TGHusker
Heisman Trophy Winner
http://journalstar.com/sports/huskers/sipple/steven-m-sipple-another-collapse-caps-another-unremarkable-year-for/article_8a7c565e-347a-5f7b-9116-001851c17146.html
Sip talks about the season ending collapses in the 3 major men's sports -- Basketball, Football, Baseball.
We finished ranked 9th in the Big 10 in all sports. Pretty pathetic for a school of our resources, facilities and fan support. I do not believe we are getting our money's worth - but then again maybe we are - based on the $$s we are paying our
coaches. This ranking, (and it was worse a couple of years ago) speaks loudly to me that we do not have the combined coaching talent and recruiting power to get it done. We have to pay big league salaries to get big lead results and attract talent to NU. With TV money and every team on TV now, this isn't the 1990s anymore where a power team like Nebraska could dominate because we were one of the relatively few that were on TV every week.
Quote:
Many Husker sports fans are fired up, some fed up. They wonder what in the world is going on with their teams, especially the high-profile ones.
Meanwhile, the Nebraska athletic department continues to rev up what's become a formidable public relations/marketing machine, especially on social media. Other than John Cook's potent volleyball program, the PR/social media wing at North Stadium may be the department's strong suit.
Media types generally are a cynical bunch. But in this market, some stumble all over themselves to praise the Huskers' slick social media presence.
Trouble is, all the creative social media campaigns in the world can't hide Nebraska's ninth-place standing in 2016-17 in our annual compilation of average finish in Big Ten competition across all sports. The Huskers' final average of 7.00 trails powers Ohio State (4.29) and Michigan (4.30), which lead the way.
They're followed by third-place Minnesota (4.79), Wisconsin (4.91), Penn State (5.26), Northwestern (6.00), Indiana (6.78) and Purdue (6.95).
Nebraska also was ninth in 2015-16 and 11th in 2014-15. The numbers are troublesome considering the generous amount of resources, passion and energy that NU pours into it athletics. The Huskers should be knocking on the top four on a regular basis.
In defense of NU athletic director Shawn Eichorst, his focus on maximizing the "total experience" for student-athletes is admirable. He's proud, and rightfully so, of the achievements of Husker athletes in academics and life skills. He believes that if athletes are doing well away from the fields and arenas, they're more apt to excel when the lights go on — when everyone is keeping track. It seems a sound credo.
Sip talks about the season ending collapses in the 3 major men's sports -- Basketball, Football, Baseball.
We finished ranked 9th in the Big 10 in all sports. Pretty pathetic for a school of our resources, facilities and fan support. I do not believe we are getting our money's worth - but then again maybe we are - based on the $$s we are paying our
coaches. This ranking, (and it was worse a couple of years ago) speaks loudly to me that we do not have the combined coaching talent and recruiting power to get it done. We have to pay big league salaries to get big lead results and attract talent to NU. With TV money and every team on TV now, this isn't the 1990s anymore where a power team like Nebraska could dominate because we were one of the relatively few that were on TV every week.
Quote:
Many Husker sports fans are fired up, some fed up. They wonder what in the world is going on with their teams, especially the high-profile ones.
Meanwhile, the Nebraska athletic department continues to rev up what's become a formidable public relations/marketing machine, especially on social media. Other than John Cook's potent volleyball program, the PR/social media wing at North Stadium may be the department's strong suit.
Media types generally are a cynical bunch. But in this market, some stumble all over themselves to praise the Huskers' slick social media presence.
Trouble is, all the creative social media campaigns in the world can't hide Nebraska's ninth-place standing in 2016-17 in our annual compilation of average finish in Big Ten competition across all sports. The Huskers' final average of 7.00 trails powers Ohio State (4.29) and Michigan (4.30), which lead the way.
They're followed by third-place Minnesota (4.79), Wisconsin (4.91), Penn State (5.26), Northwestern (6.00), Indiana (6.78) and Purdue (6.95).
Nebraska also was ninth in 2015-16 and 11th in 2014-15. The numbers are troublesome considering the generous amount of resources, passion and energy that NU pours into it athletics. The Huskers should be knocking on the top four on a regular basis.
In defense of NU athletic director Shawn Eichorst, his focus on maximizing the "total experience" for student-athletes is admirable. He's proud, and rightfully so, of the achievements of Husker athletes in academics and life skills. He believes that if athletes are doing well away from the fields and arenas, they're more apt to excel when the lights go on — when everyone is keeping track. It seems a sound credo.
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