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Apr 18, 2008 Nov 30, 2011 121 1176

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Bruins Nation Time to Act: Cease All Financial Support to UCLA Athletics

Enough is enough. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

It's been about 13 years since I slept on a sidewalk.  In Pasadena, that is.  And it was fantastic.

I was going to the Rose Bowl the next day, and didn't know yet that my Bruins would fall to Wisconsin in "the" Rose Bowl.  Nestor and I sat in the stands, and those memories won't leave me soon, or ever.

It's been only slightly less long ago, it seems, that I last posted as a front-pager on BN.  I think it was after that day of hope a few years ago that Ryan and I sat down  with our newly hired coach Rick Neuheisel. 

It's a funny thing, looking back.  It's been 20 years (holy crap!) since I first stepped onto campus in Westwood as a freshman.  It was only weeks later that I went to my first football game at the Rose Bowl.  And that's when my second most significant love affair began.  I wrote about it a bit, in one of my first posts on BN, here .

In case you are wondering, this isn't going to be a regular post, with news, insight or analysis.  There'll be none of that.  This is a story, some catharsis, and maybe a bit of a confession.

You see, while I used to, I do not support UCLA athletics financially anymore.  Let me explain why I have reached this decision and why I think all other Bruin alums, students and season ticket holders should consider doing the same.

Continue reading this post »

37 comments  |  3 recs | 

Bruins Nation BruinsNation Sits Down With Coach Rick Neuheisel: Part 1

Greetings Bruins.

Well, I haven't been around much lately. 

But I'm pleased to say that my return is, well, a doozy.

Yesterday morning, ryebreadraz and I had the pleasure of a sit down interview with UCLA head football coach Rick Neuheisel.

The interview was the product of the hard work of SB Nation CEO Jim Bankoff who kindly worked with Nestor and the other editors here, as well as the extraordinary cooperation and graciousness of Coach Neuheisel and the UCLA Athletic Department.

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a college football coach from a Division I program has sat down with a SB Nation blog for an interview, and rye and I were pleased to be your BN local correspondents.

Rye and I met on the most beautiful campus in the nation, on a beautiful sunny April morning, got our notes together, and were soon led up to the 2nd floor of the Morgan Center by a friendly member of the sports information office staff.

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After a few moments in the waiting area, Coach Neuheisel called us back to his office for an interview that lasted just over a half hour.  He was incredibly generous with his time, and were we able to ask every question we brought with us.

So, without further ado, Coach Neuheisel:

 

BN:  Good morning Coach.

CRN:  How are you?

BN:  Doing great, doing great.  I wanted to take a moment to thank you on behalf of Bruinsnation.com and SB Nation for taking some time to talk to us this morning.

CRN:  My pleasure.

BN:  We have a few questions for you, and I wanted to start off with one thing I’ve seen increasingly this year.  We’ve seen that you’ve made a concerted effort to bring former UCLA players back into the program and keep them involved. What's the biggest benefit of having players involved in the program and which former Bruins are most active in the program now?

CRN:  Well, the biggest benefit is that it’s the right thing to do.  Too often, as a former Bruin myself, I would be out amongst former Bruins, former Trojans, and hear that familiar refrain: Trojans for life, Bruins for four years.  And I just remember thinking, every time I heard it, that’s just a bunch of garbage because I knew how I felt towards the school, how I felt towards the guys I played with and so forth.  But, there wasn’t any way to really solidify the way I felt until I realized, having returned here, that we could put own money where our mouth was in some way, shape or form.  And that’s where the Then, Now and Forever concept came from.  I just wanted some way, a clubhouse if you will, for former players and former Bruins to reunite, talk about all the old times and the great times, and continue to support the current Bruins and the future of the Bruins....  Dick Vermeil is going to be at the Spring game, along with Terry Donahue.  We’re going start to really celebrate all that has happened in UCLA football in the past, as well as get excited about what we think is going to be a very exciting future.

With respect to the question about who are the guys who are most involved from the past, you know James Washington is a great former Bruin that can’t do enough; Matt Stevens and Wayne Cook obviously are in the broadcast booth, so it’s great to see them as often as is possible.  And there’s a lot of people who are willing to work hard to make sure guys want to come back and be involved.  So, it will just get better.  I think guys are realizing it’s real now, it’s not just talk, and hopefully you are going to see a great movement in that direction.

The more of the past we can have, the more the young players on our team right now will realize that it’s not just a facade, it really is going to be a special place, and their work is going to be rewarded.

BN:  You spent some time out of the college game.  Now you’ve come back and a lot has changed, whether it be on the field, in recruiting, or how you deal with the alumni and fans.  What has changed the most, and how have you either had to adjust to it or make work for you and accentuate the pros of the program?

CRN:  The biggest change since my departure was in recruiting, with respect to the 365 day nature of it.  I mean, that was really always the case, but you really have to be a class ahead now.  The month of January, instead of closing recruiting, it’s really starting the next year.  It’s the time when head coaches can be out.  You’ve hopefully had your commitments and had your deals done – certainly not all of them done – but you’ve got a lot of it done prior to December, so the month of January is really out working towards the next year, which is different.  And I’m not sure the rules have kept current with it.  So, it will be one of the topics that I’m going to bring up at the head coaches’ meeting when I get there in May, as to how we want to deal with this expedited calendar, which is, whether we want it or not, a reality based upon all the information that’s out there available on the Internet.

BN:  So would that be more towards establishing an early signing date, or would it be maybe towards limiting the days of recruiting?

CRN:  I don’t know if it’s an early signing date.  I mean, I think that an early signing date would be probably a good move, but it would have to be an August type signing date.  The negative of that is that will make the month of July more of a work month.  And that’s the point of the calendar where you actually get to reacquaint yourself with your family.  And it’s not just for us, I mean it’s coaches across the country, so that will meet with a lot of disfavor.  But, the fact that people are committing early is a reality, whether we want to do anything or not about it in terms of all these people changing their commitments and so forth remains to be seen.  It’s an interesting phenomenon how things are moving so quickly.

BN:  What are you seeing in terms of those changes in the way that technology is being implemented and used in the recruiting process?  And -- you mentioned that there are some rules that may need to be changed to accommodate things -- what would you see as being the appropriate changes to keep the rules abreast of the technological changes that are effecting recruiting?

CRN:  Well, the information is just so readily available, and the positions on the football team like a quarterback, or a kicker, where there’s a musical chairs type of effect where if the one guy takes that spot, another might think “I better look for another spot.”  Those positions are hugely impacted by all the information, and all the camps, and all the different places that cater to that specialized position.  The rule change that I think probably needs to be considered is the ability for coaches to contact players in the month of May, which is currently an evaluation period.  You know, there’s a term called “bumping,” which is when you get onto a campus, a coach will introduce you, and you're not allowed to talk, but there’s a contact.  Those technically are illegal, even though they are commonplace.  Head coaches, thankfully, for myself, aren’t allowed on the road in May because, otherwise, it’s impossible to pull yourself out of that situation.  I tell my coaches all the time, we’ve got to do everything we can to stay out of that situation where you’re contacting kids, but it’s the reality out there.  And I think we ought to just legitimize it, and create an opportunity for coaches to talk to kids about their schools and their opportunities because kids are certainly interested.  The other thing, I think, that would probably to help deal with it is some May recruiting visits in their junior year.  Kids having an opportunity, still having only five [visits], but maybe using one or two in that spring time to go and take a look if they’re ready to make those kinds of decisions. 

BN:  You mentioned a moment ago the increased speed at which the recruiting period works.  There’s been a lot of change in the recruiting world, and it’s also changed in the world of media, as newspapers are going out of business, the world of "New Media" is becoming more and more prominent via blogs, message boards, Facebook, Twitter and other online social networking communities.  We'd like to get your take on "New Media," and I’d like to know whether you have thought about strategies to engage it as this world expands and becomes a place where thousands of alumni and students are getting their information.

CRN:  Well, there are a lot of us in my generation, maybe even a little older than I, that would like to imagine that its all not really there.  [laughs]  We don’t want to have to learn all these new technologies and new applications and so forth.  But, the facts of the matter are they are there.  And, so our on-campus recruiting coordinator, Angus McClure, is – as he likes to call himself – a power user, which means that he’s adept at all this new technology.  And, so we are constantly trying to figure out ways to incorporate it into our recruiting operation and to make sure that we can always be on the cutting edge.  I am not a power user [laughs], but I recognize its an absolute necessity because, as my sons are becoming adolescents, that’s how they communicate.  And, so, we need to know how we do that, and how to best get our message across to the young people in the country that are going to help our program grow.

BN:  How do you feel about players reading blogs and message boards?  Some coaches might suggest that they prefer that players and recruits not visit these sorts of places.  Do you feel the same way or have a different feeling?

CRN:  Well it’s one thing what we like and what we don’t like, but then we have to deal with reality.  The reality is that they are going to look.  I mean, my mom and dad read the blogs and the message boards and I tell them constantly, you know, you can’t believe what you read, how many times to I have to tell you that?  But, because it’s involving their son, they are going to be involved in it.  So, for our players, all you can do is educate them to remember that these are opinions, these are ideas, these are just random thoughts – valid as they may be – that you have to make sure you are not putting any stock into. 

BN:  So, moving over onto the field now, you and Norm Chow are both offensive coaches.  How do you divide your time in terms of working with quarterbacks, working with the offense?  Also, because you have someone who is so adept at working with those quarterbacks, do you feel that now you don’t have to worry about the big picture as much in that sense, and can work more hands on with these quarterbacks when you want to?  Or do you just kind of step back more and let Norm handle those types of things?

CRN:  You know, it’s an interesting question.  That was one of Norm’s big concerns when he took the job, because he’s always been told by an old buddy of his that “don’t work for an offensive minded head coach,” because they are going to get in your kitchen.  The good news is we’re both at points in our career where we kind of checked our egos at the door.  It isn’t about which one of us has got the right idea.  It’s about getting it done right.  And so there’s been a real nice yin and yang to it.  Sometimes I’ll help in the position portion of it.  Sometimes I’ll help with the idea portion of it.  To say that we have defined roles I think is probably wrong; his defined role is that he’s the offensive coordinator and he’s got the total veto power.  I’ve given him that.  But, he also realizes and values my judgment with respect to having been an offensive coach for many years and, so, we play each others ideas and we come to the conclusion, and it’s been an unbelievably smooth working relationship, and one that I’m very thankful for.  I think he’s terrific, I think our players are lucky to have him, and I think we’re going to be a better football team as we develop and as our players learn the system.

BN:  So, if you had to take maybe the top one or two things you’ve learned from him, what would that be in the past year?

CRN:   I think that from a personality standpoint, I’m very appreciative that he’s so giving.  Many “geniuses” in the world have one way to do it and one way only.  Norm is very open-minded, and, I think, because of that, we’re able to adapt to the skills of our players.  From a technical standpoint, there are some concepts in his passing game that I’ve grown to really like and admire in terms of how he teaches it and the whole thing.  It would probably be too complicated to go into here, but just trust that he’s got some schemes that, for all of those years, [made me think] “how did he get that done?”  Now, I know.  [laughs]  And it’s been fun to learn how he gets it done.

BN:  Coach, the spread offense has taken the nation by storm and the majority of the country's top offenses are running some form of the spread offense, yet when you took over, you came in with Norm Chow and a pro-style offense.  Why did you decide to go in that direction and why do you think the offense you're currently running is the best for the Bruins?

CRN:  It’s a great question, and there are times when I look at spread offenses and I see value.  The key to the spread offense, and the reason why its successful, is that it adds an extra player.  It diminishes the need for great offensive linemen, because you’ve got a little longer because you are always in the gun, and the quarterback’s a runner.  So, in essence, he becomes a blocker, and can account for an extra defender.  All great thoughts, all great thoughts.  The problem at UCLA is that you have to beat the Trojans.  And it’s also the benefit at UCLA, because when you beat them, you’re going to be among the nation’s elite.  So you have to be a physical offense.  I know that two years ago SC got beat by Oregon up in Eugene, but his last year, SC with their physical defense was able to beat the heck out of a very, very good spread offense Oregon team. 

You’ve also seen when you lose a quarterback in the spread offense, things can go awry, as happened with Oregon two years ago.  They lost Dennis Dixon and then I think they lost their last three games to Arizona, to UCLA and then to Oregon State.  It’s a difficult offense to have a lot players at the quarterback position because it’s so [much] decision making, which requires all the repetitions and, yet, you’re exposing them. 

I was the benefactor of a type of spread offense, even though it was an option offense, it’s the same math in terms of the quarterback’s [being] a runner in Marcus Tuiasosopo at Washington which we took to the Rose Bowl.  So, I understand the benefits and the virtues of having the extra guy.  I just think you have to be careful about how often you expose that quarterback.  [Jeremiah] Masoli at Oregon was maybe the player of the year had he burst onto the scene maybe a couple weeks earlier last year.  But, if he’s gone, what happens to the offense? 

That being said, the other thing that kids are interested in today is the chance to go to play on Sundays.  You are not seeing spread offenses played on Sundays.  Vince Young would have been the perfect guy to go and do it, but even Vince Young didn’t want to do it.  And I have it on authority, because Norm was there, because he doesn’t want to get hit anymore.  He doesn’t want to get beat up on an every-Sunday basis and shorten his career length.  So, quarterbacks that are interested in going to the NFL would like to be in pro-style offenses.  So, you can go and attract guys.  [Likewise,] offensive linemen, frankly, would like to be in offenses that are going to be like the NFL because they’d like to have a chance to play in more of that scheme.  It goes on down the line; the more you play like an NFL offense, the more the NFL can look and see your skill level and adapt it to that.  That argument gets more watered down the further out you go because obviously receivers can still play receiver, and running backs can still play running back. 

But it’s an interesting question, and I think you can never, ever stop investigating it, and researching it, and having some components of it.  There were some components of the spread offense in what we did last year.  We got into the old wildcat stuff, and it isn’t as though we’ve got our heads in the sand.  I just think, to start with, we’ve got to be a physical running team that can handle the line of scrimmage with the likes of a very talented defensive team like USC.

Just tremendous stuff from Coach Neuheisel.

And, it doesn't stop there.  Stay tuned for Rye's second installment.  Ever wonder about CRN's views on academic standards for admissions in recruiting, the new Pac-10 commissioner, TV contracts, bowl tie-ins, and whether there should be a playoff to determine the national championship?  That, and more, coming soon.

For now, let us know what you think about Part 1. 

It's your turn now.  Fire away.

GO BRUINS.

51 comments  |  17 recs | 

Bruins Nation Recruiting BN Style

It's been nice to see recruiting pipelines open up for our football team.  And, obviously, it's hard to complain about basketball recruiting as the anticipation builds for a new season.

But that's nothing my friends.  Well, at least it's nothing compared to the recruiting gets I'm pleased to announce on BN today.

First off, [Bellerophon] is no more.  I'm happy to say that [he] has accepted our offer to join us as a moderator.  So, without further ado, let me introduce Bellerophon.  Let's here it for B.  Just read any of this guy's stories, and you'll know why we like him.  And it doesn't hurt to have a BN mod from Northern California in the house. 

Secondly, one of our long time members gets what I can only call a permanent "bump."  Our resident baseball expert and non-revenue sport guru, ryebreadraz, is henceforth an "author" on BN.  That means that rye has been given a few of the keys to the castle and can, among other things, post freely on the front page.  Of course, we largely did this - not to give special recognition to rye's excellent contributions - but to avoid the hassle of always having to bump his stories to the front page. 

You might ask: how did we manage this recruiting coup?  Well:

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That's right.  Taking a page from our friends across town, we used what we had to.  Cold.  Hard.  Cash.  (Photo credit brahsome.)

So, let's hear it for these guys.  Another example of this community growing and becoming more vibrant because of your contributions. 

Have a happy Halloween all.

GO BRUINS.

19 comments  | 

Bruins Nation Neuheisel to the Faithful

The Friday before Game 1. 

It doesn't get any more exciting than this.  It's bad enough that it's a holiday weekend.  Even worse that we have to wait until Monday to see how the Neuheisel era will begin against the Vols.

In the interim, all we can do is wait.  And not get much work done.

So, in that spirit, I joined the UCLA Faithful at the Bruin Touchdown Club breakfast this morning.  If you haven't been to one of these, it's a gathering of fans, led by our very own Geoffrey Strand, which features food, friends, cheerleaders and some words from our Bruins. 

For this installment, it was Coach Neuheisel's turn, along with Brigham Harwell, ATV, Logan Paulsen and Micah Reed.  It was an interesting morning, but the highlight was the presentation by Neu:

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And, besides giving a nice talk about the upcoming season, Coach Neuheisel also eloquently addressed the ads placed by UCLA in the LAT and Daily News we've discussed before.

Just 3 more days.

GO BRUINS.

UPDATE - N: We have taken the audio link out per Rick Neuheisel's request. GO BRUINS.

41 comments  |  1 recs | 

Bruins Nation Southern Cal beats USC

According to the LAT, Southern Cal's branding police won a victory over USC (University of South Carolina), convincing the U.S. Trademark Office that Southern Cal owns the rights to the "SC" logo.

The University of Southern California and the University of South Carolina share the same initials. But they won't be sharing a trademark logo.

Not now that the administrative tribunal of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has ruled that the local USC has priority of use when it comes to the "SC" logo, including the interlocking version.

Good for Southern Cal.  And I mean that with utmost respect, as our friends from across town call themselves "Southern Cal," and have several trademarks for that phrase to prove it.  Of course, they don't want you to call them "Southern Cal," but according to Adam Rose, they don't want anyone else called Southern Cal either.

The University of Southern California loathes the moniker "Southern Cal," even though they make a limited run of "Southern Cal" branded apparel every year. The production is necessary for the school to retain its trademark and prevent anybody else from using it.

Interestingly, Klein and Rose ignore some of Southern Cal's more recent trademark efforts.

According to the Trademark Office, Southern Cal is also seeking exclusive possession of the following terms:

CHEATIE PETEE™
THE HUMANITARIAN™
DAMN SPORTS AGENTS!™
CHEAT ON™
WE OWN THE POLICE™
'LIL ROMEO'S TEEN FANCLUB™
NEITHER OJ DID IT™
WHITE NATION™
GAP CLOSERS™
MCNAIR'S DOG HOUSE™

Please keep this in mind.  As we know, Southern Cal can be aggressive with their trademark enforcement practices.

Happy Friday all (and let me know which ones I missed!).

GO BRUINS.

4 comments  | 

Bruins Nation Game On: Day 3 Fall Practice Pictures

It was another beautiful day at Spaulding Field.

Once again, I was able to duck out to spend a half hour or so watching our boys gear up for the Vols.

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For most of my time, the Bruins were broken out by position working on drills.  But, I was able to hang around for a little scrimmaging, including the No. 1's going up against one another:

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It was a spirited exchange, with players on both sides of the ball hooting and hollering.  And, I believe it was Milton Knox who mixed it up with another player briefly in a nice show of emotion.

More (lots more) pictures after the jump.

GO BRUINS.

Continue reading this post »

7 comments  |  3 recs | 

Bruins Nation USC Takes Steps to Avoid Scandal

Interesting blurb by Gary Klein over at the LAT's blog. 

Instead of boning up on the play book or something, our friends at Southern Cal spent the day in meetings yesterday to remind themselves of the difficult-to-understand notion that getting free rent, uh, isn't okay:

USC players sat through several meetings Tuesday, including one in which they submitted forms with their housing information.

The Trojans, of course, are no stranger to housing-related issues.

USC is awaiting the outcome of the NCAA's investigation of Reggie Bush, and one of the main issues concerns his family's living arrangements in a house near San Diego while the Heisman Trophy winner was playing for the Trojans.

In summer 2006, the NCAA ruled receiver Dwayne Jarrett ineligible because of his living arrangement with quarterback Matt Leinart the previous year. Jarrett had paid $650 a month, Leinart had paid $650, and Leinart's father paid the balance of the $3,866 rent for a luxury downtown apartment for 13 months.

Jarrett was reinstated without missing any games and was ordered to pay $5,352 to charity as a condition of his reinstatement.

But, in another example of the clear pro-Trojan bias at the LAT, Klein only tells half the story.  The "housing form" he mentions isn't just limited to housing. 

Fortunately, through my limitless network of contacts, I was able to obtain a copy of the form.  Here it is:

University of Southtern California Fall Compliance Form

Dear Student/Athlete:

As you know, USC is committed to excelence on the field.  However, it is important to remember to also play lip service to relevant NCAA regulations as well as those pesky California and federal laws.  Fortunately, our history of villainy at Southern Cal has permited us to compile this comprehensive form.  Please fill it out completely.

1.  In the past twelve (12) months, have you:

    a.  Allowed a tutor to write papers for you?  _____  [Answer: No.]
    b.  Solicited a prostitute (Song Girls excluded)?  _____  [Answer: No]
    c.  Committed felony assault with a deadly weapon? _____  [Answer: No.]
    d.  Purchased, used or displayed a replica firearm? _____  [Answer: No.]
    e.  Purchased, used or possessed 136 Ecstacy pills? _____  [Answer: No.]
    g.  Attacked a teammate (with or without fracturing jaw)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    h.  Committed spousal battery (whether or not deserved)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    i.  Committed vandalism? _____  [Answer: No.]
    j.  Committed false imprisionment? _____  [Answer: No.]
    k.  Committed indecent exposure? _____  [Answer: No.]
    l.  Trashed the dorms or other university property? _____  [Answer: No.]
    m.  Sucker-punched guy a frat party (whether or not deserved)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    n.  Exclaimed "I own the police" (truth is no defense)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    p.  Obtained free house for your parents from sport agents? _____  [Answer: No.]
    q.  Taken thousands of dollars in cash and gifts from sports agent? _____  [Answer: No.]
    r.  Committed sexual assualt? _____  [Answer: No.]
    s.  Accepted free rent from "teammates dad" or otherwise? _____  [Answer: No.]
    t.  Taken steriods (whether or not from Ting's dad)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    u.  Knocked up any Southern Cal athletes? _____  [Answer: No.]
    v.  Hit a fellow bar patron in the face with a drinking glass? _____  [Answer: No.]
    w.  Taken any classes from Senora Garcia (formerly known as Senora Ross)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    x.  Created or joined any racist Facebook groups (whether or not as "joke")? _____  [Answer: No.]
    y.  Arrested for marijuana possession (use is okay)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    z. Trained or neglected 20 or more pit bulls? _____  [Answer: No.]
    aa.  Attacked a teammate (with or without fracturing jaw) (yes, we need to ask again)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    bb.   Resisted arrest or obstructed justice? _____  [Answer: No.]
    dd.   Committed robbery (with or without use of handgun)? _____  [Answer: No.]
    ee.  Allowed your "slow" son to post a video on uscripsit.com? _____  [Answer: No.]
    ff.  Received thousands of dollars in illegal benefits from known agent and runner right under coaches noses? _____  [Answer: No.]

2.  If "Yes" to any of the above, please call Carmen Trutanich at (310) 555-4USC immediately. 

3.  If "Yes" to any of the above, please notify the Southern Cal Rapid Media Response team by pressing the large illuminated blue button at any "USC Crisis Station".

Signature:  _________________________   [If you cannot sign, you may make your mark (X) in the space provided or ask your official USC sponsored test taker for assistance].

According to Scott Wolf, the meetings are apparently having a big impact:

``I'm already bored and it's the first day,'' one player said after attending several meetings Tuesday.

Well, at least they are trying, I guess...

GO BRUINS.

18 comments  | 

Bruins Nation Game On: Day 1 Fall Practice Pictures

Can you feel it?

You've gorged on pre-season previews.  You have your tickets in hand.  You know the roster like the back of your hand.  You wake up at night in a cold sweat rhythmically repeating "stay healthy" along with "Olson" and the names of each of the Bruin's offensive linemen.

It's just about go time, fellas.

And, today, our boys are back in action.

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Well, practice is probably still in progress.  But, I was able to spend a half hour or so at Spaulding Field.  I wasn't there long to report much, though it was interesting to see that the only QB's to attempt a pass while I was there were No. 7 above, and No. 14 Kevin Prince:

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More pictures after the jump.  Whether the coming season is up and down, or just plain sideways.  I.  Can't.  Wait.

GO BRUINS.

 

Continue reading this post »

15 comments  |  5 recs | 

Bruins Nation Howland Rewarded with New Contract

As a couple of you have already pointed out, Coach Howland signed a new seven year contract today.  From UCLA Sports Information (via LAT):

UCLA head men’s basketball coach Ben Howland and the University have agreed on a new seven-year contract, athletic director Dan Guerrero announced today. The new contract, which runs through the 2014-15 season, includes guaranteed compensation of $1.97 million for the 2008-09 season and escalates to $2.3 million for the 2014-15 season. It also includes the incentive package from his previous contract that has a maximum value of $235,000. [...]

 "Ben Howland and UCLA are a great combination," said Guerrero. "Ben is at the top of his profession and is deserving of this commitment by the University. He has returned UCLA to the nation’s elite, as illustrated by three straight Finals Fours and three consecutive 30-win seasons. He is an outstanding recruiter, and the foundation Ben has built for our program promises to keep us at the forefront for the foreseeable future."

Talk about well deserved.  And it's good to see UCLA doing the right thing after what's been one of the best coaching runs in memory.  As Jeff Eisenberg at the PE points out, it's a nice raise for Howland:

The deal is a significant bump over the extension he signed last summer. Howland made $1.5 million for the 2007-08 season and would have made $2 million by the end of the contract in 2013-14.

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via www.beloblog.com

Of course, I can't say that our pleas to hold onto Howland led to this development, which has likely been in the works for a little while.  But, I'm never one to doubt the collective weight of our words either.

It's also great to hear that, despite the slow pace of the Pauley renovation project, Howland's heart still seems to be in the right place:

"I have said this before, but there is no place I would rather be coaching than UCLA," said Howland, 51. "I grew up a Bruin basketball fan and this is my dream job. We have great young men in our program, both on and off the field, and they are the real reasons for our success. UCLA is a special name in college basketball thanks to Coach Wooden and I am proud to be the caretaker of his program. I am also grateful to Chancellor (Gene) Block and Dan for the faith they continue to show in me."

Gotta love it.  Let me just say again.  Thank God for Ben Howland.

GO BRUINS.

36 comments  | 

Bruins Nation Circling the Wagons

(Ed. Note:  I understand that this topic is likely between somewhat and ridiculously uninteresting to many of you, so if you aren't interested in inter-blog squabbling, please avert your gaze.  For the rest of you, thanks for indulging this very long little slice of heaven.)

For those of you not keeping tabs, a few days ago, a fellow SBN blogger SMQ took a shot at Neuheisel, and I responded.  SMQ then responded by attacking our expectations for the Bruins' 2008-09 football season.  In a lengthy post, which I've already addressed, SMQ attacks our motives in setting expectations in previous years, thusly:

What this is, really, is an admission that the "expectations" for Dorrell were ridiculous –– intentionally constructed to be beyond not only any independent projections but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position.

In response, I said before, and say again:

It's all very polite, but he's calling us liars.  He's attacking our motives and credibility.  He's saying we don't write what we believe.  Instead, we have some dark hidden agenda.  Before, it was to get rid of KD.  Now, it's to support Nueheisel out of some "all-out investment in coach-worship."  In short, it is, at best, a lame conspiracy theory and, at worst, an ugly personal attack.

Well, that didn't sit well in some corners.  T Kyle King, our esteemed SBN colleague at Dawg Sports, has chimed in, as he did previously in effusively praising SMQ's post, arguing that:

SMQ’s disagreements with other bloggers, no matter how vehement or heartfelt, never descend to the level of personal attacks. ...

Nowhere in there were there the sorts of cheap shots, sweeping overgeneralizations, or ancillary sideswipes which all too often typify disputes in the blogosphere. ...

While the members of the Bruins Nation community may not like what SMQ has written here, though, SMQ steered clear of attacking the singer rather than the song.

I responded in the comment thread over here as follows:

[...]  I don’t think it’s quite right that SMQ "steered clear of attacking the singer rather than the song" (with due respect to Kyle, whose opinion I value).

SMQ certainly wasn’t bombastic, and he writes very well, so I can see how folks might get that impression. But, it wasn’t like he was disagreeing with us about who will win the Lakers game tonight. I wasn’t saying, it’ll be the Lakers, because Kobe will be on fire, with SMQ saying that it’s Celtics all the way at home. He’s saying, very directly, if politely, that we were being disingenuous, and writing things we don’t mean for some imagined ulterior motive. He’s saying both that the message is (or, rather, was) wrong, and that it was wrong because the author was intentionally writing things with no basis in fact ("intentionally constructed to be beyond not only any independent projections but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position"). That’s a personal attack, in my opinion.

Yet, rather than address (or even acknowledge) my points there, Kyle chose to write a lengthy rebuke at his own place.  Kyle's finger wagging concluded thusly:

Disagree with SMQ if you will, but give the man his considerable due. He did not offer a personal attack; indeed, one of the many ways in which his posting was noteworthy was for its lack of invective and its evenness of tone. Perhaps this merely is a clash of personalities---Bruins Nation and Sunday Morning Quarterback are, respectively, the most and least partisan college sports weblogs at SB Nation---but, if SMQ is to be taken to task, let it be for what he actually wrote, not for some caricature of it.

Sunday Morning Quarterback did not outline a conspiracy theory and I would take issue with anyone who accused Nestor, Menelaus, and the rest of the Bruin faithful of such a thing. However, Menelaus’s recent diatribe against SMQ was over the top and unfair to an extent that did nothing to help me make the case that Bruins Nation is a forum for impassioned yet reasonable fans. If Menelaus’s response is representative of his approach to constructive criticism---and, to be clear, I do not believe it is---he should steer clear of tin foil hat analogies, which do him no favors after a posting like that one.

There are so many points to make.  I will try to be brief, but there is a lot of material to deal with.

First off, let's deal with the main issue squarely.  Was SMQ's critique of BN's expectations for the Bruins' 2008-09 football season a personal attack? 

Before I go on, let's be clear, calling out someone's motives politely is the same as calling them out any other way.  No amount of graceful verbiage, however "nuanced or exacting," changes that.  So, saying that BN "intentionally constructed [expectations] to be beyond not only any independent projections but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position," I'm sorry to say, is an attack on our integrity.  It's an attack on the singer, not the song.

Let me try to illustrate.  Maybe if I make it more tangible, no one will get lost in SMQ's nice prose.  Let's suppose your investing some money.  Your investment guy tells you to expect a 6% return on your investment, with no risk of loss.  A year later, the investment fails and you loss everything.  There are several possible explanations here.  Your broker might have justifiably relied on flawed market reports.  Or, he might have made an honest mistake and misinterpreted accurate data.  Or, he could have intentionally constructed expectations that went beyond not only any independent market reports but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position in order to earn a higher commission. 

If it's either of the first two, his message was just wrong.  If its the later, he was lying.  And to call him out on the later is to attack his integrity.  Of course, there is a difference between attacking the message, and attacking the messenger. 

Tellingly, it doesn't appear that SMQ's audience was at all confused.  They interpreted SMQ exactly as intended: that SMQ was calling BN a liar.  Just two examples, from the thread at Kyle's place.  First, we have Skin Patrol, from SBN colleague Hogs Heaven (who also commented at SMQ):

 

At least BN is honest with themselves about what they’re trying to accomplish. ;)

 

I think SMQ’s point was that… they aren’t.

Or, how about Beatuofa, from the same thread:

.... And to crow that BN is honest about their goals—I think that’s the whole point of what Matt (SMQ) is saying, that they are being more than a little disingenuous at least, and hypocritical at worst, in their wholly negative spin on Karl Dorrell and the newly wholly positive spin in Rick Neuheisel....

So, I guess, I got it wrong, but no one else has.

In the end, repeat it all you want.  It wasn't a personal attack.  It wasn't a personal attack.  Just know, that it was.

Second, was SMQ's critique advancing a conspiracy theory?  By definition, a conspiracy theory is:

A conspiracy theory posits that a coordinated group is, was, and/or will be secretly working together to commit illegal or wrongful actions including hiding the existence of the group and its activities.

Again, the answer is squarely yes. 

SMQ basically compared three data points, namely, our expectations for the football team in 2006, 2007 and 2008, without "going into the returning [2008] roster in extreme detail."  Based upon his opinion that BN's expectations in 2006 and 2007 were inflated as compared to 2008, SMQ concludes that the difference is attributable an intentional plot to set expectations for Dorrell beyond any realistic level as a means to see him "canned." 

Of course, SMQ doesn't analyze or even disagree with BN's expectations for each individual season and, in fact, he mostly agrees now ("It’s not that these projections are destined to be wrong"), just as he did then.  And he doesn't touch on any of the many reasons why our expectations might reasonably differ from one year to the next, (aside from snarky references to HFCAGIOACRN), such as schedule, roster or the distinction between newly hired and long-established coaches.

In other words, SMQ is ignoring, or at least glossing over, the merits of the various data points, and instead promoting a third explanation for his views:  a secret cabal of Bruins fans set upon "canning" one coach and "worshiping" the next.  That, my friends, is a conspiracy.

Third, when did SMQ become completely unassailable?  When did he become immune to criticism?  Because this debate isn't really about the "right way to argue over expectations."  My post was hardly a "diatribe," and SMQ's was hardly the poster child for evenness and respect.

On the one hand, Kyle cherry picks my post for only the quotes he believes might support his theme:  SMQ is saint;  Menelaus is unfair nasty guy.  Specifically, he attacks me for these selective quotations:

[H]e's calling us liars. He's attacking our motives and credibility. He's saying we don't write what we believe. Instead, we have some dark hidden agenda. Before, it was to get rid of KD. Now, it's to support Nueheisel out of some "all-out investment in coach-worship." In short, it is, at best, a lame conspiracy theory and, at worst, an ugly personal attack.

What comes in between the above quoted introduction and conclusion is an amusing mish-mash of snark, obfuscation and flawed analysis. . . .

[T]hroughout his commentary, SMQ also misses perhaps the most critical point. Specifically, he wrongly compares our collective expectations for a first year coach (Neuheisel) to one who'd been on the job 4 and 5 years (Dorrell)...

[D]on't buy into any of the sham details in SMQ's team-by-team analysis. It's so replete with inconsistencies as to be laughable.

By the way, I stand behind all of that.  If I had to do it over again, I might re-title the post (which I thought was funny), and delete the word "sham."  But, the rest, is still dead on. 

On the other hand, let's consider these quotes from SMQ:

Now that the message is "Head Coach Richard Neuheisel Is the Best CEO in America," the tone of the rhetoric has changed completely –– it’s all positive, all the time –– but the commitment to the message is as staunch as ever....

[R]ingleader Nestor laid out the expectations for that season...

Obviously.  And obviously, now that UCLA has a real Head Coach rather than an unqualified Doofus, for which BN lobbied so tirelessly, the excuses employed by the Dorrell apologists for the team’s mediocrity over the last five years will not do.... [T]o make the excuse of losing players for a bad record is just ridiculous....  No, Head Football Coach/Amateur Guitarist/Innocent of All Charges Richard Neuheisel is the Head Football Coach who will finally push the Bruins over the top...

O rly? That’s, uh, quite a change of opinion of the Bruins’ potential in a single year....

My first thought when Neuheisel was hired was, "How long will it take for Bruins Nation to turn on him?"  Obviously, with an all-out investment in coach-worship of this order, it’s going to be a long, long time.  Most fans have high hopes for immediate improvement under a new coach, but they don’t understand how to protect that investment.  Nestor does.  People don’t give a motorcycle gang of angry sumo wrestlers this wide a berth....

It’s not that these projections are destined to be wrong... but in context, they are staggeringly hypocritical....

[Dorrell's] was 10-10 when the current clan at BN first took the drumbeat virtual at Fire Karl Dorrell midway through the 2004 season.... Three years later, the same folks appear very willing to accept losses to the high end of the Mountain West and to Pac Ten bottom-dwellers... as a natural step in the rebuilding process.  Six-win seasons were completely unacceptable for Dorrell, but HFCAGIOFACCRN can take all the time he needs.

What this is, really, is an admission that the "expectations" for Dorrell were ridiculous –– intentionally constructed to be beyond not only any independent projections but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position....

Is SMQ's dripping sarcasm, condescension and snark really any better than what I wrote?  Why should he get a pass for politely, but not at all subtlety, ridiculing BN?  What about when he mocked our "single minded obsession" and impending struggles with a "future without their nemesis empty and devoid of meaning" (his words)?  Is any other notion not just wrong, but completely inconceivable, particularly when it comes from someone who holds himself as a impartial observer? 

Fourth, isn't it at least a little bit telling how this all played out?

  • On June 12, SMQ posted an article entitled Mandate for Change that, in part, takes a swipe at Neuheisel;
  • The next day, June 13, I put up a FanPost entitled Hating on Neuheisel disagreeing with SMQ characterization of Neuheisel as a "charlatan" and comparison to "Al Capone";
  • The following day, June 14, SMQ responds to a comment relating to BN and Hating on Neuheisel in the comment thread of Mandate for Change as follows:
  • Nestor himself just wrote he’d be ecstatic if the team went 6-6 this year, and admitted the very real possibility of going 3-9/4-8. He writes off BYU as a loss - not a toss-up, but an expected loss - even though LA beat BYU last year in the regular season and should have beat them again in the bowl game. And the reaction was, "Hmmm, sobering."

    Say what? I mean, really, WTF? It’s a rational prediction, but it’s been a rational prediction for the last two years, and BN consistently wailed about how underachieving the team was - it’s the exact result that made that site explode with contempt on a daily basis. I thought they expected progress. Dorrell never had a regular season worse than 6-6 and they berated him and ran him off like a leper. But when Head Coach Richard Neuheisel The Best CEO In America™ fails to take a single step forward (that’s Nestor’s expectation, not mine), it’s cool - just give him time.

  • The very next day, June 15, I responded to SMQ's comment on Mandate for Change as follows:
  • You understand that my criticism had little, or nothing, to do with your overall perspective re UCLA performance this year. Much of your post, including the detailed history of Dorrell’s underperformance, is quite accurate. That said, your treatment of Neuheisel, as I explained, is one sided. It’s just that simple. So, take whatever issue you’d like in your overall distaste for BN, but please, try to stay on topic.

  • That same night, June 15, SMQ posted his story attacking the expectations of BN, and the motives behind those predictions, entitled Whatever Happened to Great Expectations.
  • About a day and half later, June 17, I responded with my story defending BN against SMQ's attacks, and today, June 18, Dawg Sports comes to SMQ's defense.
  • Now, far be it from me to suggest that SMQ is human, and possibly got a little miffed that I'd have the audacity to disagree with anything in Mandate for Change.  Of course, it's impossible to believe that SMQ chose to get his digs in against BN after refusing to engage in a discussion about his barbs about Neuheisel over at his place.  Yep, the guy is unassailable.  He had the "expectations" post in the queue from the beginning.  And Mr. Evenhanded wouldn't even dream of taking a shot if he somehow was suffering from a bruised ego.  And no one out there might even think so.

    Fifth, why do folks go so far out of their way to soft pedal this and defend SMQ?  Kyle, for example, gives SMQ a wider berth than a motorcycle gang of angry sumo wrestlers, in saying that "SMQ [merely] had some questions about Nestor’s game-by-game analysis, wondering a bit about" BN's expectations.

    Huh?  SMQ was just "wondering" aloud, like some absent minded professor wandering across campus?  The tone wasn't sarcastic and snarky?  No, no, it was a hallmark of "evenness of tone" (evenly snarky?).  Really?

    Listen, I fully understand that I'm not one of the "gang."  I get that some people worship SMQ and look down on UCLA and BN.  But, to see outsiders circle the wagons around SMQ like this baffles me. 

    As I've said, he's a pretty thoughtful guy, known for in-depth analysis and doing his homework.  But, I won't apologize for calling him out on this one.

    Sixth, and finally, let me address, in closing, some of the side issues raised by Kyle's post.

    • Are you really trying to support your argument by comparing the comments to my post, to the comments to SMQ's?  I'm sorry, but you could just as easily say that SMQ's post didn't hit the high water mark (or, more correctly, conveyed exactly the intended message), when it inspired comments attacking BN's "nonsensical drivel," "biggest bunch of hypocrites," and delighting in a "takedown" of a blog that couldn't be "more deserving."
    • Your main substantive point, that Neuheisel should perform better in his first year at UCLA than BN expects, rests on a misapplication of the premise that "maintaining prior level of play with the former coach's players appears to be Coach Neuheisel's modus operandi" (emphasis added).  Among other things, and most fundamentally, this ignores that talent and experience wise, the cupboard at UCLA is considerably more bare than it was at Colorado and Washington.
    • It's not right to chide me more attributing the "single-issue blog" comment to SMQ when, despite not authoring the specific line from EDSBS, he's said basically the same thing himself before.

    Thanks to anyone who had it in them to get this far.  But, some things just can't go unanswered.

    GO BRUINS.

    31 comments  |  7 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Bring Out the Tin Foil Hats

    As you know, last week, Nestor set out our expectations for the Bruins' 2008-09 football season.  We said that, at this snap shot in time, the Bruins could finish anywhere from 6-6 to 3-9 depending on how things shook out.

    Some of you pushed back with conspiracy theories, suggesting that we'd toned down expectations to give Neuheisel a "honeymoon."  And we responded, in much detail, setting forth the many reasons we felt that this season would be a rough one for the Bruins, and had a nice fact-based back and forth.

    And that was it.  Well, at least until SMQ took a shot at Neuheisel, and we had the audacity to respond.  Then, after this "single-issue blog" (do they mean UCLA's three consecutive Final Fours?) disagreed with SMQ, we had our response.

    But, instead of supporting his labeling of Neuheisel as a "charlatan," SMQ lashes out at Bruins Nation, suggesting that our football predictions are "ridiculous" and part of a fraudulent and politically calculated attempt to stay on "message."  Specifically, SMQ begins:

    One of the really entertaining things about UCLA partisans Bruins Nation is how staunchly on-message it is at all times. It’s apparent some of its founders have political backgrounds. When the message was "Fire Karl Dorrell," no opportunity was missed, no sentence was written that might weaken the campaign. Not even after a 26-point win. Not even if it was November and L.A. could still potentially make the Rose Bowl.  Nothing could stand in BN’s path.

    Now that the message is "Head Coach Richard Neuheisel Is the Best CEO in America," the tone of the rhetoric has changed completely –– it’s all positive, all the time –– but the commitment to the message is as staunch as ever. Take the site’s official expectations for Neuheisel’s first season, for example.

    And then, after comparing our expectations for this year to those of years' past, concludes:

    What this is, really, is an admission that the "expectations" for Dorrell were ridiculous –– intentionally constructed to be beyond not only any independent projections but beyond the realistic grasp of anyone in his position.

    It's all very polite, but he's calling us liars.  He's attacking our motives and credibility.  He's saying we don't write what we believe.  Instead, we have some dark hidden agenda.  Before, it was to get rid of KD.  Now, it's to support Neuheisel out of some "all-out investment in coach-worship."  In short, it is, at best, a lame conspiracy theory and, at worst, an ugly personal attack.

    What comes in between the above quoted introduction and conclusion is an amusing mish-mash of snark, obfuscation and flawed analysis. 

    On the one hand, he puffs up the Bruins, lauding them as "a team that returns its leading passer, leading rusher and five of its seven leading receivers," presumably to make our dour predictions seem fool hearty.  Of course, that conveniently ignores that said "leading passer" [Olson] is injured and had a mere 1040 yards passing, with just 7 touchdowns (and 6 INT's), in limited duty; that the "leading rusher" [Bell] had just 795 yards and also is returning from season-ending injury; or that UCLA's best two receivers are gone and the best of the remaining five "leading receivers" [Johnson] had just 322 yards on 25 receptions.

    On the other hand, SMQ seems to begrudingly agree with our assessment:

    It’s not that these projections are destined to be wrong –– without going into the returning roster in extreme detail....

    Indeed, this agreement is no doubt compelled by even a cursory review of UCLA's lineup and upcoming season, including that:

    • We have no healthy experienced quarterback, and our lone returning starter has been both uneven in performance and fragile in health;
    • We have a brutal schedule, including a strong OOC slate of BYU, Tennessee, and Fresno State, which have pre-season rankings of 12, 22 and 29, respectively.  We also have most of our toughest conference games (Oregon, Cal, ASU) on the road;
    • We have an unheralded, inexperienced, and frightfully thin offensive line;
    • We have limited overall experience, on both sides of the ball, with only 9 returning starters (compared to 20 last year);
    • We have basically only one proven returner in both the secondary and at linebacker;
    • We have two green, undersized and inexperience defensive ends; and
    • We have seen recruiting suffer through much of Dorrell's tenure, with most of the help this year being in the form of freshman.

    And, don't just take our word for it.  Even if one were to question our motives, surely they would believe virtually the same predictions coming from such folks as "prognostocenti par excellence" Phil Steele and others:

    6.  UCLA - The Bruins have just 9 returning starters and maybe less than that if OB Ben Olson does not return from an injury suffered in the spring.  They do have an inexperienced O-line but were an injury ravaged team last year so they have more experience than you would think.  UCLA gets five Pac-10 HG's [home games] but still needs and upset or two to land a bowl bid.

    Moreover, throughout his commentary, SMQ also misses perhaps the most critical point.  Specifically, he wrongly compares our collective expectations for a first year coach (Neuheisel) to one who'd been on the job 4 and 5 years (Dorrell).  To be sure, we had higher expectations for a coach who had several years to establish his system and recruit in his players.  Come back next year or in 3 and see if things change (they will).  It's that simple.  And it doesn't take a conspiracy theory or tin foil hat to get there.

    It's also funny that this conspiracy theory is so completely at odds with the usual jabs at Bruins Nation.  You see, for years, we've been branded as the unreasonable, crazy, demanding, lunatics, that are uncontrollably filled of hate and vitriol.  Folks like SMQ openly worried about our well being.  But, now, you're all to believe that we've, overnight, been transformed into some sort of cabal of athletic department suck ups; shills for the UCLA man. 

    Shouldn't we be running amok with pitch forks, trying to run Neuheisel out of town in favor of Richt, Meyer, Rodriguez, Saban or fill-in-the-blank coach we'd never have any hope of landing?  Shouldn't we be sifting through CRN's garbage looking for dirt to use against him?  Shouldn't we be making up lie after lie to advance our secret, demented and terrible hidden agenda?  Heck, where's the fatwa?

    Of course, the more reasonable interpretation is that we actually think Neuheisel is the right guy for UCLA.  And we are giving you our best, reasonable expectations for the team's performance at this particular moment in time.

    And don't buy into any of the sham details in SMQ's team-by-team analysis.  It's so replete with inconsistencies as to be laughable.  We picked a win against unheralded BYU teams at the Rose Bowl in prior years, but not a nationally 12th ranked BYU team or a Utah team on the road?  Shocking.  We unreasonably expected wins against Arizona, Washington and Oregon State in 2007, no doubt as part of our secret plan to inflate expectations, when SMQ predicted UCLA would win each of those games himself?  We are slow playing it with our predictions, because we won't chalk up wins against ASU or Cal teams which are the Pac-10's consensus No. 2 and No. 3 teams this year?  Is he really making such a fuss because we called games at Washington and against Arizona toss-ups?

    Also, which is it?  Our predictions (which he seems to agree with now) are wrong?  Or, our predictions from years past (which he did agree with in part) are wrong?

    You lace it all together with good prose, and some sly jabs, and it's a conspiracy!  Well, I guess if you look for anything hard enough, you might just find it. 

    GO BRUINS.

     

    45 comments  |  1 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Hating on Neuheisel

    Just the other day, bluestreet pointed out one example of the Lame Pettiness of Neuheisel Haters

    In that case, we saw how Seattle Times writers with an ax to grind against Neuheisel jumped at the opportunity to take a joke at an alumni auction out of context.

    Well, those guys aren't alone.  Now, our friends at SMQ are taking their turn:

    The New Guy(s): Rick Neuheisel has a long way to go to escape the long shadow of charlatanism: he left Colorado with more than 50 rules violations and two years’ probation in 1998, was investigated for illegal recruiting visits, reprimanded by the board of the American Football Coaches’ Association and compared to Al Capone in Slate (the NCAA got him, but only for a technicality – gambling on basketball. like Capone got nailed for tax evasion – instead of the meat of his transgressions).

    This kind of jab isn't unexpected, at least from the Bill Plaschke's of the world (I can just see the Capone reference in one of his patented single sentence paragraphs). 

    But, it's not what one would expect from SMQ.  You see, despite apparently OMG holdingz a grudge, SMQ is a pretty thoughtful guy, known for in-depth analysis and doing his homework.

    So why would SMQ be so cavalier with the facts about Neuheisel?  Surely, before branding Neuheisel a "charlatan," he'd cite to more than a couple five year old articles that tell only part of the story.  Surely, SMQ's above-average Google skills gave light to the many, many articles which show the other side of the equation.

    Funny thing, though.  The points in those articles weren't mentioned.  Maybe SMQ didn't have the time. 

    Or, maybe, he's trying to advance the easy narrative and stir the pot like any other non-affiliated "pundit" we'd expect to see on the WWL.  Who knows?

    GO BRUINS.

    27 comments  |  1 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Bruins Nation: 3 and 3,000,000

    They say that things in life often come in 3's.

    Today, Bruins Nation hit a pretty big 3, with another one just around the corner.

    Earlier today, Bruins Nation logged its 3,000,000th unique visit (with over 8 million page views).

    And, next week, on June 16, Bruins Nation turns 3 years old, which is the blog-years equivalent of 33, or maybe 333.  (Though, old as BN may be, you'll see that we were talking about Rick Neuheisel on Day One.)

    Bruinsnationlogo_medium

    Now, I don't mention this to toot our own horn.  I'm merely an interloper who joined Nestor, Odysseus, Ajax and the rest of the gang mid-stream.

    I mention it to recognize how vibrant this community has become, in large part because of your contributions.  Bruins Nation is you, and we all together are thriving.

    For many months, and particularly with the migration to BN 2.0, we've witnessed remarkable contributions by so many of you.  So, consider this a big hat tip by us mods to Rye, bruinbabe, 66, godblesstyus95, tasser, Fox, bruinhoo, BruinBlue, BruinsRule, isodore, rfirpo, jlegs, uclafan11, bluestreet, Daynuh (just to name a few), and all the new regulars  who have contributed so much to this place.

    As we've said time and again, we do with just for fun, out of our love and devotion to all things blue and gold.  And BN would only be a shadow of its present self without great comments, FanPosts, etc. from you guys/gals.

    So, enjoy a beverage (or 3) on us today, and let's get back to UCLA.

    GO BRUINS.

    32 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Phil Steele: UCLA T-6th in Pac-10

    In keeping with what has become a bit of a yearly ritual, I made it to the bookstore today (maybe my only trip to a physical bookstore per year) to pick up this year's Phil Steele's 2008 Collegel Football Preview.  As I've said before, Steele is a college football machine, who puts together -- by far -- the most comprehensive pre-season preview on the market. 

    So, while there are a lot of good reasons to be fired up about UCLA football, Steele's 2008 Pac-10 Forecast also helps put things back in perspective.  Steele has the Bruins tied for 6th in the Pac-10, behind USC, Cal , Oregon, Arizona St., Arizona and Oregon St.:

    6.  UCLA - The Bruins have just 9 returning starters and maybe less than that if OB Ben Olson does not return from an injury suffered in the spring.  They do have an inexperienced O-line but were an injury ravaged team last year so they have more experience than you would think.  UCLA gets five Pac-10 HG's [home games] but still needs and upset or two to land a bowl bid.

    As much as I'd like to, I can't say that I disagree too much.  And Steele seems to have zeroed in on our weaknesses, including the OL and DB's, which he's ranked as 9th and 7th in the Pac-10, respectively (our ST's are #1).

    I won't say much more.  Steele's mag is a must have for stat hounds and reality based football fans.  You should buy a copy and read it for youself.

    Sorry to be a kill joy.  Unfortunately, Neuheisel, Chow and Walker have a lot of work to do.  And I'm confident that it will happen.  But, I also know that this year will just be the start.

    GO BRUINS.

    38 comments  |  4 recs | 

    Bruins Nation UCLA Women's Tennis Captures No. 102!

    When it rains, it pours.  After a narrow miss by the men in the Final Four yesterday, the women's tennis team took home their first NCAA championship today in Tulsa.  Here's the recap from the IHT:

    UCLA's women's tennis team finally got to contribute to the school's record haul of NCAA title. The Bruins beat California Tuesday for championship No. 102.

    Riza Zalameda rallied to win the final two sets over Susie Babos of California on Tuesday, clinching it for the team that would have tied Florida with six second-place finishes if it had lost.

    Freshman Andrea Remynse won at No. 4 singles, Alex McGoodwin won in the No. 6 singles spot and UCLA claimed the doubles point.

    2008womentennischamps_medium

    (Photo credit: UCLA)

    More details are slated to come soon at the official site.  Until then, here are more particulars from the IHT:

    Babos won the opening set against Zalameda in the top-flight singles, but Zalameda came back and clinched the team title with an overhead smash less than 2 minutes after Remynse finished off her 7-6, 6-2 defeat of Claire Ilcinkas.

    McGoodwin downed Bojana Bobusic 6-4, 6-1. Zalameda and Tracy Lin teamed to defeat Babos and Stephanie Kusano 9-7 in the No. 1 doubles and McGoodwin and Yasmin Schnack beat Bobusic and Cristina Visico 8-6 as UCLA took two of the three doubles matches.

    Just a tremendous accomplishment.  And it's great to see another program climb the mountain top and get that the brass ring after getting so close so many times.

    Congrats ladies.  Here's your Championship No. 102 post match thread.

    GO BRUINS.

    15 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Road to No. 102: Women's Tennis Edition

    It's less than a week since UCLA's women's water polo team captured championship No. 101, and it's already time to start talking titles again.

    This afternoon at 3 pm, UCLA's No. 7 women's tennis team faces off against No. 10 Southern Cal in Tulsa in the NCAA Round of 16.  From the official site:

    No. 7 UCLA Heads to NCAA Round of 16 in Tulsa, Okla.

    The seventh-seeded UCLA women's tennis team (20-5) picked up a pair of wins in regional play over the weekend to advance to the round of 16 of the NCAA Championships, May 15-20 in Tulsa, Okla. The Bruins are scheduled to face No. 10 USC this Thursday at 3:00 p.m. (CST). If the Bruins can win that match, they will face either Arkansas or No. 2 Georgia on Saturday at 4:00 p.m. The tournament is hosted by the University of Tulsa and played on campus at the Michael D. Case Tennis Center.

    Bruins and Women of Troy to Meet for a Third Time
    The Bruins have already posted a pair of wins over the Women of Troy this season, winning 6-1 at USC on March 13, and 5-2 at UCLA on April 18. The last time these two teams met during the NCAA Tournament was back in 2005 at the University of Georgia. USC won that match 4-3.

    UCLA Cruises in NCAA Regional Play
    The Bruins hosted a four-team NCAA Regional at the Los Angeles Tennis Center last weekend, as Buffalo, Long Beach State and Denver rounded out the field. Denver defeated Long Beach State, 4-0 in its opening-round match, while UCLA defeated Buffalo by the same score. The Bruins were never really tested on the weekend, taking another 4-0 win over Denver in the second round to earn a spot in this week's round of 16.

    Rizazalameda_medium

    (Senior Riza Zalameda; Photo by Russell White)

    Per the Daily Bruin, the lady Bruins are coming into this rivalry match with a experience and confidence:

    The entire team, with the exception of freshman Andrea Remynse, was a part of last year’s run to the championship match. [...]

    [T[he Bruins have a great deal of confidence heading into today’s match against USC, thanks mostly to a pair of dominating wins over the Women of Troy.

    "We have confidence that we’ve beaten them already, and so why not do it again?" senior Riza Zalameda said. "I think this is another opportunity to beat them and prove that we’re the better team. Any time we play against USC, we want to play our best."

    The last time the two teams met in the NCAA Championships was in 2005 at the University of Georgia. The Women of Troy defeated the Bruins by a narrow 4-3 margin that year to end their postseason run. This time around, UCLA will be looking to return the favor.

    Again, the match begins today at 3 p.m.  You can follow along and find live stats at Tulsa's tournament page here.

    The men's team also will be in action in the Round of 16 tomorrow, but, for now, it's time for the ladies to get it on.  Go luck.

    GO BRUINS.

    6 comments  |  1 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Pete Carroll, Tim Floyd, USC and Scandal (3rd Update)

    It's that time of year again.

    For the third year in a row, I present my updated collection of all of the available information regarding the scandal, criminality, investigations, embarrassing incidents and other assorted black eyes that have plagued USC since Pete Carroll's tenure began six years ago.

    When this began in April 2006, it was strictly a football affair.  In the 2007 edition, however, I included the first entry for Southern Cal's basketball team, observing that "it appears likely that there will be trouble with Tim Floyd's program if he doesn't take steps to avoid the controversy surrounding Pete Carroll's program."  Well, he hasn't.  So, there has.

    I remain surprised that Southern Cal athletes would be implicated in so many incidents during such a short period of time.  Even recently, I actually began to think that Southern Cal might have taken steps to limit additional incidents, or at least conceal them from view.  Perhaps they have for the football team.  But, clearly, not so for the basketball team.

    Keep in mind, since I first posted this in April 2006, the list of incidents has nearly tripled.  One would think that, following the -- and there's no other way to put it -- massive uninterrupted deluge of problems, that USC compliance officials would be like a veteran army, standing ready to take swift and substantial action to prevent further problems.   Unfortunately, that does not seem to have happened.  Rather, Southern Cal appears to have opted for a strategy of calculated ignorance rather than genuine institutional control.

    As before, I have endeavored to collect as much information as is publicly available.  Unfortunately, many of the news stories about these issues are no longer available online.  I've provided links where I found them, and relied upon second hand sources to the extent those are reliable.  Also, there are some dead links in the text below that I've left there both for posterity, and so you know that I wasn't making anything up.

    I also continue to try to be as objective as reasonably possible.  The facts speak for themselves.  I see no need to embellish.  If anyone has any information that would help make this entry more accurate and complete, please let me know, and I will edit this accordingly.  

    Once again, when I first posted this in 2006, a few people disagreed with a few items, but didn't provide any supporting evidence.  I offered to publish any such information, and did so again in the 2007 edition.  To date, however, no one has contradicted a single entry with any credible facts.  That said, if I'm wrong in any way, please tell me.

    Finally, many moons ago, I shared my view that everyone doesn't really do it, and talked about those rationalizing mischief at USC.  To this day, some apologists continue to try to explain away the behavior detailed below by claiming that it "happens everywhere."  That's fine.  And, if you can show me a similar list for every other Division I program out there for the same six year period, I'll consider revisiting my opinion.

    There are additional allegations swirling around out there, but I have not included anything I could not verify in at least two places.  I've also left out "on the field" misconduct, including various stories about blatant personal fouls and possible cheating.  Again, please provide any (verifiable) information or links you may have in the comments section.

    Finally, let me address something that comes up every year.  As I've said above, this is a list of "scandal, criminality, investigations, embarrassing incidents and other assorted black eyes" affecting Southern Cal.  It's broader than just criminality.  So, dearest Southern Cal apologists, please spare me the arguments about how something above isn't really a crime, even if many of the items above do involve serious, sometime violent, criminal behavior.

    GO BRUINS.

    57 comments  |  9 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Road to No. 101: Women's Water Polo v. USC

    Bumped. It's turning out to be busy busy Mother's Day in terms of news. We are going to leave this post up top. Consider it as open thread as the Ladies are gunning for number 101. GO BRUINS. -N

    How great is this. 

    After a slow start, with the game feeling a shade too close heading into halftime, the Bruins pull away from No. 4 UC Davis with a 11-4 win to advance to their fourth consecutive NCAA title game.

    Now, the only thing standing between UCLA and it's record 10th NCAA title is No. 2 Stanford No. 3 USC.  Yes, that's right, Southern Cal managed the upset Stanford in the late game, setting up a rivalry game for the National Championship.

    Before we get to Southern Cal, let's start with UCLA's win over UC Davis

    Tanya Gandy scored three goals in the first four minutes of the third period to help the top-ranked UCLA women's water polo team beat UC Davis 11-4 Saturday and advance to the NCAA championship match against USC.

    The Trojans advanced to today's title game with a 10-6 victory over Stanford as Michelle Stein scored three straight goals to open the fourth period.

    Courtney Mathewson also scored three goals for the Bruins (32-0), who will be seeking their fourth consecutive national title, and sixth since 2001.

    Here's more from the official site:

    A six-goal outburst in the third quarter turned a 3-2 UCLA halftime lead into a 9-3 advantage, and the Bruins dispatched UC Davis in the NCAA semifinals at Stanford University, 11-4, securing their fourth consecutive and seventh overall NCAA Championship game berth. Tanya Gandy scored three straight goals to start the second half, Courtney Mathewson added two, and Katie Rulon one in the decisive period.

    ...

    Clinging to a 3-2 halftime lead, UCLA came out swinging early in the third quarter. Just 40 seconds into the period, Gandy scored on a skip shot, and she repeated her success with another skip shot goal with 5:15 left in the quarter to increase UCLA's lead to 5-2. Gandy made it three in a row a minute later, lofting a shot past Aggie goalkeeper Casey Hines into the right corner of the net. Lindsay Kiyama scored on UC Davis' third power play goal with 3:56 on the clock, but Mathewson answered less than a minute later with a power play goal of her own to make it 7-3 UCLA, and she scored her third of the game with 27 seconds remaining in the quarter. Rulon added a goal with two seconds left to up the Bruin lead to 9-3.

    Tanyagandy_medium

    (Junior attacker Tanya Gandy; Photo Credit: Nathan Tyree)

    After UCLA advanced, Southern Cal surprised host and No. 2 seed Stanford to advance to the finals.  From CSTV:

    The USC women's water polo team posted a dominating effort against second-seeded host Stanford in the NCAA Semifinals on Saturday, tallying a 10-6 victory over the Cardinal for the Trojans' biggest win over Stanford since 2005. Behind hat tricks from Alexandra Kiss and Michelle Stein, No. 3 seed USC secured a trip to the NCAA Championship game, where the Trojans will face undefeated UCLA in the title match at 6 p.m. on Sunday (May 11) at Stanford's Avery Aquatic Center.

    Now, playing Southern Cal won't exactly be a new experience to the Bruins.  UCLA has already beaten the Trojans three times this season, including as recently as a one goal victory in the final of the MPSF title game.  Here's the pre-tournament scoop on Southern Cal from the Bootleg:

    About the Trojans:   USC’s season started off a little shaky with surprise losses to Arizona State and Cal early on. The Trojans seem to have righted their ship recently, though, and look poised to make a deep run. Senior Veronika Bartunkova and sophomore Tumua Anae are first team All-MPSF selections, and have 44 goals and a 4.7 GAA respectively. Senior Miranda Nichols is one of the conference’s best defenders and earned a Second Team All-Conference spot. Michele Stein leads the team with 52 goals on the season. They are coached by Jovan Vavic, in his 14th season, who looks to win the women’s championship back for the first time since 2004.

    The championship will begin today at 6 pm.  And, in addition to being broadcast online at www.uclabruins.com, look for the game on TV on the CBS College Sports network (formerly CSTV).

    This is what it's all about ladies and gents.  One more game with No. 101 on the line.

    GO BRUINS.

    73 comments  |  2 recs | 

    Bruins Nation Women's Water Polo v. UC Davis - Open Thread

    As Nestor noted already, the lady Bruins took care of business against Division III Pomona-Pitzer to advance to the semis against UC Davis.  From the Daily News:

    Katie Rulon, Gabrielle Domanic and Jillian Kraus each scored three goals to lead the top-ranked UCLA women's water polo team to a 19-6 victory over Pomona-Pitzer in the quarterfinals of the NCAA tournament at Stanford.

    Katierulon_medium

    (Senior driver Katie Rulon; Photo credit: Jennifer Drader)

    Here's more from from the official site.  And, while Courtney Mathewson had a day off in the scoring department yesterday, you should check out this Daily Breeze article that recounts her game winners during the last two NCAA title games.

    The Bruins face the 4 seed in UC Davis today at 4 pm today.  No. 2-seeded Stanford and No. 3-seeded USC will face each other in the other semifinal. 

    As with the last contest, the game broadcast will be available online at www.uclabruins.com

    If you're in the Bay area, I can't think of a much better way to spend the day than heading down to Stanford and taking in the game to cheer on our ladies.

    If you're not, and your watching the game online, consider this your open thread.  Fire away.

    GO BRUINS.

    9 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation The Road to 200: Women's Water Polo Edition

    100 down. So, why not 100 more to go?

    Okay, okay, no one's getting crazy here, but it's nice to be looking forward.  And it's hard not to think about national championships when the subject turns to the Bruins woman's water polo team, our very own dynasty of the water world

    A year ago next week, the lady Bruins brought us No. 100.

    Now, the Bruins, led by Cutino Award finalists Courtney Matthewson and Jillian Kraus, and winners of three consecutive NCAA championships in 2005, 2006 and 2007, look to make it four in a row by capturing their 10th national title overall.

    By the way, these kinds of stats are just ridiculous:

    LOOKING FOR A FOUR-PEAT: The three-time defending NCAA Champion Bruins are seeking an unprecedented four-peat and their 10th national women's water polo title. Since the first NCAA Championship in 2001, UCLA has won five of the seven titles (2001, 2003, 2005, 2006 and 2007), with only Stanford in 2002 and USC in 2004 being able to break the stranglehold UCLA has on the NCAA trophy. Prior to women's water polo becoming an NCAA-sanctioned championship, UCLA won national titles in 1996, 1997, 1998 and 2000.

    And the lady Bruins have it rolling again this year, riding a perfect 30-0 record after capturing their second-straight MPSF Championship after just another win against USC (their 3rd of the season).


    Senior Jillian Kraus; Photo by Kyle Lishok

    For those of you who haven't been following our lady Bruins, here's a tournament preview of UCLA by the Bootleg:

    About the Bruins:  UCLA has put together an amazing season this year, after winning national championships each of the last three years. They look to become the first team to go undefeated since 2005.  Coach Adam Krikorian, in his tenth year, brings a veteran team led by junior Katie Rulon with 58 goals, senior Jillian Kraus with 54 goals, senior Courtney Mathewson with 50 goals, senior Brittany Rowe with 48 goals, and junior Tanya Gandy with 42 goals.  Mathewson and Kraus shared MPSF Player of the Year honors, and junior goalkeeper Brittany Fullen sports a 4.77 GAA.  The Bruins have shown chinks in their armor -- winning by just one goal three times, including an overtime victory over Stanford in the UC-Irvine Invitational.

    How they got here:  UCLA beat USC 8-7 in the MPSF Tournament finals to earn the automatic bid. They are undefeated and were the obvious choice for the top overall seed.

    Outlook in the tournament:  The Bruins will have the easiest trip to the championship game.  After a warmup against Pomona-Pitzer on Friday, they should have little trouble with the winner of the San Diego-UC Davis game.  They can thus put all of their energy into preparing for either Stanford or USC, which have each almost beat UCLA this season.  In the end though, UCLA’s combination of toughness, all-around offensive capabilities, and veteran leaders may be too much for any team to solve.

    This year's NCAA Tournament begins today with a 5:00 p.m. matchup against Pomona-Pitzer (17-11) at Avery Aquatic Center at Stanford (the No. 2 seed). The Sagehens, the only Division III team in the tournament, will have their hands full with the Bruins.

    Pomona-Pitzer earned the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference’s automatic bid to Palo Alto last weekend with an 8-7 win over Cal Lutheran in its conference’s tournament final. Despite going 8-1 in their conference regular season, the Sagehens were 0-2 against teams in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, the conference that has brought UCLA and three other at-large teams to the NCAA title table.

    The game today will be broadcast live on www.uclabruins.com.  And, should the Bruins advance, here is the schedule for the rest of the weekend:

    On Friday, May 9 at 5 pm, UCLA will broadcasting live the 5 pm quarterfinal match between the top-seeded Bruins and eighth-seeded Pomona-Pitzer. Should UCLA win, the match on Saturday, May 10 between UCLA and either San Diego State or UC Davis will be broadcast live at 4 pm. The second semi-final, which is expected to be between #2 seed Stanford and #3 seed USC, will also be broadcast live at 5:45 pm. Should UCLA reach the championship match, it will be broadcast live at 6 pm on Sunday, May 11.

    This should be an interesting weekend.  Good luck ladies,

    GO BRUINS.

    17 comments  |  5 recs | 

    Bruins Nation The Buzz about Buzz

    My apologies for indulging in this post, which doesn't relate to the Bruins or even BN much at all.  But, I wanted to say a few words about the dust up last week regarding Will Leitch's appearance on HBO's Costas Now.  

    As you may have heard, Leitch, of Deadspin.com fame, made an appearance on Costas last week only to be ambushed by Buzz Bissinger, writer of Friday Night Lights.  In case you didn't catch the program, the video is here and here.  Take a look, it's pretty amusing to watch a grown man almost lose control of his facilities.


    Yes, Buzz, I'm mocking you.  And I'm saying this as someone who has spent 34 years perfecting the craft.

    I'm not all that interested in the "new media" versus "old media" debate.  I don't need to point out, again, how embarrassing Bissenger's profanity laden meltdown was.  I don't need to note sharply declining newspaper readerships or the employment fears of traditional writers.  There's no need to point out that there are good and bad professional journalists, just as there are good and bad blogs.  I don't even need to chuckle about some folks inability to discern the difference between a comment and a front page blog post.  Those points, and many others, have already been made (among other places, here, here, here, here, here, and here).

    I prefer a slightly different angle.  As a blogger on BN, I don't spend my days worrying about how I'm perceived by professional journalists, or, frankly, anyone beside our community members.  I'm not looking for links.  I'm not hoping to see my post quoted in the paper.  And, while I can't speak for the rest of the front-pagers, my only interest is talking about the Bruins and sharing information of interest to the Nation.  

    I don't need to be evenhanded.  I'm proudly partisan.  I don't care to mediate a detente between the media of new and old.  I'm only care to bleed blue and gold.  I'm not part of any movement.   I'm a proud Bruin alumni.  I'm not a journalist, and don't pretend to be. I'm a fan who enjoys stepping away from my hectic life to talk Bruins with my friends.  In the end, I view Bruins Nation as first and foremost a community.  At that's it.

    So, when something like the Buzz Bissenger episode comes along, I can only shake my head, and wonder how so many people can not get it, and why so many of those people care.  Sure, some folks may think blogs are the end of sports news as we know it, but I'll just keep blogging about UCLA and won't spend a moment worrying about what's got Buzz's undies in such a twist.

    More videos from the "ryanparkersongs's channel" channel at Heavy.com

    (HT: the Wiz)

    So, for the record, if anyone here posts another photograph of Matt Leinart boozing with teenage co-eds, please know that were not trying to show he's "a real human being."  He's an ex-player for our main rival, and we're making a joke at his expense.  And, yes, we're also trying to embarrass him (in whatever infinitesimally small way we can).  

    Oh, and also talk about UCLA.

    GO BRUINS.

    8 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Big Moves at the Rose Bowl

    Not involving the team, exactly.  But, since we've already had a fair bit of discussion about the Rose Bowl, I thought I'd add something related.

    As many of you know, the Select-a-Seat program was expanded from Pauley to the Rose Bowl this year.  So, many season ticket holders have been invited to the Rose Bowl to do just that.  For those who haven't done it, folks are given a window of time and priority number and asked to come to the Rose Bowl.  Then, folks are allowed to mill around the Rose Bowl to pick amongst the then available seats that are marked with various cards (divided according to donor level).

    In my book, it's just another perfectly good excuse to go to the Rose Bowl.  A place, as I've said before, is one of my favorite on Earth.  And, I must say, they did a pretty good job of putting this thing together.  Everything ran smoothly.  And it's a million times better than the old seat selection system, which I honestly never really figured out.

    So, whether or not the seats are a bit tight in places, it's was time for me to get a couple extra seats for the lit'l ones in recognition of a program headed in the right direction.  A fond farewell to my friends in Section 2-H.

    If your interested, I've posted a few more photos after the jump.

    GO BRUINS.

    Continue reading this post »

    20 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Bush Gags on Court Rulings

    Bumped. GO BRUINS. -N

    After having moved forward at near glacial pace for several months, today brings us some interesting developments in the Bushgate affair.  First off, a San Diego judge has set both trial and deposition dates:

    A March 13 trial date has been set in Lloyd Lake's suit against former USC running back Reggie Bush.

    After much acrimony between both sides in the case, a frustrated San Diego Superior Court judge Friday also finally got both sides to agree on the case's most explosive issue so far: dates when Lake and Bush are to answer questions under oath in pretrial depositions.

    Judge Joan M. Lewis ordered June 5-6 deposition dates for Lake, June 23 for Bush and June 27 and 30 for Bush's parents.

    More importantly, aside from dealing with the litigants scheduling squabbling, the judge also denied a request by Bush's lawyers to keep any deposition transcripts out of the hands of the public (and NCAA):
    Lewis denied a request by Bush's attorneys for a protective order that would prevent Lake and his attorney, Brian Watkins, from giving any deposition transcripts to the NCAA or the media. Such transcripts would be valuable to the NCAA because Bush and his parents would be asked about the allegations in the depositions. So far, the Bush family has not cooperated with the NCAA in its investigation. The guys at Yahoo report the strained reasoning of Bush's (four) lawyers for seeking the gag order: Bush's four attorneys, including Cornwell and Los Angeles-based attorney Patricia Glazer, argued in court Friday for the confidentiality motion. They do not believe that information from the depositions should be available to a third party, such as the NCAA or the media.
    "I happen to believe court actions are brought for court actions," Glazer said. "If that's the reason they brought it, we're going to deal with that on the merits. We're not in favor of using one forum for the benefit of another forum, or one forum for the benefit of the press." That's just funny.  The lawyers here on BN can tell you how much of a long shot this motion for protective order was, and how silly Bush's lawyers sound.  "Please, don't let this become public because, er, uh .... it would really suck."

    The other tidbit from the Yahoo story is that the judge apparently wants the case to move along, and that Lake has agreed not to take the Fifth:

    Lewis ordered that discovery be completed by May 23. Watkins said Lake would not ask for Fifth Amendment protection in discovery. Oh, and how delicious it will be to watch this unfold.  Assuming, of course, that Bush doesn't buy Lake's silence, I'd love to see discovery unfold.  And, who might have to testify?  Per the LAT: USC Coach Pete Carroll and one of his assistants could find themselves summoned into the courtroom as part of the contentious civil lawsuit involving Reggie Bush, an attorney in the case said today.

    A would-be sports marketing agent, Lloyd Lake, has claimed that he gave Bush cash and gifts while the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner was playing college football. Lake's attorney, Brian Watkins, said Carroll and running back coach Todd McNair could play a role in his trial strategy."Both Pete Carroll and Todd McNair are most likely going to be witnesses," Watkins said by telephone after a morning court hearing in San Diego. "I can't talk about what we're going to be asking them."

    We'll see how this unfolds, but at least things are moving again.  

    GO BRUINS.

    4 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation More Practice Pictures

    Bumped. Per reports today PC sat out due to a tweaked knee. But no worries. He will come back on Thursday (next practice). GO BRUINS.-N

    Well, I made it out for another day of paradise.  The most notable thing was that this guy was playing with the first team.

    Now, before you assume that BO was promoted, you should know that PC didn't take a rep as far as I could tell (no idea why, but PC was there and dressed).  BO was backed up by KC and CF, both of whom had less than stellar days (BO was competent, but nothing special).  Anyways, it's always a beautiful day at Spaulding, and some more of my pics are below the fold.

    GO BRUINS.

    Continue reading this post »

    6 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Another Day in Paradise

    Finally made it out to my first practice of the spring.  It's been too long.  And, on a cool afternoon (by Cali standards), I got to spend a little time getting to know a group that's changed quite a bit since last April.

    I'll leave the detailed practice reports to those who brought their notepads and already know the numbers of the six deep (oh, if only there was a six deep on the OL...).   You'll have to forgive me, but I was just soaking it in.  And, besides watching a crisp practice, that included a nice performance by PC before I had to hit the 405, I was able to snap a couple picks.  So, for those of you outside of SoCal, enjoy the amateur photography after the fold.

    GO BRUINS.

    Continue reading this post »

    15 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Ben Ball Round-Up: Western Kentucky Edition

    So, while Nestor is enjoying the Emerald City, it's time to pivot to the one and only focus around these parts:  Western Kentucky University.

    Before we move on, however, let's not let any MSM-fanned distractions about supposed "missed calls," "easy roads" or overlooked contributions get in the way of recognizing what the Bruins accomplished this past weekend.

    First off, as zoo752 points out in the diaries, hopefully this weekend will help put to rest some of the annual (baseless) concerns raised by Howland's scheduling.  Eight games (including an outstanding 7-1 record) against other regional semifinalists shows exactly the kind of road UCLA travels to prepare for the big dance.  

    And, before we get to the Hilltoppers, it's good to see that others have recognized some truly superlative performances by Love and DC during the opening weekend.  Notwithstanding his lame take re the closing minutes of the Texas A&M contest, Bilas gets a couple things right.  First on Love:

    Best Player: Kevin Love, UCLA. Love did everything, from scoring to rebounding to blocking shots, and he did it with a maturity beyond his years. Plus, he helped the helpless: rescuing a ball behind the backboard by firing another ball at it, after a referee tried it multiple times and failed. On Wednesday, Love fired a ball 95 feet (standing out of bounds on the baseline) to the other basket ... and drained it ... with a chest pass. It is among the most incredible things I have ever seen on a basketball court. There can't be more than a handful of players on the planet who can do that. Incredible.


    Photo Credit: Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times

    You just can't say enough about this guy.  Early on Saturday, I was in my standard pre-game worry mode, telling my wife about A&M's kenpom rating, and such.  Then, Mrs. M stops me and says not to worry, "because Kevin won't let this team lose."  And, you know what, she was right.  Unlike some freshman phenoms, Love brings a level of intensity and composure to the game that amazes me again and again.  It was no different this past weekend.

    And, there's no forgetting DC, who has elevated his game (even more) ever since the Pac-10 tourney.  Here's Bilas again:

    Best Point Guard: Darren Collison, UCLA. It is hard to argue with those who would take Texas' D.J. Augustin as the nation's best point guard, but I would take UCLA's Collison without any hesitation. Collison is the most efficient point guard in the nation (shooting 51.6 percent from 3), and no guard puts better pressure on the ball to start your defense. When the game was on the line, it was Collison who hit the big shots.

    More on DC from Dohn:

    UCLA point guard Darren Collison was a central figure against Texas A&M, scoring a game-high 21 points, including making 5 of 8 attempts from 3-point range.

    He also was a driving influence on UCLA's defensive push during a 17-minute stretch of the second half when the Aggies went 2 of 17 from the field, teaming with center Kevin Love to keep Texas A&M's guards from penetrating to the basket off the high screens that gave the Bruins so much difficulty in the first half.

    "They were getting a lot of stuff off pick-and-roll at the top of the key," UCLA power forward Luc Richard Mbah a Moute said. "We made some adjustments at halftime, and from that point on, we had some good stuff happening.

    "Coach asked (Love and Collison) to keep the point guard on one side coming off the screen. He was coming off the screen one way, and going back the other way. Coach asked them to keep him on one side and make him make a tough pass. Once we did that, we started playing better defense."

    And then there was Collison's last-minute heroics, as he banked in two difficult layups in the final minute. His first one, with 55 seconds remaining, gave the Bruins a 49-47 lead. His next one put the Bruins up 51-49 with 9.5 seconds to play.

    And, finally, before anyone gets too carried away by some of the inane gibberish in the MSM, I'd like you to meet perspective, courtesy of Tydides:

    Yeah UCLA is in a lot of trouble. Going to the wire against the 16th best team in the country according to Pomeroy is certainly reason to hit the panic button. Similarly:
    Miami takes Texas to the very end before losing 75-72. Miami is the 45th best team in the country (lower than Oregon).

    Butler takes Tennessee to overtime before losing 76-71. Butler is the 30th best team (below Gonzaga).

    Davidson beats Georgetown. We know Davidson is legit. No further comment is necessary there.

    Memphis in a dogfight with 35th ranked Mississippi State.

    Looks like the Bruins had the most quality second round win.

    Exactly.  And here's some more perspective from Mandel:

    Confidence-level: Holding steady. The Bruins' 53-49 second-round escape against Texas A&M would be more troubling if not for the fact UCLA has had at least one similar game each of the past two years and reached the Final Four both times. If anything, the game may serve as a confidence-builder for stars Kevin Love and Darren Collison, who scored 40 of their team's 53 points and showed yet again they can take over a game down the stretch.

    Now, on to Western Kentucky, who took care of business against USD yesterday.  The Bruins will have to transition from dealing with the physicality of Texas A&M to the guard oriented play of the Hilltoppers:

    Western Kentucky (29-6) will face top-seeded UCLA in the West Region semifinals in Phoenix. The Hilltoppers can only hope their three senior guards -- Lee, Tyrone Brazelton and Ty Rogers -- will carry them through another round.

    "I'm not totally surprised that we're here," Hilltoppers coach Darrin Horn said. "We thought this was a special team coming into it. ... We've been telling these guys for two years, three years really, 'If we get there, we've got a real chance to make some noise."'

    And a chance to prove how important guard play is in the tournament.

    Lee, the Sun Belt Conference player of the year, finished with 29 points and seven rebounds. He had a huge 3-pointer that gave his team the lead for good with 6:17 remaining, then sank six straight free throws in the final 34 seconds to seal the victory.

    Brazelton added 15 points for the Hilltoppers, who won for the 19th time in 20 games.

    Rogers, who hit a 26-footer at the buzzer in overtime to beat Drake in the first round, had a much quieter afternoon offensively. He had five points, three rebounds and two assists. But he came up big on the defensive end, holding San Diego's Brandon Johnson to 4-of-15 shooting and 13 points.

    These guys can ball, and I was particularly impressed by how poised the Hilltoppers were against Drake.  UCLA will have to leave it's seed at the door and apply their trademark on-ball pressure to keep Lee, Brazelton (who had 33 against Drake) and Rogers off balance, while capitalizing on the Bruins advantages down low.

    Here's the boilerplate preview from the Sporting News:

    UCLA's game plan: This one is easy -- play the first half like it, you know, matters. The Bruins' potentially devastating tendency to fall behind early won't fly against Western Kentucky, which is unflappable on offense and has an absolute go-to guy in Courtney Lee, something Texas A&M clearly lacked. Some scoring from Josh Shipp would be nice for UCLA, but don't be surprised if Luc Richard Mbah a Moute dives into the fray with a big game.

    Western Kentucky's game plan: The Hilltoppers must do whatever is needed to make UCLA point guard Darren Collison give up the ball, using half-court and full-court traps and lots and lots of ball pressure. The Hilltoppers also would be wise to let All-American center Kevin Love take all the perimeter jumpers he can hoist; WKU certainly can't handle Love on the low block. And there is reason to believe Shipp will continue to misfire. UCLA is so strong defensively that Lee might have to play decoy for shooters Tyrone Brazelton and Ty Rogers.

    X-factor: The Hilltoppers like to speed things up with a full-court press, and they won't be shy about doing so Thursday night. The funny thing about the Bruins, though, is that they play better -- at least of late -- when they really get moving on offense.

    Bottom line: If UCLA can successfully pick up the pace on offense without compromising its commitment to defense, this game eventually will become a one-sided affair. But that's a mighty big "if." Fortunately for the Bruins, they have a lot of experience winning nail-biters, too.

    We'll have more on the Hilltoppers in the coming days, as we maintain a laser-like focus on advancing beyond this Thursday.  For now, though, let's try to enjoy the ride.  Enjoy the performances of some great kids.  And remember that our team has been here before and is exceptional hands.

    GO BRUINS.

    24 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Get Your Oscar Fix, Blog-Style

    So, you may be telling yourself that you're here for your daily Bruin fix.  But, we know your real passion.

    You don't bleed blue and gold.  You love awards shows.  Yep, and Bruins Nation is only sad solace in a cruel world where a writer's strike threatens what you hold so dear.


    Oh, dear God, the pagentry!

    Admit it.  The sight of a drug addled movie star slurring though his or her acceptance speech is your cat's meow.  You set your TIVO three hours early, just to see the red carpet and to marvel at the spectacle that is Joan Rivers (and her even more talentless train wreck of a daughter).  You bet more money on your Oscar pool than you did the whole football season.

    Right?  Right.

    Good news, my friends, we have something just for you.  Yes, the 2007 College Football Blogger Awards are upon us.  Thankfully, a tradition started by the good folks from Rocky Top Talk has been continued.  This year, Orson at EDSBS has assumed the hosting duties, so that us bloggers can revel in, uh, ourselves.  And, as last year, MGoBlog's Brian has made that process even easier with a handy nominations gizmo.  Check it out and nominate yourselves silly.  The nomination deadline is January 27.

    Why should you care?  Here's what Peter at Burnt Orange Nations says:

    Why do we do this?

    Believe it or not, it's not just a giant blogger makeout session, though we wouldn't blame you for thinking as much. In reality, save for one or two outliers, us blogger folk write year round just 'cause we like it. There's very little financial reward in this, but as most of you know, there's a wealth of great content out there for readers to enjoy. It's nice to take a couple weeks at the end of the season to recognize some of the best work from the season.

    Not a blogger make out session?  Riiighttt.  (I keed, I keed.)

    More seriously, for us Bruin fans, we have a great chance to recognize some truly great content being generated in the wider college sports blogosphere.  And who deserves the recognition?  Not us, gentle souls.  But, rather, for your consideration, I submit to you Dumpdorrell.com (as best Pac-10 blog).

    We bask today in the sun that is Rick Neuheisel and a resurgent, dynamic, genuinely exciting football program in no small part because of the good work of Dumpdorrell.

    So, take a moment, and use the gizmo to help give those guys, even posthumously, the kudos they deserve.  And, while your at it, step outside of this wonderful UCLA community (which some may argue is the best in the blogosphere), and check out some of the other fantastic blogs out there.  And there's no better place to start than our carefully selected list of blogs on our Blogroll.

    Okay, enough of that, back to UCLA....

    GO BRUINS.

    8 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation [UPDATED] Dorrell Reportedly Lands in NFL

    A tough weekend, that seems to absolutely racing into the background.

    After the blockbuster hiring of Norm Chow, the football program gets a nice shot in the (financial) arm thanks to Kansas City, which reportedly has hired Karl Dorrell as it's receivers coach:

    WIDE RECEIVERS - Karl Dorrell

    After five seasons as head coach at UCLA, Dorrell was fired in December. He has previous NFL experience as a wide receivers coach from three years in Denver, where he helped Rod Smith and Ed McCaffery develop into one of the best receiving tandems in the league. The pair combined for 201 receptions in 2000. Dorrell is also credited with helping Charles Johnson and Michael Westbrook flourish at Colorado in the early 90s.

    (HT to Daselfish14u.)

    As you will now doubt recall, Dorrell's contract included a buyout clause that would pay him otherwise $2.05-million over a two-year period.  That amount is reduced by every dollar he earns in Kansas City.  So, here's to hoping Karl is well compensated.

    More seriously, it is good to see KD get this gig.  He could have easily pulled a Toledo, and enjoyed some golf time on UCLA's dole.  Despite your views about anything else he's done, this was clearly the honorable thing to do.  And, it seems like a great fit for Karl.  Back in the NFL, as a receivers coach.  Good luck Karl.

    UPDATE: As pointed out by bruinchick, this might not be a done deal, as there are conflicting media reports, some suggesting that Dorrell is heading to Miami as their receivers coach:

    Former UCLA coach Karl Dorrell is expected to be named the team's wide receivers coach at some point this week, as Dorrell is believed to have chosen Miami over Kansas City.
    Dohn also has something to this effect on his blog.  So, maybe a different team, even if same position and back in the NFL.  However it shakes out, the same sentiment applies.  Good luck Karl.

    UPDATE II: It looks like the Dolphins it is for KD.

    GO BRUINS.

    19 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation Chow to UCLA

    From Dohn:

    UCLA coach Rick Neuheisel hit the daily double when it comes to coveted coordinators after Norm Chow accepted the offensive coordinators role Sunday, according to sources.

    Chow, the former Tennessee Titans and USC offensive coordinator, gives Neuheisel a formidable staff along with defensive coordinator DeWayne Walker.

    Neuheisel, Chow and Walker each interviewed for the head coaching job. A UCLA official declined to comment.

    Chow was a long-time offensive coordinator at BYU, but made his mark nationally as the offensive coordinator at USC, tutoring Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart.

    He spent the past three seasons as the offensive coordinator of the NFL's Tennessee Titans, but was fired last week. Neuheisel was waiting for Chow to decide whether Chow would return to college football, attempt to secure another NFL job or take a year off from coaching.

    GO BRUINS.

    UPDATE -- Meriones: The LA Times is running it in today's (Monday's) paper:

    Norm Chow, the offensive mind who helped USC win two national titles, has agreed to join UCLA's staff as offensive coordinator, sources familiar with the situation said.

    Rick Neuheisel coveted Chow from the moment he was hired as Bruins coach in late December, but the chances of landing the 61-year-old coach were minuscule. That changed when Chow was fired by the Tennessee Titans on Jan. 14.

    After taking a few days to discuss the situation with his family, Chow agreed to sign on across town from where he developed two Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks for USC. Chow spent four seasons with the Trojans. But after friction developed between him and Trojans Coach Pete Carroll, Chow left to become the Titans' offensive coordinator in 2005.

    UCLA officials declined to comment. Neuheisel and Chow did not respond to telephone calls for comment.

    I'm still hoping for that official announcement from campus, but holy (bleep). WOW. -- M

    61 comments  | 

    Bruins Nation A Year Lost in Pauley Restoration

    So, we have another game against the gap-closing losers from across town.  And just about all that anyone can point to in support of the purported "rivalry" is that USC has managed to get themselves a new building.

    So, I suppose it's about time that we'd get an update on Pauley.

    Last year at about this time, I wrote a series of posts because I was frustrated at the ridiculously slow pace of the effort to restore Pauley.  Shortly thereafter, as coincidence would have it, there was a burst of activity coming from the Morgan Center.  A respected architect was hired, meetings were held, donors were surveyed, ideas for improvements were discussed, and a firm timeline was released- with the new building's opening set to coincide with Coach's 100th birthday.  And, as progress seemed to be being made, and events on the field took our attention, time has passed.

    Well, it's been nearly a year.  And Dohn has an update on where things stand.  He doesn't come out and say this, but since last February the wheels have fallen off the wagon.

    Let's start with a recap of where we are:

    UCLA's project, which is more than five years in the works, has gone about as smoothly as downing a tablespoon full of chunky peanut butter ... without a drink.

    There were feasibility studies, changes in fundraising personnel, vastly overpriced architectural drawings, on-campus opposition and differences of opinions as the original cost of the project has nearly tripled.

    UCLA has less than $15 million in donations committed in writing, sources said, and even by guidelines announced by athletic director Dan Guerrero a year ago, the project is already a year behind schedule.

    That's right.  It's been a year.  And we are now a year behind schedule.  That, my friends, means that absolutely nothing of substance has been accomplished since this time last year.  Besides some announcements, and a bit of fundraising, the last twelve months have gotten us nowhere.

    Why, you ask?  Well, for one, UCLA couldn't play nice with its architect, the well-regarded HOK Sport:

    After announcing 12 months ago a desire to re-open a renovated Pauley Pavilion in time for the 2010-11 season, sources said the target date for the completion of the proposed renovation is the 2011-12 season.

    The latest obstacle in the renovation of the 43-year-old year building is the drawings by HOK Sport. UCLA spent $500,000 to have Kansas City-based HOK complete comprehensive drawings of a possible renovation, which included moving the seats closer to the court, along with building a practice basketball court and new locker rooms and improving fan amenities, widening the concourses and installing a media workroom.

    "The key elements we originally wanted from the outset are still alive and in play," Guerrero said. "How we actually incorporate them into our renovation is still yet to be determined, and that's what the new architect will look at."

    UCLA needs a new architect because of sticker shock. The school told HOK it would spent approximately $100 million in the renovation, but HOK returned conceptual drawings with a $200 million price tag.

    I don't know exactly how this happens.  Obviously, there were some communication problems between UCLA and HOK for the bid to come in $100 million over budget.  Either UCLA was asking for more than it could reasonably expect, or HOK, as architects are apt to do, was pumping things up.  However it happened, it's pretty inexcusable.  Cost overruns are common in construction, but you should be able to at least get the plans in somewhere near the ball park.  In UCLA's defense, if they really did ask for drawings for a $100 million renovation, and got $200 million plans, there were right to be annoyed.

    So, presumably, UCLA was able to work things out with HOK and keep the project moving, right?  Or maybe not:

    So UCLA severed ties with HOK and went looking for another architect in the fall. By the second week of February, the school plans on making a decision on a new firm, which should pave the way for new drawings.

    "Once we get this architect on board," Guerrero said, "it can really move forward."

    Again, I don't mind so much that UCLA fired HOK.  I'm disappointed, because HOK has done some impressive work.  But, 100% over budget is 100% over budget.

    But why has it taken months and months to find a replacement firm?  As Dohn points out, the plans are key to fundraising:

    At that point, Ross Bjork, UCLA's senior associate athletic director and chief fundraiser, should finally be able to get to the nitty-gritty of a job he was hired for in August 2005. So far, during what UCLA is terming its "quiet phase" of raising funds, Bjork is being asked to sell UCLA's vision of Pauley Pavilion without potential donors being able to use their vision to see anything.
    So, where are we now?  As it stands, the fundraising seems to be doing okay, with $13 million in signed pledges and verbal commitments of an additional $40 million, but the delay until 2011-12 represents yet another in what has literally been decades of delays and false promises:
    Discussing the renovation last January, Guerrero said, "we anticipate launching the public phase in the fall." That phase, according to sources, has been pushed back until fall 2008.

    It is also the latest change in plans, but not the first. In discussing the financial aspect of renovating Pauley Pavilion in August 2003, UCLA senior associate director of business operations Ken Weiner said "if we do it all, it may be $40 million." UCLA is now looking at a much more expansive, and expensive, renovation with a price tag close to $120 million.

    In May 2005, Guerrero said UCLA should begin "to develop a funding strategy" and begin a fundraising campaign "in the latter part of this year."

    The take aways here are a couple things.  To begin with, you just can't be complacent about something like this.  Even with the success of Ben Ball, I am convinced that we'll never see a Pauley renovation without the constant support and prodding of the fan base.  Once again, we have a clear demonstration of what happens during "quiet phases" if noone's watching.  So, we have to keep on this.

    On the positive side to the ledger, I'm at least pleased to see that UCLA is starting to come to grips with the cost of a genuine renovation of Pauley.  I'd be the first to support a $200 million project, assuming we got value for that, but it's still nice to see that UCLA is prepared to spend $120 on a "much more expansive, and expensive, renovation."  Indeed, my biggest fear, aside from the project never getting off the ground, is that we'd have a "renovation" like we saw at the Rose Bowl a few years ago.  Yes, some new ill-fitting seats and a few gallons of paint won't do.  It certainly wouldn't respect the unmatched tradition of UCLA basketball and the history of Pauley Pavilion.

    One more interesting note.  There has been some speculation as to where UCLA would play during the construction phase of the project- assuming that ever happens.  We'll, it looks like the Forum is the favorite:

    And once the plan does go public and a timetable is established for the renovation, plans for the teams that play in Pauley Pavilion must be set. ...

    The men's basketball team will play at the Forum, Staples Center or Honda Center in Anaheim. However, during preliminary discussions with Faith Central Baptist Church, which owns the Forum, UCLA was told it could have whatever dates it wanted, and is the leading candidate, sources said.

    There is also a desire to play at least one weekend of Pacific-10 Conference basketball games at the Honda Center, which is owned by UCLA graduate Henry Samueli, who also owns the NHL's Anaheim Ducks.

    I can't say I'm that excited about the Forum.  It would be our version of the Sports Arena for a year.  Clearly, Staples or the Honda Center would provide better facilities, though I understand that the location of at least Honda isn't ideal.

    I'm sure Nestor will have a game day thread up soon.  For today, at least, the building won't matter much, so long as our warriors come out focused.  After that, we can get back to the business of restoring Pauley.

    GO BRUINS.

    5 comments  |