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Post-Kyle Smith thread

Thought I'd start fresh.

I'm not all that surprised, but the timing smells like fish.

Wel lose Saturday afternoon, early Monday Stanford announces. Where was Chun for that not-even 48 hours? Did he present a contract extension/raise package? A counteroffer? Anything? Where's his statement?

I am with Mik for once, promote Shaw. In fact, an announcement should be out already. Chun should have had that in his back pocket Saturday night. We don't know what Stanford's coach made since they are a private school, but inquiring minds would like to know.

I guess the portal is already open? None of our names in it is of yet, per the below link.

UW AD leaves after 6 months on the job.

All the Red on the balance sheet might have been an issue.

Here is this morning's update.

Six months after Troy Dannen arrived to be Washington’s 16th director of athletics, the Huskies are back on the search for someone to lead the UW athletic department.

Dannen, who was announced as UW’s new AD to replace the outgoing Jen Cohen on Oct. 7, has left Montlake to take the same job at Nebraska, a UW spokesperson confirmed to The Seattle Times. UW declined to immediately comment on the departure.

Dannen is finalizing a six-year contract with the Cornhuskers according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

During his short tenure at Washington, Dannen oversaw Washington’s run to the College Football Playoff championship game, the hiring of football coach Jedd Fisch to replace Kalen DeBoer, and the firing of men’s basketball coach Mike Hopkins.

“I am so honored to have the opportunity to serve the University of Washington, our students, coaches, staff, faculty and incredible fans,” Dannen said in a press release announcing his hiring in October. “Throughout this process, the passion, love and spirit of the UW was evident in every conversation, as was the alignment necessary for comprehensive success. We will compete for championships, and we will provide an unmatched experience for our student-athletes.

“The future has never been brighter for Husky Athletics, and I am humbled to steward the next chapter in our storied history.”

Just to pass the time - NIT decliners

Been thinking about this. While I can understand some of the bigger programs getting all butt hurt about the NCAA, here's a thought. Since the NCAA is supposedly paying the way, why not accept the bid and use it to play your younger players that have been warming the bench all year? Not like the whole starting 5, but giving solid minutes throughout the game would IMHO be huge for these guys. Still try to win the game(s), even better if you get 2 or 3 to really give some quality time to them.

Good news. Coug baseball

Cougs sit at 15-8 on the year and more importantly 5-4 in conference play. They just finished off the sweep of ASU this weekend. Starting pitching, bullpen and some key bats seem to be leading to the improvement. Nathan Choate seems to be fitting in nicely.

Big day in Omaha...

Washington State men’s prep for Iowa State puts ball security at premium​

Greg Woods
March 22, 2024 at 4:31 pm Updated March 22, 2024 at 4:31 pm
By
The Spokesman-Review
OMAHA, Neb. — For as quick as Isaac Jones is, for his nimble footwork and his springy spin moves, Washington State’s star forward prefers to play slow. He would rather take his time in the post, back his guy down, maybe grab his own miss and stick it back.

“I like playing slow,” Jones said. “I play at my own pace, and I play it slow, and I like to see the floor. Especially since I get doubled a lot, I think playing slow is good because I can see the floor, scan, make a skip pass and get open shots off it. I think that’s what’s important about playing slow — not being sped up by other teams.”

As the seventh-seeded Washington State men prepare for second-seeded Iowa State on Saturday, just the program’s fourth appearance in the NCAA tournament round of 32, the Cougars will face that exact challenge. The Cyclones don’t just try to speed up opponents. They try to disorient them.

Iowa State, champions of last week’s Big 12 tournament, are all about defense. A physical group, the Cyclones rank second nationally in both defensive efficiency and turnover percentage, and they’re third nationally in steal percentage, nabbing take-aways on 15% of their defensive possessions. They haven’t allowed more than 65 points since mid-February — in a loss to one-seed Houston.

The Cyclones, who cruised past South Dakota State in Thursday’s opening round, take ball pressure to an extreme. They force turnovers on more than a quarter of their defensive trips, second in the country. Center Robert Jones is 10th in the conference in block percentage and guard Tamin Lipsey is sixth nationally in steal percentage, snaring one 5.2% of the time.

In that sense, it might be the tallest task of the season for the Cougars, who clipped Drake in a 66-61 win Thursday. In that one, they played their third game in four tries under something of an offensive haze, shooting just 38% from the field and losing 13 turnovers. WSU made just 5 of 17 layups, a key reason why the club had trouble breaking out all night, and the Cougs posted an uncharacteristically low 22 points in the paint.

All of which prompts this question: Are the Cougs comfortable playing in lower-scoring environments? More important, can they win playing that style?

WSU might not have much of a choice against Iowa State, which will give the Cougs a defensive challenge they might not have seen yet this season. The good news for the Cougs is, even though they haven’t found many wins in these slower games, they found out Thursday they have it in them.

“Against some of those opponents, it’s been to our advantage,” WSU coach Kyle Smith said. “Like Colorado and Washington — we would rather wrestle with them than some of those speed teams. … Probably [against] Iowa State, it will be lower scoring if we take care of the ball. If we don’t, if they turn us over — which is what they’re good at — they’ll get up and down a little bit.”

In other words, WSU can win Saturday’s game by valuing possessions, by playing slower and eschewing turnovers. The Cougs are halfway there already. They’re one of the country’s slowest teams in terms of pace, ranking No. 313 nationally with a tempo rating of 65.0 according to KenPom. They’re at their best when they’re at their slowest, which is the kind of trend they want to replicate Saturday.

To do that, they will have to limit turnovers. They have not been doing that well of late. They gave away 13 turnovers against Drake, 19 last week against Colorado, 11 against Stanford and 12 against Washington. The last time WSU committed fewer than 10 turnovers came in a March 2 win over UCLA, when the Cougs committed just seven.

What’s been the key? Some of the Cougs turnovers have been entirely unforced. In Thursday’s game, wing Jaylen Wells tossed a pass into the second row of the crowd. In last week’s game against Colorado, guard Myles Rice committed back-to-back turnovers, including a behind-the-back pass that was easily intercepted. The latter became particularly consequential because it was a live-ball turnover — the kind the Cyclones feast on, turning them into buckets on the other end.

“We’ll take our shots at them, too, and our advantages,” Smith said. “But we’ll see. They really don’t run as much off transition, off misses, as they do just turn you over and get numbers.”

Another area where WSU has been losing turnovers: When Jones has gotten doubled in the post. At times, he hasn’t sensed the double team until it’s too late. He lost three turnovers against Drake, two against Colorado, none against Stanford and two apiece against Washington and UCLA.

It’s relevant because Iowa State will deploy that strategy, perhaps to an extreme, forcing Jones to get rid of it.

“It doesn’t matter. They double the post every possession,” Smith said. “Doesn’t matter who catches it. They really swarm you. They’re almost like a really athletic, quick Tony Bennett team where they double the post every time. It doesn’t matter who catches. It will be hard.

“We have to find different ways of getting the ball to different places, I think, and get on the glass a little bit. We have somewhat of an advantage there, I hope.”

Jakimovski dealing with shoulder pain​

WSU wing Andrej Jakimovski, who posted 9 points on two triples in Thursday’s game, continues to play through pain in his shooting-arm shoulder. The pain, he says, is a 7 or 8 on a scale from 1-10.

“When I got hit on a ball screen or something, I felt it for a couple minutes,” Jakimovski said. “I gotta play through it. It’s not ideal. I just wanna play free. I don’t wanna think about the shoulder. But I’ll give everything for the team to get the win, so I’m trying to be ready for tomorrow and to win the game.”

Jakimovski, who first suffered the injury Feb. 29 during WSU’s win over USC, has been playing with pain ever since. He’s also been playing with an arrangement of tape on the shoulder. Against Drake, he made 2 of 7 shots, 2 of 5 from deep and 3 of 6 from the free-throw line.

“[I feel it most] when I get hit,” Jakimovski said. “For example, like ball screens, I feel it a lot, or finishing, I feel it a lot because I can’t extend my arm fully. That was the worst. Trying to get it ready for tomorrow because we know it’s a huge game.”

Greg Woods Washington State beat writer for The Spokesman-Review

Money shot...

How WSU and OSU are benefitting financially from Pac-12’s NCAA men’s tournament wins​

Jon WilnerMarch 23, 2024 at 4:14 pm
The past seven months have produced a barrage of highs and lows for Washington State and Oregon State, the schools left behind in the realignment game.

The Pac-12’s demise in August was followed by the football season, the laborious but ultimately successful legal fight against the 10 departing schools, scheduling arrangements with the Mountain West and West Coast Conference and, finally, two very different experiences for the respective men’s basketball programs.

But for plot twists and emotional turns, the eight days that concluded Friday are tough to beat. The stretch began with crushing news and a bleak financial situation and ended with an unexpected pot of cash.

The schools improved their financial situation by more than $30 million in that short timeframe.

Let’s recount the eight days, step by step.

March 15​

It was anything but a quiet Friday as late-morning media reports sent shockwaves through Pullman and Corvallis.

The College Football Playoff’s revenue distribution model, which allocated varying amounts to the conferences, had relegated WSU and OSU to fourth-rate status.

The two schools were treated as Independents and reportedly assigned annual shares of $360,000 each for the six years of the contract cycle (2026-31).

That was just 20 percent of the $1.8 million shares negotiated for each Group of Five school (think: Boise State, Tulane, Akron, etc.), and it was roughly 95 percent less than the amount WSU and OSU collect currently as members of the Pac-12.

This, while every other FBS school would receive a substantial increase in CFP revenue from the new, $1.3 billion annual deal with ESPN.

Multiple industry sources were aghast at the treatment of the two schools.

Meanwhile, the semifinals of the Pac-12 tournament were scheduled for that evening, with Arizona facing Oregon and Washington State playing Colorado.

The financial outlook for WSU and OSU on the court? Somewhat gloomy.

Victories by the top-seeded Wildcats and second-seeded Cougars likely would result in the conference sending only those two teams to the NCAA Tournament.

With each March Madness game carrying a value of $2 million in future revenue, the semifinal pairings suggested two bids for the conference and, therefore, just $4 million in guaranteed cash for the ‘Pac-2’ schools.

March 17​

By Friday night, the on-court outlook had improved dramatically, with victories by Colorado and Oregon pushing the Pac-12 closer to additional berths.

When the brackets were revealed on Selection Sunday, the conference had secured four bids — the maximum available under the circumstances.

Oregon claimed the automatic bid (by winning the tournament) while Colorado joined Arizona and WSU in the at-large field, albeit barely. The Buffaloes were the third-to-last team voted into the event.

Even if all four schools lost their NCAA openers, the Pac-12 would have four units at $2 million each. The Cougars and Beavers were now guaranteed $8 million in future revenue.

March 19​

A double dose of good news arrived Tuesday.

First, the College Football Playoff revenue distribution model was finalized, and — presto! — it featured larger shares for WSU and OSU. Substantially larger shares, in fact.

Instead of just $360,000 per school per year for six years, the Cougars and Beavers would collect $3.6 million annually for the first three years (2026-28) of the contract.

Exactly what was said in the private discussions between Pac-12 commissioner Teresa Gould and her colleagues remains a mystery. But the end result was a 10-fold increase for the Cougars and Beavers during the first half of the contract term. (The distributions for the final three years are unknown.)

But an increase in CFP revenue wasn’t the only encouraging development Tuesday for WSU and OSU.

Thunderous news surfaced in the ACC, where Clemson filed a lawsuit against the conference in an attempt to invalidate the grant-of-rights contract holding the ACC together.

The lawsuit came three months after the ACC’s other football powerhouse, Florida State, initiated legal proceedings against the conference.


Sponsored​


The lawsuits make different claims, but the end goal is the same: The Tigers and Seminoles want to obliterate the ACC’s contract so they can pursue membership in the SEC or Big Ten.

And anything that creates more realignment at the power conference level is good news for the Cougars and Beavers.

If the ACC dissolves, Cal and Stanford, which are scheduled to enter the conference this summer, might be forced to join Washington State and Oregon State in rebuilding the Pac-12.

If the ACC dissolves, the Big 12 might become a receptacle for all schools that don’t gain membership in the Big Ten or SEC.

If the ACC dissolves, the top football schools in every conference could form a super league of 24 or 32 teams and leave everyone else behind — thus placing WSU and OSU on the same level as dozens of second-tier football schools that are currently in the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten and SEC.

Uncertainty over the structure of the sport is the building block of the ‘Pac-2’ strategy: Remain as flexible as possible for as long as possible in case everything crumbles and opportunities surface.

There was even better news for WSU and OSU the next day, March 20, when the chair of North Carolina’s Board of Trustees told Inside Carolina: “I think that what Clemson is doing is 100 percent proof positive that a significant portion of the (ACC) membership of the conference is unhappy.”

March 21-22​

The start of March Madness brought more good news for the Cougars and Beavers, as all four Pac-12 teams won their first-round games. Add Colorado’s victory in the First Four, and the conference was guaranteed at least nine games.

With each game (i.e., unit) equalling $2 million over the course of the six-year payout window, the ‘Pac-2’ schools were suddenly staring at $18 million in guaranteed cash — a huge uptick from the situation as it stood prior to the semifinals of the Pac-12 tournament.

In fact, the NCAA Tournament results and the change in College Football Playoff revenue produced a windfall for WSU and OSU over just eight days.

Here’s our back-of-the-envelope math:

— How it looked on March 15

NCAA Tournament revenue: With only two teams assured of making the field (two units), the conference could count on just $4 million.

CFP revenue shares: With $360,000 annual shares over six years for two teams, that meant just $4.3 million for the Pac-12 coffers.

Total: $8.3 million.

— How it looked on March 22

NCAA Tournament revenue: With four teams winning five games (nine units), the conference is guaranteed at least $18 million.

CFP revenue shares: With $3.6 million annually for three years for two teams, the total climbs to $21.6 million.

Total: $39.6 million

In other words, Washington State and Oregon State increased their guaranteed revenue by $31.3 million from Friday morning of one week to Friday night of the next.

And the total will grow by $2 million with each subsequent NCAA victory. (Arizona defeated Dayton on Saturday, pushing the unit count to 10.)

That said, the NCAA revenue is contingent on Pac-12 survival. If the conference dissolves or if it becomes a different legal entity, a source said, the revenue earned this month will be split evenly among the 12 current schools, regardless of future conference affiliations.

Also, any additional members of the Pac-12 — if we assume WSU and OSU pursue expansion in some form — might attempt to negotiate access to a portion of the NCAA units.

And it’s unclear how the CFP would handle revenue distributions if a Pac-8 or Pac-10 were to emerge in a few years, with schools from the Mountain West or other conferences.

The past eight days did nothing to solve the riddle of what comes next for WSU and OSU. But the wild week clearly unfolded in a favorable, and lucrative, fashion for the two schools.

Jon Wilner: jwilner@bayareanewsgroup.com; Jon Wilner has been covering college sports for decades and is an AP top-25 football and basketball voter as well as a Heisman Trophy voter. He was named Beat Writer of the Year in 2013 by the Football Writers Association of America for his coverage of the Pac-12, won first place for feature writing in 2016 in the Associated Press Sports Editors writing contest and is a five-time APSE honoree.

Clemson suing to leave ACC...

My guess is this is the domino WSU/OSU are waiting for. What's unclear if that means Cal/Stanford back to rebuild the PAC-12, or joining forces with the ACC to build out a western division (my hope/guess).
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