretty sure Madsen chooses Stanford. Those connections are very important to him. He'd have more security there. Our advantage is inertia. The Cal job opened up first and he is here.

What is the LDS life in Palo Alto like? Schools are very good.
LDS in Palo Alto has 3 separate Wards (Church designations) The main one is Menlo Park "Stake Center", Palo Alto Ward and also an Stanford Ward (designed mainly for the younger LDS attending Stanford or working nearby) Plus Steve Young among several others, in the Church reside in Palo Alto, whom Coach knows. The local public schools are very good and there are some excellent close by private schools as well (Pinewood, Meno School, Sacred Heart, Castilija) So yes the HC job at Stanford offers multiple advantages. Cal has the advantages of being near his East Bay roots for growing up, would be a disruption for his 4 young kids(very important factor to him and his Wife), He clearly has very high integrity and leaving a Program after one year, would be very difficult for him to agree too. "Big C' hit on the key factor being his feeling on whether He can win here - meaning will the donor base step up to the necessary NIL fund raising the ACC level requires. That is really the key factor as coaches want to feel/see/trust that the Alumni base and Department are committed to winning. Personally I would be surprised if Coach Madsen were to leave after this season for Cal or another program. Now if He turns the program around (NCAA entrant etc) in 3 years, that would be more likely concern.


Thanks.

I see it the opposite. If he stays three more years his kids will be more deeply entrenched in school and friends, he will have recruited more of the players, become more identified with Cal and it will be unlikely the Stanford job opens again. If you are going to jump, better for everyone to jump sooner rather than later. At least Cal would get a nice payout from Stanford.

Put it another way: he doesn't turn down Stanford now, but then jump there 3 years from now. That wouldn't make any sense.

The good news is if he turns down Stanford this month we won't have to worry about it any more. Either way, we will know soon enough.
4thGenCal
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calumnus said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Bobodeluxe said:

calumnus said:

sonofabear51 said:

I don't think he leaves Cal for awhile. IIRC, he grew up in the East Bay, and I think his ethics are better than most other coaches. IMHO, I think he has a higher standard. Guess we will see.

GO BEARS!!


There is nothing unethical about following the terms of your contract to accept an offer to coach at a better job or at your alma mater. There was nothing unethical in Madsen buying his way out of the Utah Valley contract to come to Cal. If Wilcox had taken the Oregon job, that would not have been a lapse in his "ethics." If Cal offered Taylor there would be nothing unethical about him leaving Stanford and coming "home" to coach. Many people that Madsen cares about would view spurning his alma mater as a betrayal and "unethical." One of the advantages of hiring alums is you avoid that particular risk.

Again, I think it comes down to how settled in the Madsen family is in the East Bay (especially how happy his wife is) and how much Madsen wants to raise his family where he grew up because when it comes to Madsen's "ethics" and "love" I'm pretty sure:

Cal<Stanford<his family.

If he thinks staying put is what is best for his family, he will stay put.

But yes, we will see.
The Stanford life ring, in these turbulent waters, is much more buoyant than that of the UC Berkeley Bears.


Yes, if it is just the two jobs I'm pretty sure Madsen chooses Stanford. Those connections are very important to him. He'd have more security there. Our advantage is inertia. The Cal job opened up first and he is here.

What is the LDS life in Palo Alto like? Schools are very good.
LDS in Palo Alto has 3 separate Wards (Church designations) The main one is Menlo Park "Stake Center", Palo Alto Ward and also an Stanford Ward (designed mainly for the younger LDS attending Stanford or working nearby) Plus Steve Young among several others, in the Church reside in Palo Alto, whom Coach knows. The local public schools are very good and there are some excellent close by private schools as well (Pinewood, Meno School, Sacred Heart, Castilija) So yes the HC job at Stanford offers multiple advantages. Cal has the advantages of being near his East Bay roots for growing up, would be a disruption for his 4 young kids(very important factor to him and his Wife), He clearly has very high integrity and leaving a Program after one year, would be very difficult for him to agree too. "Big C' hit on the key factor being his feeling on whether He can win here - meaning will the donor base step up to the necessary NIL fund raising the ACC level requires. That is really the key factor as coaches want to feel/see/trust that the Alumni base and Department are committed to winning. Personally I would be surprised if Coach Madsen were to leave after this season for Cal or another program. Now if He turns the program around (NCAA entrant etc) in 3 years, that would be more likely concern.


Thanks.

I see it the opposite. If he stays three more years his kids will be more deeply entrenched in school and friends, he will have recruited more of the players, become more identified with Cal and it will be unlikely the Stanford job opens again. If you are going to jump, better for everyone to jump sooner rather than later. At least Cal would get a nice payout from Stanford.

Put it another way: he doesn't turn down Stanford now, but then jump there 3 years from now. That wouldn't make any sense.

The good news is if he turns down Stanford this month we won't have to worry about it any more. Either way, we will know soon enough.
Agreed that the kids will be more entrenched, but moving in back to back years takes a toll especially with the young ages - I really don't believe He will leave (not in his make up) and also unlikely he moves to another program in the next 3-4 years. But said another way, if the program is successful under his leadership to levels that Cuonzo/Monty achieved and consistently shown, then certainly that becomes a real risk 4 yrs down the road. That would be a great problem to have then. He is overall happy and fired up to get the program to winning levels/competing for post season achievements at the highest level. However the Cal donor base will need to step up the NIL, more than it did for his first season (and that was a good initial raise).
GoldenBasketBear
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WAIT?! How on earth did JK forget to factor in a specific increase in buyout, specifically from the Furd or BYU (an additional $4M to the designated buyout), when those are the two schools most likely to aggressively poach him? Or wait, I know… We are at Cal, where incompetence is our middle name. Talk about leaving the barn door wide open for the foxes to waltz right in and snatch the prized chicken!
Big C
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The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
4thGenCal
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Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
HoopDreams
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4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
maybe the fact that Stanford has jumped into NIL with both feet, with their whale donors writing huge checks, that the Cal big guns will be motivated too
eastcoastcal
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4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Any chance of us replicating this? Seems like a great idea to me. At conservatively 4% returns that's nearly 2M annually (not including one-off donations). Love the idea of getting 10 of our whales to put $5M each- obviously very easy for me to say but I have seen VCs put that kind of money towards seed rounds without blinking an eye.
philbert
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Let's go Cal NIL donors!






calumnus
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eastcoastcal said:

4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Any chance of us replicating this? Seems like a great idea to me. At conservatively 4% returns that's nearly 2M annually (not including one-off donations). Love the idea of getting 10 of our whales to put $5M each- obviously very easy for me to say but I have seen VCs put that kind of money towards seed rounds without blinking an eye.


While we are not claiming tax exempt status, it still might be advantageous to seek out donations of appreciated stock, with the donors thereby avoiding capital gains taxes.
HearstMining
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Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
With the exception of the Cuonzo's Brown/Rabb class, it seems like Stanford has recruited better than Cal for years and years and I haven't been able to figure out why. Stanford has had mediocre coaches (Trent Johnson, Dawkins, Haase) since Monty left 20 years ago, yet still recruit stronger than Cal, even during Monty and Braun's best years. Ok, maybe the Powe/Kately class (I think they came in together) was better on paper, but didn't really pan out. Anyway, I've always wondered about this.
bipolarbear
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bluehenbear said:

The biggest reason Madsen would leave begins and ends with this person:

https://www.higherechelon.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Knowlton-head-shot-small-002-James-Knowlton-768x1024.jp
Such a punchable face
wifeisafurd
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4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Apparently it is endowment. If you take $42 million times say a 5% return, that is $2.1 million annually, which is nice, but not huge coin. The other thing is Stanford is not designed to take transfers, and those the few they take seem to have really high academic profiles, that exclude almost all Portal players. So the money goes towards high school players, which is not that effective, or retaining good players, which likely is money much better spent. That said, but if the player is really good, they still can't come close to matching the big boy NIL schools like Tennessee.
oskiswifeshusband
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Mad dog is here to stay

Sources: trust me bro
bluehenbear
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With the advent of NIL, I think it would be easier for Madsen to recruit to Cal. Would Aimaq, Cone and Tyson have been able to transfer to furd?

As I implied above, it is his relationship with Knowlton and the Cal bureaucracy (AD and university) that will chase him away.
calumnus
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bluehenbear said:

With the advent of NIL, I think it would be easier for Madsen to recruit to Cal. Would Aimaq, Cone and Tyson have been able to transfer to furd?

As I implied above, it is his relationship with Knowlton and the Cal bureaucracy (AD and university) that will chase him away.


Knowlton lying about the practice facility, poor initial work on Tyson's appeal, stubbornness about students getting in for free….

At Stanford it would be admissions for transfers. More an institutional issue than a personal one, but also more fundamental.

I'd choose Cal, no question. But I am not in the Stanford Hall of Fame.

Big C
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HearstMining said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
With the exception of the Cuonzo's Brown/Rabb class, it seems like Stanford has recruited better than Cal for years and years and I haven't been able to figure out why. Stanford has had mediocre coaches (Trent Johnson, Dawkins, Haase) since Monty left 20 years ago, yet still recruit stronger than Cal, even during Monty and Braun's best years. Ok, maybe the Powe/Kately class (I think they came in together) was better on paper, but didn't really pan out. Anyway, I've always wondered about this.

I think Furd, over the years, has done a good job of identifying a niche (absolute best university academically that also offers top-shelf athletics in a major conference) and then recruiting to that niche, concentrating on private high schools. Helps that, starting with Harbaugh, they relaxed their admissions standards a bit for these athletes.
drizzlybear
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bipolarbear said:

bluehenbear said:

The biggest reason Madsen would leave begins and ends with this person:

https://www.higherechelon.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Knowlton-head-shot-small-002-James-Knowlton-768x1024.jp
Such a punchable face
Sebastabear
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calumnus said:

eastcoastcal said:

4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Any chance of us replicating this? Seems like a great idea to me. At conservatively 4% returns that's nearly 2M annually (not including one-off donations). Love the idea of getting 10 of our whales to put $5M each- obviously very easy for me to say but I have seen VCs put that kind of money towards seed rounds without blinking an eye.


While we are not claiming tax exempt status, it still might be advantageous to seek out donations of appreciated stock, with the donors thereby avoiding capital gains taxes.
Unfortunately that doesn't work. Basis transfers to the new holder of the stock. So if the collective were to receive $100 in stock that you had a basis of $20 in, the collective would have taxable income of $80 when we sold it to pay athletes. The reason you can give appreciated stock to a charity without a tax event is the charity also takes the original basis and has a gain but it isn't a taxpaying entity. So the $80 in gain doesn't trigger a tax event for them

If this worked, people would buy houses and cars with appreciated stock. There's a reason that doesn't happen.

Rereading this post, i realize I definitely went wrong somewhere in my life that I'm posting about tax accounting on a sports message board. Yikes.
wifeisafurd
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4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
So they must be saving all that money for another year. Let's try your two best players and starting d-back when healthy went into the Portal. Absolutely no excuse for letting a future NFL player like Yurosek get away if you have money. Any evidence you can share with us that the Furd guys actually raised any money, or if they have why they are too afraid to use any of it?
calumnus
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Sebastabear said:

calumnus said:

eastcoastcal said:

4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Any chance of us replicating this? Seems like a great idea to me. At conservatively 4% returns that's nearly 2M annually (not including one-off donations). Love the idea of getting 10 of our whales to put $5M each- obviously very easy for me to say but I have seen VCs put that kind of money towards seed rounds without blinking an eye.


While we are not claiming tax exempt status, it still might be advantageous to seek out donations of appreciated stock, with the donors thereby avoiding capital gains taxes.
Unfortunately that doesn't work. Basis transfers to the new holder of the stock. So if the collective were to receive $100 in stock that you had a basis of $20 in, the collective would have taxable income of $80 when we sold it to pay athletes. The reason you can give appreciated stock to a charity without a tax event is the charity also takes the original basis and has a gain but it isn't a taxpaying entity. So the $80 in gain doesn't trigger a tax event for them

If this worked, people would buy houses and cars with appreciated stock. There's a reason that doesn't happen.

Rereading this post, i realize I definitely went wrong somewhere in my life that I'm posting about tax accounting on a sports message board. Yikes.


I was addressing the idea of creating an endowment (as Stanford supposedly has) whose annual proceeds would go to NIL. If appreciated stock were donated and accepted for that endowment, there would be no need to sell the stock and incur capital gains taxes.
6956bear
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wifeisafurd said:

4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
So they must be saving all that money for another year. Let's try your two best players and starting d-back when healthy went into the Portal. Absolutely no excuse for letting a future NFL player like Yurosek get away if you have money. Any evidence you can share with us that the Furd guys actually raised any money, or if they have why they are too afraid to use any of it?
Well Yurosek the TE you mention went to Georgia. Their TE Brock Bowers (Napa) is a likely top 10 pick. They have a lot of money to spend. Stanford could have made Yurosek a good offer that got dwarfed by Georgia.

When the big boys want a player they have the means to get it done.

Personal opinion here. If you want to win you better have an 8 figure NIL warchest. You can be a decent team with a lower number, but if you want to win championships you need a big warchest. A $4M or $5M warchest likely buys a mid tier roster and in no way gets you an elite QB, pass rusher, OT or WR. Those impact positions cost.
southseasbear
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Sebastabear said:

calumnus said:

eastcoastcal said:

4thGenCal said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account
Stanford privately(but its been discussed in various media articles) has now embraced NIL with six very wealthy alums contributing $42M+- with the plan set up to be endowed and thus the interest/investment returns are to be funneled into Football and basketball on a yearly basis. Not sure of all the specific details, but their players are getting varied amounts of NIL income. All other points spot on, with good talent on the current roster. Definitely Haase/staff have continually underperformed, w/o ever making the NCAA post season tournament.
Any chance of us replicating this? Seems like a great idea to me. At conservatively 4% returns that's nearly 2M annually (not including one-off donations). Love the idea of getting 10 of our whales to put $5M each- obviously very easy for me to say but I have seen VCs put that kind of money towards seed rounds without blinking an eye.


While we are not claiming tax exempt status, it still might be advantageous to seek out donations of appreciated stock, with the donors thereby avoiding capital gains taxes.
Unfortunately that doesn't work. Basis transfers to the new holder of the stock. So if the collective were to receive $100 in stock that you had a basis of $20 in, the collective would have taxable income of $80 when we sold it to pay athletes. The reason you can give appreciated stock to a charity without a tax event is the charity also takes the original basis and has a gain but it isn't a taxpaying entity. So the $80 in gain doesn't trigger a tax event for them

If this worked, people would buy houses and cars with appreciated stock. There's a reason that doesn't happen.

Rereading this post, i realize I definitely went wrong somewhere in my life that I'm posting about tax accounting on a sports message board. Yikes.
I dare you to make up for it by posting something about sports on a tax accounting message board!
RedlessWardrobe
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HearstMining said:

Big C said:


The Stanford job is kind of interesting right now, in terms of being able to build a winner:

- On one hand, they don't seem to have many fans, they haven't embraced NIL and they're not keen on transfers

+ On the other hand, they have brought in some pretty impressive high school classes, especially taking Haase into account

Okay, please don't shoot me - this is HYPOTHETICAL: If Furd was to get Madsen would there be any scenario on earth where Cal would pursue Haase? I only say this because its often pointed out here that Haase has done a fairly good job recruiting.

Again I'm only putting this out there to get some opinions. I don't think I would be a proponent of it. If the idea of this happening is so disturbing please let me know and I promise I'll never to bring it up again!
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