Sunday, July 31, 2011

A Pacific 12 future both bright and cloudy

Bruins look forward to meeting challenge

Former UCLA basketball player Tracy Murray joins coaching staff of WNBA's Tulsa Shock

UCLA?s Neuheisel on the hottest of hot seats

Neuheisel knows he's on the shortest of leashes

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By JEFF S. MILLER / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

LOS ANGELES ?- He opened with a joke, an admirable gesture for a man who's dead.

Rick Neuheisel, in his first formal comment on the upcoming football season, announced he's on "the proverbial hot seat" and, as such, was "excited to be invited to any of these things."

Article Tab: image1-UCLA?s Neuheisel on the hottest of hot seats
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Imagine what Neuheisel would have said Tuesday at Pac-12 media day if he weren't such an undying optimist.

Dead, that's what Neuheisel is. Already. Nearly two weeks before UCLA's first practice.

Dead, unless his Bruins suddenly leap forward during a season in which the forecast calls for only a small step.

Dead, unless the man who always thinks positive can somehow will his team to produce positive, too.

Hey, we're not being overly dramatic, not when the coach himself brings up the "hot seat" before anyone in the media even has a chance to ask him if his cheeks are roasting.

"To deny that the number of wins is important is putting your head in the sand," Neuheisel said. "Getting to the postseason is huge because that's where the perception of the program changes. It's postseason or it's not postseason.

"Right now, we've got to get over this hump of (being) mediocre. I've got a bunch of kids (who) are poised to do it. And I've got some coaches who are ready to lock arms and do it, as well. So that's going to be exciting."

A short time later, he added, "When we get there, this is going to be really, really good."

And that's what makes this nearly impossible situation even harder to witness. Neuheisel is so damned optimistic, such a breeze to talk to, so easy to appreciate that to see him dying is tough.

He won't measure the season this way, so we'll do it for him: The Bruins have to make a bowl game for Neuheisel to retain his job. No question. And even that might not be enough.

Missing the postseason for a third time in Neuheisel's four seasons would be asking the boosters, alumni and faithful for far too much patience. Especially now, when 70 teams make bowl games and only 50 don't.

Just improving won't suffice. It's bowling or bust this year at UCLA.

"I don't quantify it (that way)," Neuheisel insisted, expressing an opinion as popular in Westwood right now as "Fight On." "I think people have to see UCLA football played really, really well. Now, hopefully that does parlay itself into a bowl game..."

Neuheisel believes his survival depends on rallying Bruins fans around the performance ? more than the result ? reestablishing hope in a program that, under his guidance, is 15-22 since 2008.

We believe that, while sounding encouraging, this idea couldn't possibly float. Bruins followers need to see more than just their team playing better; they need to see their team playing in December.

More still, they need to see their team winning and doing so right from the start. A 1-3 September could sink this whole operation.

Neuheisel even said, "It doesn't take long to win back your constituency. They just want to know that there's reason for their optimism."

Again, encouraging. However, we'd point out that last season, after the Bruins returned home following their stomping of Texas in Austin ? a victory that, at the time, was startling and unforeseeable ? the Rose Bowl featured entire empty sections for the Washington State game.

Just a few weeks later, Neuheisel and the Bruins were being booed by that constituency.

Tuesday, here was the coach characterizing the running game being "light years ahead of where we were" and the defense having depth previously unseen during his tenure. He referenced "great optimism" and "a great chance" and being "thankful."

And we couldn't help but wonder if Neuheisel was burying himself in an avalanche of feel-good, all this rah-rah setting himself up to fall dramatically should the offensive line continue to struggle and the quarterback play sag.

"If we can go on the road and beat Houston (in the opener) and do so in an impressive way, look like a well coached and sound, fundamental football team, I think they'll come out the next week and be excited," Neuheisel said of the fans.

"And if we can find a way to win that one (against San Jose State)," he continued, "then the next one's against Texas. It can happen that fast. We're not that far away from getting this jump-started."

He sounded convincing, even if he sounded like he was trying to convince himself.

No, that's not accurate. Neuheisel is sold, to be sure. He's certain UCLA football ? under his leadership ? will be back, as certain as he is that "good things happen to good people."

That's another thing Neuheisel said Tuesday. He talked a lot, all right.

We have to be honest. We'd really like to believe him. Sure would make for a great story, a program coming back to life in the hands of a dead man.

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There are two eras here for Neuheisel: With Chow and without. Personally I?d like to see what he can do without Chow. But if he only has one year to turn it around in the post Chow era, he?ll have his work cut out for him. But if anyone can do it, Neuheisel can. Is he the right coach for this team? I believe 100% that he is. Will the angry mob give him more than one year in the post Chow era to prove it ? probably not. So to that angry mob ? be careful what you wish for. That kind of thinking is how we ended up with Obama.

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First off, UCLA has to recruit an excellent QB prospect. The last two QBs have been marginal at best. If you are going to stick with the "Pistol", then you need a
Massoli (SP) type guy, who has the running skills to be a true threat.
If you try to use this offense with the existing QBs, it is destined to fail.
I am a UCLA fan, but getting extremely discouraged with what we have seen on the field in the last several years.

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No seismic shift, but still a shake-up for Pac-12, other conferences

Chris Dufresne's college football story lines, No. 1: After membership changes in Pac-10, Big Ten, Big 12 and other leagues, you can't tell conferences without a scorecard. And more change may be on way.

Ralphie V

Mascot Ralphie V and the University of Colorado bolted West to a new conference. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press / November 14)

By Chris Dufresne
A college football fan recently rescued after two years on a deserted island ? please play along here ? was asked to make this year's conference picks.

He liked Nebraska in the Big 12, Boise State to win the Western Athletic and Brigham Young and Utah to battle it out in the Mountain West.

Told those schools were no longer in those leagues, he quipped, "Whoa, next you'll tell me Texas joined the Pac-10."

No, but almost.

College football avoided (for now) the "Big Bang" cosmic conference shift, yet the Big Ten alone underwent so much realignment it could have split into the "Sciatica" and "Lower Lumbar" divisions.

Larry Scott, had thy will be done, you would have been commissioner of the soon-to-be Pac-16, the nation's first "super conference." Six Big 12 schools, including Texas and Oklahoma, would have been among the 16.

Scott's grand maneuver failed but caused a chain reaction that would have made Sir Isaac Newton proud.

You can't begin to tell this year's college football story until you know where all the mascots landed.

The Pac-10 didn't get Texas but added Colorado and Utah and is now the Pac-12. The league split into divisions and will play a Dec. 2 championship game in the home stadium of the highest-seeded finisher.

USC and UCLA are in the South but still will play annually against Stanford and California, now in the North.

It's going to be different. New member Utah got a huge housewarming gift by missing Stanford and Oregon on the 2011 schedule. Cal and Colorado are now conference mates but must play a "nonleague" game this year as part of a previously arranged contract.

The Big Ten, which used to have 11 teams, now has 12. It adds Nebraska, which bolted the Big 12, which went from 12 teams to 10, having also lost Colorado.

The Big Ten named its divisions "Legends" and "Leaders" before Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who was on the "Leaders" side, was forced to resign in disgrace.

The Pac-12, which used to play a round-robin schedule without a title game, has divided into six-team divisions. The Big 12, which used to have six-team divisions and play a title game, has switched to the round-robin format.

Brigham Young, formerly of the Mountain West, will go independent in football and ship its other sports to the West Coast Conference.

And this, believe it or not, is only the beginning.

Next year, Texas Christian will join the Big East Conference and three more WAC teams ? Hawaii, Nevada and Fresno State ? will move to the Mountain West.

And that might not even be the end of it. The Big 12 staved off extinction and has been nourished back to life, but it's a very fractious coalition. Remaining members, Texas A&M in particular, see Texas' new network deal with ESPN as nothing but a recruiting tool.

In other words, conference realignment may not be over.

chris.dufresne@latimes.com

twitter.com/dufresnelatimes

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Will this be the year of the asterisk in Pac-12?

Youngman column: NCAA sanctions could prevent inaugural division winners from playing for title.

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By RANDY YOUNGMAN

By RANDY YOUNGMAN
COLUMNIST
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Notes, quotes, observations and opinions on Pac-12 football, awaiting the start of fall practice:

? Oregon is a prohibitive favorite to play in and win the inaugural Pac-12 Championship Game, as well as capture its third consecutive conference title and BCS bowl berth.

Article Tab: Oregon coach Chip Kelly and tight end David Paulson at the Pac-12 Football Media Day on Tuesday.
Oregon coach Chip Kelly and tight end David Paulson at the Pac-12 Football Media Day on Tuesday.
MARK RIGHTMIRE, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
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With USC banned again from postseason play and Stanford losing Coach Jim Harbaugh to the NFL, I think the only built-in suspense in the conference race is whether the NCAA investigation into Oregon's use of scouting and recruiting services leads to any immediate sanctions against the Ducks.

It could turn out to be "The Year of the Asterisk" if first-year member Utah or Arizona State in the South, or perhaps Washington in the North, winds up playing in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day as a non-division winner.

? Commissioner Larry Scott is pumped up about the new Pac-12, but adding Utah and Colorado doesn't do much for me.

It definitely would have been exciting if Texas had committed to joining the conference last summer, because after all of the dominoes had fallen, the Pac-10 would have become the Pac-16, a super-conference also including Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and Texas A&M.

Nobody knows if Texas was serious during its Pac-10 expansion talks, or merely bluffing to get its own TV network by remaining in the Big 12, but the Pac-10's two-team expansion seemed anticlimactic after Texas stayed put.

? Even in a potential asterisk-riddled season, UCLA doesn't have much of a chance at a major bowl, unless you believe in miracles.

But fourth-year coach Rick Neuheisel has to be thankful the Pac-12 has been split into two six-team divisions, because it disguises how low the Bruins are picked in preseason polls.

Conference media picked UCLA to finish fifth in the South, but only two teams ? Washington State and Colorado ? received fewer votes overall.

Being picked 10th out of 12 would have sounded a lot worse, wouldn't it?

? Neuheisel's future looks anything but promising after compiling a 15-22 record in his first three seasons, and even he concedes he hasn't been able to use USC's sanctions to his advantage in recruiting the past two years.

"I haven't noticed anything with respect to that," Neuheisel said on Pac-12 media day this past week.

"I mean, obviously, the numbers will be small. Remember, those sanctions (against USC) didn't play into it at all this year because they had the appeal. But their (scholarship) numbers will be down. So we'll wait and see."

Wait? UCLA fans don't like hearing that word.

? When USC coach Lane Kiffin concluded his remarks on media day, he introduced junior QB Matt Barkley by joking, "And Matt's going to announce that he's coming back for his senior year."

To which Barkley retorted, "Every time he says that."

? USC begins practice drills Thursday, and UCLA four days later on Aug. 8.

But the dates circled on my calendar are Sept 10, when Utah (and new offensive coordinator Norm Chow) comes to the Coliseum to play the Trojans, and Nov. 12, when UCLA renews acquaintances with Chow at Utah.

How many axes does Chow have to grind?

Contact the writer: ryoungman@ocregister.com



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Pac-12 sees potential under Larry Scott - Stewart Mandel

Will this be the year of the asterisk in Pac-12?

Youngman column: NCAA sanctions could prevent inaugural division winners from playing for title.

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By RANDY YOUNGMAN

By RANDY YOUNGMAN
COLUMNIST
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Notes, quotes, observations and opinions on Pac-12 football, awaiting the start of fall practice:

? Oregon is a prohibitive favorite to play in and win the inaugural Pac-12 Championship Game, as well as capture its third consecutive conference title and BCS bowl berth.

Article Tab: Oregon coach Chip Kelly and tight end David Paulson at the Pac-12 Football Media Day on Tuesday.
Oregon coach Chip Kelly and tight end David Paulson at the Pac-12 Football Media Day on Tuesday.
MARK RIGHTMIRE, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
ADVERTISEMENT

With USC banned again from postseason play and Stanford losing Coach Jim Harbaugh to the NFL, I think the only built-in suspense in the conference race is whether the NCAA investigation into Oregon's use of scouting and recruiting services leads to any immediate sanctions against the Ducks.

It could turn out to be "The Year of the Asterisk" if first-year member Utah or Arizona State in the South, or perhaps Washington in the North, winds up playing in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day as a non-division winner.

? Commissioner Larry Scott is pumped up about the new Pac-12, but adding Utah and Colorado doesn't do much for me.

It definitely would have been exciting if Texas had committed to joining the conference last summer, because after all of the dominoes had fallen, the Pac-10 would have become the Pac-16, a super-conference also including Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and Texas A&M.

Nobody knows if Texas was serious during its Pac-10 expansion talks, or merely bluffing to get its own TV network by remaining in the Big 12, but the Pac-10's two-team expansion seemed anticlimactic after Texas stayed put.

? Even in a potential asterisk-riddled season, UCLA doesn't have much of a chance at a major bowl, unless you believe in miracles.

But fourth-year coach Rick Neuheisel has to be thankful the Pac-12 has been split into two six-team divisions, because it disguises how low the Bruins are picked in preseason polls.

Conference media picked UCLA to finish fifth in the South, but only two teams ? Washington State and Colorado ? received fewer votes overall.

Being picked 10th out of 12 would have sounded a lot worse, wouldn't it?

? Neuheisel's future looks anything but promising after compiling a 15-22 record in his first three seasons, and even he concedes he hasn't been able to use USC's sanctions to his advantage in recruiting the past two years.

"I haven't noticed anything with respect to that," Neuheisel said on Pac-12 media day this past week.

"I mean, obviously, the numbers will be small. Remember, those sanctions (against USC) didn't play into it at all this year because they had the appeal. But their (scholarship) numbers will be down. So we'll wait and see."

Wait? UCLA fans don't like hearing that word.

? When USC coach Lane Kiffin concluded his remarks on media day, he introduced junior QB Matt Barkley by joking, "And Matt's going to announce that he's coming back for his senior year."

To which Barkley retorted, "Every time he says that."

? USC begins practice drills Thursday, and UCLA four days later on Aug. 8.

But the dates circled on my calendar are Sept 10, when Utah (and new offensive coordinator Norm Chow) comes to the Coliseum to play the Trojans, and Nov. 12, when UCLA renews acquaintances with Chow at Utah.

How many axes does Chow have to grind?

Contact the writer: ryoungman@ocregister.com



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marc tyler datone jones Jesse Scroggins max wittek

Saturday, July 30, 2011

UCLA basketball: Jerime Anderson arrested, suspended

UCLA Basketball: Anderson's Priorities

UCLA coach Rick Neuheisel's optimism already getting tested

Video: Daily News sportswriters Jon Gold and Scott Wolf on Pac-12 Media Day

USC Focused On Football (via ESPN)

Reggie Bush's family takes back Heisman Trophy

Carl Kraushaar, John Wooden's first UCLA center, dies

Friday, July 29, 2011

Commissioner announces Pac-12 Network

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FROM REGISTER NEWS SERVICRES

NEW YORK ? The Pac-12 will launch national and regional conference television networks next year.

Commissioner Larry Scott announced Wednesday at an East Coast football media day in Manhattan that the Pac-12 had partnered with cable companies Comcast, Cox, Time Warner and Bright House. There will be a national network along with six regional channels: Washington, Oregon, Northern California, Southern California, Arizona and Mountain.

Article Tab: Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, shown here addressing the media on Tuesday in Los Angeles, announced the Pac-12 Network in New York on Wednesday.
Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, shown here addressing the media on Tuesday in Los Angeles, announced the Pac-12 Network in New York on Wednesday.
MARK RIGHTMIRE, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Said Scott, "We've had a national brand, but the tribal nature make college sports every local. So this is an attempt through the unique structure of our conference and the cable industry to super-serve fans in a hyper-local way."

Once the networks launch in August 2012, they will broadcast about 850 sporting events a year ? 350 nationally and 500 regionally. Subscribers will also be able to watch games on mobile devices.

Every football and men's basketball game will be televised nationally. The conference already had a 12-year television contract worth about $3 billion with Fox and ESPN, which will air many of the most high-profile games.

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Former UCLA basketball player Tracy Murray joins coaching staff of WNBA's Tulsa Shock

Pac-12 Network is coming

Arriving in August 2012, it will make every Pacific 12 Conference football game and men's basketball game available to a national audience on TV.

Larry Scott

Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott announced Wednesday that the Pac-12 Network will go live in 2012. (Ed Andrieski / Associated Press / 16)

By Diane Pucin
The creation of the Pac-12 Network was announced Wednesday, with details about a television network covering schools in the West coming from league Commissioner Larry Scott in New York.

Beginning in August 2012, the Pacific 12 Conference will offer one primary national channel and six regional channels matching up teams paired in the same area (USC and UCLA, for example) that will televise 350 events annually on the main channel and 500 more regionally.

So far the Pac-12 has signed cable providers Time Warner Cable, Comcast, Cox and Bright House to distribute the seven network channels.

There are no plans in place with distributors such as DirectTV or Dish Network, though Scott said he hoped to eventually add satellite and telephone companies to the deal.

The four distributors who are onboard with the conference can reach about 48 million viewers.

Scott said the regional networks such as the Southern California channel dedicated to USC and UCLA content would be carried on expanded basic cable and that the national network will probably be found on digital basic cable in Pac-12 markets and on digital sports tiers that require extra fees in the rest of the country.

The networks would appear on high-definition channels and they will be new channels, not ones already in place, he said.

Scott said the conference will keep ownership of the Pac-12 Network.

"With this arrangement, every [Pac-12] football game and every men's basketball game will be available to a national audience on television," Scott said.

Scott described the creation of the six local channels to enhance the one national channel as cutting-edge.

"This is an attempt through the ? the cable industry to super-serve fans in a hyper-local way," Scott said.

The conference recently signed a $3-billion, 12-year national deal with ESPN and Fox that begins next year.

diane.pucin@latimes.com

twitter.com/mepucin

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A few minutes with Lane Kiffin

by on Jul 27, 2011 6:04 PM PDT in USC Football

Things shook out a little differntly than last year here in NYC for the east coast swing of the Pac-12's media event...

I got pretty much all of Lane Kiffin's time.

Kiffin was relaxed. Not as much under the gun as last year with all the controversy post NCAA ruling. He was affable and looked me in the eye and answered every question I asked. He wasn't quick to make a break for it and head out.

I kept it light, I didn't go into too much detail because Kiffin pretty much answered all the same questions over the past two days....we all know the answers.

I could tell he was relieved with the NCAA decision making process behind him. The penalties are what they are and he and his staff can move forward.

Overall depth is a concern on both sides of the ball, no secret there.

He doesn't plan on doing anything much different than last season.

Kiffin is excited with all the potential on offense. New faces on the line, the potential for even more explosiveness with the receivers. We spoke about the running back situation. Because he views each back differently, the three potential starters, Kiffin sees all three getting touches in different roles. I didn't ask about the Tyler situation...I saw it as a pointless question, we all know the deal with Tyler for right now.

With being in his second year at 'SC with the players on the roster he is looking forward to seeing the defense responds this season. Last seasons struggles were obviously, not lost on him or his dad. He thinks that with some of the new faces they may turn the corner this season. We spoke about Nickell Robey and how special a player he is and how great a story he is and will continue to be.

We discussed recruiting...He reiterated that with the reduced numbers quality will be the key moving forward.

I then asked him about his relationship with Pat Haden.

Kiffin has tremendous respect for Haden. They see eye to eye on may issues and that he handled all that has been thrown at him better than most.

I nibbled around the edges of USC not challenging the NCAA...I could tell that he was just happy not be involved with it.

I didn't discuss the UT situation...He knows it is how of his hands at this point.

I then turned away from football and asked more about family and how he has adjusted after his first season ended. He was happy to back in L.A. ... as was his wife.

Kiffin is at pe

VIDEO: Anderson in Las VegasSnapshot: UCLA Football RecruitingAllison: "I'm Wide Open"Lewis Not Closing Any DoorsJerime Anderson Arrested, Suspended /pages/xml/headerxml.aspx
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/...tory?id=6151134
]]>
<span style="font-size: small;">GO BRUINS!<br><br><p><img src="http://i.cnn.net/si/multimedia/photo_gallery/0804/campus.cheer.ucla/images/Brianna-UCLA_29.jpg"/><br></p></span> Anyone NOT notice...Lame leaves a trail of slime where ever he goes.disbelief]]>
rowbro wrote:

Anyone NOT notice...Lame leaves a trail of slime where ever he goes.disbelief

SuC fans will look the other way...]]>
<div><div><span><br><br></span><img alt="http://img2.yardbarker.com/media/a/b/abe512e835d6ffe8f3fd5c0fcedcc4931580e724/medium/usc.jpg?stamp=1310661193" src="http://img2.yardbarker.com/media/a/b/abe512e835d6ffe8f3fd5c0fcedcc4931580e724/medium/usc.jpg?stamp=1310661193"/> LMAO!</div></div>
rowbro wrote:

Anyone NOT notice...Lame leaves a trail of slime where ever he goes.disbelief

Anyone NOT notice...the OP linked to an article from February.bored1

Here's breaking news regarding that same case, in which Tennessee claims one of the major violations charged to Kiffin should actually be reclassified as a secondary violation.

Tennessee also argued that 16 impermissible calls to five recruits made by former football coach Lane Kiffin and his staff are secondary violations instead of major ones.

"The violation is secondary because the impermissible calls were isolated to a four-day period and did not provide more than a minimal recruiting advantage, particularly given the fact that 11 of the 16 calls lasted for two minutes or less," the response says.

http://espn.go.com/college-spo...tions-secondary

]]>
brdcstrr wrote:
rowbro wrote:

Anyone NOT notice...Lame leaves a trail of slime where ever he goes.disbelief

Anyone NOT notice...the OP linked to an article from February.bored1

Here's breaking news regarding that same case, in which Tennessee claims one of the major violations cha

Pac-12 Media Day - New York City Edition

by on Jul 27, 2011 2:01 PM PDT in

Photo

Well, here we are at Chelsea Market!

Things are supposed to start at 5pm but one of the buses from Bristol, Ct was late. Thank god...because I just got here.

So, my hope is to Tweet and post but I think it will just be Tweeting...

Join us!!

How are you feeling about the Trojans?

Poll closes Jul 30, 2011.

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