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Final wrap up on my nightmare road trip

Ok, so two things.

After not being able to find my wallet, I went down the HIghway a ways and pulled way off the road. Still had beer then so I was imbibing in the cab. Keys safely in my pocket. Next thing I know, two Sheriff's deputies are knocking on my window. Passenger floor was covered in beer cans, and I was a mess by that time. So I tell them of my wallet woes, and they looked around the cab and said they could haul me in for DUI. I asked how? I'm sitting off the road, keys are not in the ignition. "Physical Control". They asked for my drivers license, and I said it's in the wallet I lost! Anyway they let me off, with my promise not to go anywhere until mid-morning. Wish Washington cops were as flexible. I think my dog in the back seat helped.

So after getting my buddy's WU money, I headed home. By CDA the gas gauge was not looking good, and I was trying to limp into Spokane to hit my credit union, which thankfully is open half days on Saturday. By Post Falls I knew I wasn't going to make it. One thing about Chevy trucks - when the gauge says you are empty, you are empty. Unlike my Subaru, where when it sez you are empty you have a gallon or two left. Rather being stranded on the side of I-90 with a dying phone and no money, I pulled into a gas station. This pretty cute and age appropriate gal (wedding ring damn it) was gassing up, and I told her my woes and asked she would let me steal $5 of gas from her. She says sure, so I pulled forward and she gave me $15 of gas! Which I ended up needing as I wandered East Spokane looking for my bank. But what a sweety pie to do that for a compete stranger! Luckily I am charming and handsome and chicks like me.

Found WSECU, got cash - brought in my Truck registration as it was the only proof of who I was. Guy was cool - asked me some questions, bought that it was me, and off I went.

Hope you all enjoyed my tale of misery. I am done posting about it, think I hit all the lowlights.
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Pictures from CSU

For those of you that are interested, below is a link to the album of some selected photos from the CSU game. I included some photos of the field from Loyalcoug's seat so he can see what he missed.

CSU vs WSU game pics

CSU fans were generally pretty friendly although my wife said a couple fans gave her some grief when she was going up to the concession area. The CSU fans behind us were great and even gave me a shot of some bizarre cherry something or other. My daughter's boyfriend got the guy's contact info to see about an internship next summer.

A few observations....
  1. CSU fans are excited about WSU and OSU joining the MWC.
  2. They do not want to abandon the MWC name and think we need to come to them.
  3. Canvas Stadium is fairly new and it's pretty damned nice even though it seats less than 40k.
  4. Finding our reserved parking lot sucked and their parking in general is poorly organized. They funneled too much of the traffic into one location so that they could reduce the number of people they paid for traffic control.
  5. People in Colorado are idiots and don't know how to drive.
  6. We would go again if we get the chance....even though the drive there sucked.
Enjoy the pictures! FYi...the last picture is actually a video of the team singing the fight song to the fans that made it to the game.

Sloppy sloppy win

The stat line looks fine, but the game tape isn’t good. Ward needs to clean up his ball security and develop ability to feel pressure. He’s lucky to not have 4 lost fumbles and an interception. I am not sold on him and find Mateer to be increasingly flashy when given the opportunity.

Center and L-Tackle need a lot of work.

Special teams mediocre-bad.
Run game mediocre-bad.
Liked Paine when he got the ball up the gut, why isn’t he getting some carries.

Hicks and CB’s are money.

I know it’s early, and it’s a W, but we could have won that 77-X if we played remotely clean.

Cam is great 50% of the time and frustrating the other 50%. He’s got to clean his game up.

It is crazy who actually took their turns driving the bus

1) Stanford and Cal thumbed their noses at any Big 12 institutions moving to the Pac 12. Then Stanford felt their name and endowment and any income shortcomings from conference alignment would be self funded and made them more attractive. So they screwed everyone early then late. Their reward...the nearest team to Cal and Stanford is Louisville. So much for student athlets

2) Prime Slime and CU. He always made it know he wanted CU to join the Big 12 because of Texas recruiting. What he doesn't understand is LA is only an extra 35 minute flight from Denver than Denver to Dallas. Also, it escapes him when CU was good they were pulling players in from LA. So a team that hasn't done anything in 20 plus years got their hands on the wheel and pulled up stakes.

It is crazy that the Big 12 would rather have CU, Arizona and ASU than WSU. WSU was number 4 in number of TV sets the last 10 years, In 2022 they were 6th. Care to guess where Arizona, ASU, and CU ranked? Cal Stanford?

Oregon was 1 in 2022, USC, UCLA, Utah, UW then WSU

Over the last 30 years how many times has CU, Arizona, Cal, Stanford, OSU, UCLA ASU won the conference championship?
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Wilner commented to my question RE: bowl tie-ins moving forward

Answer: unclear.

Can you comment on the Pac-12 bowl arrangements, contracts (rumored to be intact for another three years) and how that factors in the calculus on the value the Beavers and Cougars have as the last two standing? — @ttowncoug

The Pac-12 began a six-year contract cycle with its bowl partners in the fall of 2020, meaning it runs through the 2025 season — or what would be the first two years of a reconstituted Pac-12.

However, we don’t know the force majeure piece: Do the contracts allow the bowls to sever ties in the event of a monumental unexpected event? (We saw force majeure at work during the pandemic.)

And would the departure of eight schools qualify as a legal justification for dissolving the contracts if Stanford, Cal, WSU and OSU set about rebuilding the conference?

That’s one of many issues that attorneys and financial officers are examining, both inside the conference and on the campuses of the four remaining schools.
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On the upside...Buckle Up....

OC Ben Arbuckle doesn’t just understand the WSU offense — he understands the players​

Aug. 31, 2023 Updated Thu., Aug. 31, 2023 at 7:09 p.m.
PULLMAN – Ben Arbuckle’s life changed in the dining room of a New Orleans hotel. Before the sun had a chance to rise, signaling the arrival of Western Kentucky’s game day against South Alabama in the New Orleans Bowl last December, the Hilltoppers’ offensive coordinator saw his phone ring.

Arbuckle didn’t recognize the number. He definitely didn’t recognize the area code, 307. Arbuckle figured it was spam.

Then, by some stroke of luck , Arbuckle remembered a lesson he learned from one of his coaching mentors, Zach Kittley.

Always answer the phone, Kittley told Arbuckle when they coached together at Houston Baptist and Western Kentucky. You never know who it’ll be.

So Arbuckle paused his breakfast to answer the phone. On the other end was a man named Jake Dickert.

That Arbuckle finds himself as Washington State’s new offensive coordinator might register as against conventional wisdom. He’s 27, not much older than the eldest players on the team, and he’s working his first Power Five job. He had no big connection, no record-shattering playing career, and relative to most other coaching ascensions, Arbuckle has skipped many steps.

“Take a peek at the quarterback room and the vibe that goes on there,” WSU associate head coach and running backs coach Mark Atuaia said. “It’s not Cam (Ward). It’s him. ‘Buck’ is the one that runs that deal.”

For Arbuckle, that’s where all the magic lies. His genius is in his youth, his willingness to be aggressive in his playcalling, his ability to relate to players on levels older guys just can’t. He admits to scrolling on TikTok. Some coaches try to fake their trend savvy. Others play it up as a joke. Arbuckle comes across it naturally.

“I think that’s the biggest thing that today’s football has taught, is that age doesn’t matter as much. It doesn’t,” Dickert said. “You see his ingenuity. You see his creativity. You feel his energy out here at practice, which I think is important. I think guys really relate to him. It’s about how he goes about his business that I’ve been really impressed with.”

“Wasn’t too long ago that I was a player myself,” Arbuckle said, reflecting on his time playing quarterback at West Texas A&M. “I wasn’t a very good player. But I was a player and I understand what they’re going through, the time commitment that they have. I always just try to make this experience for them as enjoyable as possible.”

Arbuckle picked a trying time to become the Cougars’ head offensive coach. The big umbrella hanging over this WSU season is the finality of the Pac-12 Conference, of course, and the Cougars’ uncertain place in all this. Zoom in closer, though, and you understand the challenge Arbuckle faces.

He has a talented quarterback, Cameron Ward, and a senior receiver, Lincoln Victor. Around those guys, though, are players who haven’t been in Pullman much longer than Arbuckle – transfer receivers DT Sheffield and Josh Kelly, Kyle Williams and Isaiah Hamilton, plus true freshman Carlos Hernandez.

What Arbuckle gets out of those guys might determine how far the Cougars go this fall. How do all these new pieces mesh? How does Arbuckle earn their trust? How does he convince them that a 20-something-year-old knows what he’s talking about?

For that, the Cougars might check Arbuckle’s resume. He spent two years with WKU, the first as an offensive quality control coach, the second as the Hilltoppers’ offensive coordinator. Last season, Arbuckle’s offense finished sixth nationally in total offense (497 yards per game) and 15th in scoring (36 points per game). WKU quarterback Austin Reed led the nation in passing yards (4,746) and finished third in passing touchdowns (40).

The Hilltoppers also didn’t just trounce South Alabama in their New Orleans Bowl victory. They racked up 677 yards of total offense, including 522 through the air, a record for that bowl. That helped Reed finish second nationally in passing (339 ypg) and fourth in total offense (355 ypg). The man behind the controls was Arbuckle.

Although few might think of hiring a 27-year-old whose biggest experience was one year at a Group of Five, it made sense from the Cougars’ approach. They’re all but synonymous with the Air Raid offense. Dickert didn’t want to change that. When he lost his previous OC, Eric Morris, he put together a list of six to eight candidates who fit the bill.

“And every step of the way,” Dickert said, “the more I really went through the film and looked at it from my defensive lens, how creative he was, how hard he was to prepare for, how each week was like a new offense and a new challenge. Yet they were really just efficient, didn’t hurt themselves. You saw some toughness on tape and really good quarterback play.

“So it just kept leaning toward Ben. And then the fit personally with him and his family – a small-town, Texas guy. Understands what it’s like, loves Pullman. He just fits us in who we are. Just really happy to have him here.”

That’s where Arbuckle’s background and Washington State’s history dovetail. Arbuckle hails from Canadian, Texas, a tiny town in the state’s panhandle with a population hovering around 2,500 in the past decade. By the time May 2014 arrived and Arbuckle graduated from Canadian High, he had racked up more than 7,500 passing yards over his junior and senior seasons with the Wildcats.

Googling most towns will provide a TripAdvisor link: “Top 10 things to do in _____.” In Googling Canadian, the TripAdvisor link displays five things to do. The nearest Walmart is a 47-minute drive. The closest McDonald’s is a 45-minute drive. There’s plenty of rich history in Canadian, including an old movie theater that guests rave about, but Arbuckle’s home is a small town in just about every sense.

As for how Arbuckle went from Canadian to Pullman in five short years, his office provides a hint.

WSU offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle watches his players during a fall camp practice on Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023, at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Wash. (Tyler Tjomsland/The Spokesman-Review) Buy this photo
Arbuckle’s office is on the fifth floor of the Cougar Football Complex, nestled in the back of the hallway, past a row of other coaches’ rooms – more like a home to a graduate assistant, not the man in charge of the team’s offense.

The room includes a giant white board on the wall. Arbuckle has used a green marker to draw up multiple plays. Behind his desk, an L-shaped wood arrangement, he can lean back in his black chair, pick up a small remote and point it at the white board. That illuminates a laser pointer he uses to illustrate different parts of his ideas.

Arbuckle isn’t quite willing to disclose details on the plays he’ll call Saturday, when Washington State kicks off its season with a road matchup with Colorado State, but he’ll explain just about everything else. What’s an X receiver? A Y receiver? And what’s the difference between a play and a concept?

Arbuckle understands offense and it comes across in his verbiage, in his body language, in the way he can make the minutiae of offense seem like basic addition

.

“He knows how to talk. He knows what I like to do on the field,” Ward said. “We see eye-to-eye.”

“I think the dynamic that he brings to our offense is a really unique one,” WSU tight end Billy Riviere III said. “I think that he has a real close personal relationship with every player. But I think when we’re out here practicing, and we need to be serious, we have a lot of respect for him. I think he’s a genius when it comes to scheming up plays and whatnot. So I think he’s done a great job of creating that family relationship within our offense, but also keeping it at a serious level when we need to.”

Not every WSU tight end might have spoken so glowingly of their offensive coordinator in previous years. Last season, when Riviere hauled in a pass during the Cougars’ win over Wisconsin, he became the first WSU tight end to do so in 11 years.

Arbuckle is ready to change that. He wants to incorporate tight ends into the passing attack. On the Cougars’ first depth chart of the season, they aren’t even listed as tight ends. They’re listed as Y receivers.

At the top is Cooper Mathers, a junior. He played linebacker during his freshman and sophomore years. When he heard Arbuckle was set to become WSU’s new offensive coordinator and tight ends would be a bigger part of the team’s passing attack, he was ready to make a change.

“Very excited, very excited when I heard Coach Arbuckle was coming,” Mathers said.

“Going out there every day and showing Coach Arbuckle and the rest of the staff what we can do,” fellow tight end Andre Dollar added, “is definitely boosting our confidence and boosting the trust.”

Arbuckle has their trust. If he can parlay that into another breakfast at a hotel dining room this winter, this time as a Cougar, he might have much more.

If Mike Leach was still here would the Big 12 have extended

an invite? They wanted Sanders and a bad CU program.

And if Leach was at MSU and still with us I wonder what he would say.

I remember sitting in the CUB in 1981 wondering how WU stays in the Pac 10. They were losing money and the UW was a monster. I think Walden saved us from going off to the WAC.

I had said on several occasions WSU was the hardest place to recruit to, and it wasn't a slight to Pullman. But rather how diverse the Pac 10/12 was. You are an academic kid and want elite? Stanford. Want big City? LA, Bay area and Seattle. Want warm? Arizona. Want college town? Eugene and Corvallis

I always though the Big 12 in terms of weather, topography, town size etc was a much closer match to WSU and would be easier to recruit in that conference.

Hey Flatland!

Ok so I'm in lot 310, wherever the F that is. Probably a ways away, I got a cheap permit. Red Chevy Silverado, Lance camper on top.

If we don't connect pregame, I'm in the nosebleed section 203, row 29, seat 10

I haven't been to an away game in many, many years. Just hope my old truck will get me there from Washington without blowing something out. 175,000 miles, and barely stout enough to handle my camper. Leap of faith.
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Hindsight 20/20...interesting piece by Wilner...

Multiple Pac-12 presidents declined deal from ESPN last year to pursue "unrealistic" offer​

Jon WilnerAug. 11, 2023 at 1:40 pm

Do-overs? Absolutely, Kirk Schulz has a list of decisions he’d like back following the collapse of the Pac-12.

The Washington State president and chair of the Pac-12 board was heavily involved in the media rights saga that spanned 13 months and ended last week in a failed effort to save the conference.

“We should have had a more robust conversations about our value in the marketplace,” Schulz told the Hotline on Friday.

UW joining Big Ten latest news and commentary​

The failure to accept market reality led the Pac-12 presidents last fall to reject an offer of $30 million per year (per school) from ESPN for the entirety of the conference’s football and men’s basketball media inventory, according to JohnCanzano.com.

Instead, the presidents instructed commissioner George Kliavkoff to pursue a deal in the $50 million per-school range.

“Two or three schools were interested in that number,” Schulz said. “The discussions were that we really had to close the gap on the Big Ten. The commissioner went off with those numbers, which were unrealistic for sure.”

A source familiar with the negotiations told the Hotline this week that one president even believed the valuation “should be in the 50s” — meaning, more than $50 million per school. (The source declined to identify the president.)

ESPN declined the Pac-12’s counteroffer.

“They couldn’t save those guys from themselves,” the source said. “The people with expertise were telling them there was a path to a deal in the $30 millions …

“(But) if George had come to the presidents in October and said there was a deal out there at $32 million or so, they would have thrown him out of the room.”

Asked if Kliavkoff should have pushed back against the presidents, Schulz said: “I don’t know what the individual conversations were like between George and those schools.”

Kliavkoff declined to comment for this story.

The push for $50 million per school came after the Big Ten announced a deal with Fox, CBS and NBC valued in the $65 million range (per school per year) but before the Big 12 presidents agreed to a partnership with ESPN and Fox for $31.7 million per year.

Schulz served on the Pac-12’s three-person executive committee for the first year of the media negotiations, along with Washington’s Ana Mari Cauce and Stanford’s Marc Tessier-Lavigne; he became chair in July.

“Nobody wants to hear it,” Schulz said, “but sometimes you need a reality check … rather than spending too much time chasing fantasy numbers.”

Jon Wilner: jwilner@bayareanewsgroup.com; on Twitter: @wilnerhotline
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