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Everything posted by Charles Fischer
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I wanted him to get a new chance, but with a CONTENDER!
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To our conference opponents...it is going to get worse for you!
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The PRIDE of Hillsboro Oregon, Kolby Somers got the save! The Press Release will be posted later...
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Pretty Important, now let's get the others back too! Oregon softball pitcher Makenna Kliethermes will be available for Cal series, catcher Terra McGowan (hand) remains out WWW.OREGONLIVE.COM Makenna Kliethermes (7-2, 2.01 ERA) will be available when No. 12 Oregon hosts Cal this weekend while it’s undetermined if infielder Paige Sinicki and backup catcher Karissa Ornelas will play and...
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Perhaps those who are basketball-astute can explain why both Gonzaga and Arizona lost? Whew!
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Great interview, and learned a ton. Watch: Mark Wasikowski discusses Ducks' recent success and "modern" bullpen model WWW.ON3.COM Oregon is currently one of the hottest baseball teams in the nation and is fresh off a midweek road win over No. 23 Gonzaga. The Ducks’ .340 team batting average is currently the fourth-best in... "Gonzaga was a "RPI" game" for the Ducks..."I'm not very patient with that kind of stuff." (Walks by our pitchers)
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You are a great sport, and I thank you. You are always welcome here…
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Yikes!
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Of course if we count Club National Championships...what about Oregon Bass Fishing 'Natty? Or...this special one by Oregon Women... The "Men of Washington" are simply NOT Championship caliber....in ANY sport?
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Guess who won the 2015 Club Baseball National Championship?
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Payton Pritchard Has the Celtics Rolling into the Playoffs
Charles Fischer replied to 30Duck's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
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Canzano: Never Too Early to Talk Pac-12 Football
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Shaw had to "dumb-it-down" for Stanford guys? Huh. -
Canzano: Never Too Early to Talk Pac-12 Football
Charles Fischer posted a topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Championship Rings and Non-Conference Flings... Oregon State and San Jose State announced a home-and-home football series that will be played in 2029 (Corvallis) and 2030 (San Jose) this week. It got me thinking about the Pac-12’s non-conference games in 2022. Oregon’s “neutral site” matchup in the season opener will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Sept. 3. That’s a big test for the conference and Ducks’ first-year coach Dan Lanning, who will make a poetic debut against his former employer. BYU feasted on the Pac-12 last season, going 5-0. The Cougars will play at Oregon and at Stanford in 2022. There’s some interesting non-conference scheduling strategy going on in the conference. Here are the 2022 non-conference games for each Pac-12 program: Arizona: at San Diego State, Mississippi State, North Dakota State ASU: Northern Arizona, at Oklahoma State, Eastern Michigan Cal: UC Davis, UNLV, at Notre Dame Colorado: TCU, at Air Force, at Minnesota Oregon: at Georgia, Eastern Washington, BYU Oregon State: Boise State, at Fresno State, Montana State Stanford: Colgate, at Notre Dame, BYU UCLA: Bowling Green, Alabama State, South Alabama USC: Rice, Fresno State, Notre Dame Washington: Kent State, Portland State, Michigan State WSU: Idaho, at Wisconsin, Colorado A RING TO IT: Utah honored the memory of running back Ty Jordan last season and Kyle Whittingham’s team won the conference title and went to its first Rose Bowl. The Utes’ conference championship rings are in and the program again paid homage to Jordan, who died of an accidental gunshot wound late in 2020. Whittingham was widely celebrated last season. He’s done a terrific job. But I don’t think it can be overstated — this was a program that endured the tragic deaths of two players in a nine-month span. First Jordan, then teammate Aaron Lowe was shot and killed at a house party two miles from campus. The team held a meeting after Lowe’s death in Week 2 of the season and discussed whether it should take time off or continue to play. The players decided to unite and rallied all season around their late teammates. Both players were honored with championship rings this week. Major college football feels like a big deal sometimes. But what Utah pulled off last season felt even bigger. CARDINAL RULE: Stanford is coming off a disappointing (3-9) season. David Shaw is now just 11-19 in his last three seasons. In 2021, I started to hear more and more from frustrated Cardinal fans who watched Shaw win 9, 9, 10 and 12 games in the prior four seasons. I am especially curious about Stanford’s spring, which Shaw said has been simplified to help some of the younger players catch up. “We made it simple,” he said. “Guys are playing faster. We still have a little bit of funk in there to keep it interesting but are playing faster.” Shaw knows he had some bad recruiting classes that haunted him. The incoming talent and his underclassmen are just plain better than his upperclassmen. Shaw’s 2021 recruiting class was exceptional. Stanford finished December’s signing day with a class ranked No. 12 by ESPN, No. 14 by Rivals and No. 15 by 247Sports. Additionally, last spring Shaw did something Stanford hadn’t ever done before — welcoming two early enrollees. He’s opened the door for early enrollees again this spring. Stanford will be improved. Also, I like their schedule better in 2022 vs. 2021. They’ll get at least one easy one (Colgate) and there weren’t any easy ones on last season’s schedule. Petros Papadakis works for FOX, among others. GREAT CALL: Petros Papadakis is one of my favorite football broadcasters — maybe THE favorite. He’s knowledgeable, passionate, informative and most of all — genuine. Papadakis doesn’t get enough run nationally but Pac-12 Conference fans know him well. I rarely watch a college football game just because of a broadcaster, but if I’m flipping past and Papadakis is on the broadcast I’ll not only tune in but stick with it. He’s often rough around the edges and I like that because it’s a very different experience from the herd of broadcasters there to mechanically promote network properties and manipulate the audience. His authenticity comes through on FOX broadcasts and during the '“Petros and Money” sports-radio show he hosts in Southern California. He’s also an occasional guest on my statewide radio show in Oregon. Papadakis attended high school in Southern California and accepted a scholarship to play running back at Cal. Papadakis told me once that he quit during double-day practices and took a taxi home from Berkeley. His parents must have flipped. He eventually ended up at USC, where he followed in his father’s footsteps and became team captain. I smiled this week when I saw a story announcing that Papadakis had been elected to the Palos Verdes Peninsula High School Hall of Fame. I know why they want to claim him. He’s made them proud. Papadakis told the local newspaper: “I was somebody who struggled in high school, like a lot of young people do. I was not a good student. I struggled getting along with my parents. I had a lot of issues with self-image and wanting to be accepted.” It’s exactly the kind of message that makes him great at his job. -
Duck Legends Will be on the Sidelines for the Spring Game
Charles Fischer replied to 30Duck's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
This is SO AWESOME! Talk about bringing the former players back in and making them an important part of the program...helps recruiting, builds bridges with other boosters. This is great planning and I'm grateful to the players for taking part.- 1 reply
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Here are the Most Famous Duck Fans in the World!
Charles Fischer replied to 30Duck's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
This guy is a TRUE Duck fan!- 1 reply
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This is one man's opinion, and as we've learned with Herbert going to the Chargers...dropping to a better team is not so bad... ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.: Oregon Ducks edge rusher Kayvon Thibodeaux ‘not going to go out of the top 10′ WWW.OREGONLIVE.COM ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. projects Thibodeaux going No. 7 to the New York Giants in his latest mock draft and offered his assessment of the All-American.
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RPI is great, but in the end...people do look at the polls. Right now only two Pac-12 teams are in the top-25, (Oregon State and Arizona) but I do think you will see OBD in there before long. Thanks for posting the RPI, as it lets Oregon fans understand that our Ducks are playing very well right now. Give us three killer pitchers along with this hitting, and Omaha would be very attainable! (But I do like the development of many of the young pitchers!) College baseball rankings: Ole Miss holds No. 1 spot, Virginia, Arizona make big moves WWW.NCAA.COM Here are the latest D1baseball top 25 rankings after the start of conference play. Ole Miss holds on to the No. 1 spot despite a 2-2 week and Virginia is up nine spots to No. 10.
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My friends, this is a BIG DEAL, and it could relieve some pressure off the need for NIL earnings, when athletes are getting commissions/fees for wearing sports apparel. (Before we get too negative, let's see how these things actually turn out?) Canzano: Adidas Throws a Haymaker on the College Sports Front Nike will punch back, be sure. A couple of years ago in Hollywood at Pac-12 Conference football media day University of Oregon star quarterback Justin Herbert showed up wearing a pair of size 13 “Oregon Air Jordan Tinker 3” sneakers. Herbert and I talked for a bit about his shoes. I asked the quarterback why he’d left the tags on them and he said, “I’m borrowing them.” Turns out the NCAA viewed the scarce customized sneakers as a potential violation and extra benefit. Herbert checked out the shoes from UO’s equipment room that morning and slipped them on. So did linebacker Troy Dye. But there was a catch: The football players had to turn the sneakers back in after media day. Only after leaving Oregon for the NFL would Herbert and Dye be allowed to keep them. Hold that thought. Adidas announced Wednesday that it is opening its arms to athletes who suit up for its 109 university partners. The sneaker company said that more than 50,000 athletes across 23 sports can now become paid Adidas ambassadors. Some athletes will be compensated for social media posts. Others might use commission-based links to receive a percentage of sales they drive to the company’s website and app. Others yet are in line for more lucrative brand partnerships. The rollout will happen over the next year. The big surprise to me? That it took this long for a sneaker company to officially enter the name-image-likeness fray. Also, that Nike wasn’t first. Or was it? I’ve been looking hard at university sneaker-company deals in recent days. Alabama is currently riding out what amounts to a lousy contract that former athletic director Bill Battle signed with Nike in 2013. It runs through 2025 and is worth $63 million in apparel and included a $5 million signing bonus. Just two years later Michigan signed a $169 million over 11 years that included $77 million in cash. A year after that Nike signed Texas to a 15-year, $200 million deal. And Ohio State got a $252 million apparel contract from Nike in 2016. Athletes have always been brand ambassadors for the sneaker companies. Free shoes, bags, and sweat suits have always been part of the deal. The difference now is that athletes will be in an official business arrangement directly with the company. Other major corporations are going to be busy today lining up their own widespread affiliate programs for college athletes. Nike won’t want to look like an Adidas follower so I’d expect some splashy accelerated advancements in the concept from them when they announce. Or maybe Nike will just shrug and say, “We invented this game, folks.” I keep thinking about Herbert’s “borrowed” sneakers. He eventually left Oregon with a truckload of team-issued sneakers, including those rare Oregon Air Jordan Tinker 3’s. Under current rules, Herbert could have worn the sneakers home from media day, posted a photo to social media and included a commission-based link for others to buy their own. Or Nike could have just paid him six figures to wear them to media day and called it good. Oregon defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux partnered with Nike co-founder Phil Knight and designer Tinker Hatfield on a $100,000 partnership last year. It was widely celebrated as a new day in college athletics. But I did some poking around and found that, at least initially, the endorsement windfalls were modest. In the first six months Oregon athletes signed 273 endorsement deals. The average value: $1,087. Biggest deal: $100,000 (Thibodeaux). But if you remove that six-figure outlier you get a better idea of how the typical Oregon athlete fared. Average at UO without Thibodeaux: $723. Meanwhile, Oregon State athletes signed 48 NIL deals during the first six months. Olympic champion gymnast Jade Carey signed a $200,000 endorsement deal that skews the numbers significantly ($5,340 average) so we’ll throw that out, too. Average at OSU without Carey: $1,198. Olympian Jade Carey signed a $200,000 endorsement deal at Oregon State. There are bound to be more six-figure paydays in the next 12 months for major recruits in revenue-generating sports, particularly. But the feeling I got from studying the initial returns was underwhelming. It’s why this Adidas deal is of particular interest. It’s built for mass participation and there’s lots of upside for all parties. The Adidas concept makes every athlete on campus a potential paid brand ambassador. The sneaker company hasn’t just turned 50,000 college athletes into a commission-based sales force, it has also added incentive for athletic departments to keep doing business with it. It was a solid punch from Adidas. Nike will hit back, be sure.
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NIL, Will the Goose That Lays the Golden Egg Kill Itself?
Charles Fischer replied to Steven A's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Bottom line....is NIL, is ANY of this stuff going to change college football THIS fall? No! Will it affect the next fall? No. Will it affect the 2024 season? Maybe some... So why are people checking out now? It could be a lot worse right now...