-
Finish your profile right here and directions for adding your Profile Picture (which appears when you post) is right here.
-
Posts
14,393 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Articles
Events
Everything posted by Charles Fischer
-
The Temporary Nature of 2022 College Football
Charles Fischer replied to FishDuck Article's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Great post. Thanks for the "thanks," as I like to think that we are pretty good at "Opinion-Editorial" articles, and those type of articles feed into the forum wonderfully and generate discussion. For those who like to write for fun as the FD writers do....we will have some slots open--email me: charles@fishduck.com -
We've BEEN THERE Miami Fans!
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Good one! -
It is Not Just the Spring Game....it is DUCK DAY!
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
It has always been that way. With the Dan-Man, we can embrace the challenge, and let's make the 'Natty between Oregon and USC as it was for two SEC teams this year. Don't everyone laugh yet! It could happen in the future...and what would THAT do for the conference? -
It is Not Just the Spring Game....it is DUCK DAY!
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Give USC all the hype, and it will be that much sweeter when we beat them. I am sure our friends in Utah would agree with those sentiments... -
Pictures: Oregon vs USC on Comeback-Sunday
Charles Fischer replied to Tandaian's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
You had a good seat! -
It is Not Just the Spring Game....it is DUCK DAY!
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Made for Oregon fans then, and we will have a BLAST! -
By John Canzano...."ESPN will televise the USC spring game." Lincoln Riley will coach his first spring game at USC on April 23. USC will play its first spring football game under coach Lincoln Riley on April 23 at noon PT at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The game is open to fans and will be televised on ESPN with Kirk Herbstreit, Matt Barrie, Joey Galloway and Molly McGrath on the broadcast. I’ll watch it. Bet you will, too. The Pac-12 suffered some surprising turnover last season. Oregon and Washington are both in transition with new head coaches. That will benefit Riley’s rapid rebuild. Still, I think fixing USC is a tougher job than people understand. The Trojans were depleted of talent in some position groups where they have traditionally been gifted. It wasn’t just that USC went 4-8, it was the demoralizing way they lost games. Six of those losses were by 14-or-more points. USC plays Notre Dame next season. The other two non-conference games are vs. Fresno State and vs. Rice. I’ll put the Trojans at 2-1 there. But Utah is entrenched as a power in the South Division and I expect Arizona and UCLA might be really improved next season. Lincoln Riley’s home in Palos Verdes Estates is 13,000 square feet. A lot has been made of Riley’s arrival in Southern California. USC is reportedly paying him $110 million to coach the football team. He bought a 3.17-acre oceanfront hut in Palos Verdes Estates for $17.2 million. It includes 13,000 square feet of living space, seven fire places and an elevator. Also his first spring practice was heralded by some as the greatest to ever happen on a football practice field. OK. But seriously what does success look like next season for Riley? 8 wins and a decent bowl game? 9 wins? A South Division title? And what kind of pressure might arise if the rebuild is slower than expected? The USC spring game will produce some much-needed national attention for the Pac-12. That ESPN is sending the “A-Team” broadcast crew is no surprise. I also think ESPN will likely send one of the good satellite trucks to this event. I hope. Some other good stuff… • UCLA coach Chip Kelly opens his spring football on Tuesday at 8:45 a.m. All of the Bruins’ spring practices start early and are scheduled only for Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Kelly scheduled his spring “showcase” for April 23 — same date as rival USC and that big-time ESPN event. The UCLA spring game will be televised by the Pac-12 Network. Of note, Kelly tacked on three scheduled practices the week after that spring showcase game. • There’s no way that ugly Oscars scene between Will Smith and Chris Rock was rehearsed. • Spoke with an Oregon State football player on Sunday who told me he believes Jonathan Smith is a forever guy in Corvallis. Smith’s team finished 7-6 last season and made the LA Bowl. The coach was rewarded with a six-year contract extension worth $22.6 million. The contract includes a unique extension bonus — if Smith wins seven-plus games in 2022, 2023 and/or 2024 he’ll get another year of job security added to the deal. The Beavers’ spring game is April 16 and will air on the Pac-12 Networks. • Oregon Ducks’ first-year football coach Dan Lanning told me last month that he bought a pair of size 13 boots and fly-fishing equipment. UO special teams coach Joe Lorig is serving as his fly-fishing guide. Lorig is from the Pacific Northwest, was team captain at Western Oregon and his wife is from Klamath Falls. Lanning told me, “I want to experience Eugene.” The head coach popped up on Instagram last week with a picture of himself holding a trout on the McKenzie River. His first win? coachdanlanning A post shared by Dan Lanning (@coachdanlanning) • Chris Rock took that Will Smith slap like a champ. It was a disturbing and uncomfortable scene. Still, I can’t help but look forward to the next episode of Saturday Night Live. • The Stanford women’s basketball team is 32-3 this season. The Cardinal avenged one of their three regular-season losses on Sunday by beating Texas in an NCAA Tournament game that served as the gateway to the Final Four. Coach Tara VanDerveer said: “You’re always happy to go to the Final Four, but sometimes you’re really happy.” The defending national champions are now two wins away from being back-to-back champs. VanDerveer loosened her team up in the run-up to the regional final game vs. Texas by promising her players that they’d perform a team dance if they won the game. She spent practice time working on this. "I think it just loosened people up and showed them that I had confidence in them," VanDerveer told media after the win. "And they know I can't dance so they're watching me and laughing, so it was all good." • Will Smith was wrong to slap-fight on Oscars night, right? Can we agree on that? I mean, it was a joke that set him off. But did Chris Rock go too far in making fun of Jada Pinkett Smith’s alopecia? Who was out of line? Smith? Rock? Or both? Anna posed that exact poll question on her Twitter: Anna Canzano @Anna_Canzano Who was out of line? Chris Rock for joking about Jada Pickett-Smith’s alopecia? Or Will Smith for slapping him for it? #Oscars2022 March 28th 2022 3 Likes • Washington coach Kalen DeBoer starts his first spring practices this week in Seattle. I think DeBoer was a really smart hire by AD Jennifer Cohen. The move flew under the radar with USC (Lincoln Riley) and Oregon (Dan Lanning) conducting searches that got more run from national media. Keep an eye on gifted Huskies’ running back Emeka Megwa, the highly coveted recruit who fielded 36 scholarship offers (Alabama included) before picking UW. He graduated high school early and enrolled at Washington last September. Feels like this is his spring to shine. • Washington State football is also holding its spring game on April 23. I’m especially interested to see transfer quarterback Cameron Ward, who left Division-II University of Incarnate Word and chose WSU over joining Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss. Ward is familiar with the Air Raid offense. He played for new WSU offensive coordinator Eric Morris at Incarnate Word. I’m not as concerned as others with questions about the step-up of competition Ward will see in the Pac-12. I think the Cougars could be sneaky good next season if Ward is as advertised.
-
I will not say that I "hope" that what is below will happen, because I KNOW it will happen. Mario was emboldened to continue to do for the 'Canes what he did at Oregon with an Eight Million a year positive reinforcement; he absolutely will do all of it again because he is smarter than everyone else. (Especially on offense) Boy...I cannot believe how lucky we are as Oregon fans. Great Dano-Days are ahead!
-
It is Not Just the Spring Game....it is DUCK DAY!
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
This is going to become a BIG DEAL, and made for TV... -
The Temporary Nature of 2022 College Football
Charles Fischer replied to FishDuck Article's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
I do not deny what is happening, and I am not putting my head in a hole...but nothing is going to change dramatically for Oregon in the next three years, maybe even four years as Jon Joseph and I have concluded. Thus.... Not me! We have a three year window to enjoy Oregon football before major changes occur; why not soak it up while we can and savor what we know is so sweet while we can? The change will be there forever, and we can check out of college football then! -
You have to scroll down and look to the right margin, but Oregon State is No. 3, Arizona is No. 15, Oregon is No. 21, and Gonzaga is No. 24. Playing Oregon State five times later this season gives us a chance to increase that ranking! How The Top 25 Fared: Week Six • D1Baseball D1BASEBALL.COM Chase Burns and Tennessee had an outstanding weekend, as we take an in-depth look at how the Top 25 fared over the past week. And Oregon has climbed to No. 4 in the RPI! Nitty Gritty • D1Baseball D1BASEBALL.COM Follow along with the most accurate college baseball RPI updated daily as the Road to Omaha continues.
-
- 2
-
-
-
Coach Waz on the Comeback: "We Didn't Wanna Lose"
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Some amazing performances...and this team are truly Fighting Ducks!- 1 reply
-
- 3
-
-
(From Oregon Athletics Press Release) EUGENE, Ore. — USC celebrated first Sunday afternoon, but the Oregon baseball team celebrated last after the Ducks rallied for four runs in the eighth inning to complete a 7-6 comeback before 1,277 fans at PK Park. The Trojans homered once during a five-run first inning then added a solo shot in the second, prompting celebrations that didn’t go unnoticed by the home team. Down 6-1 at the seventh-inning stretch, the Ducks got within two on a Colby Shade homer in the bottom of that inning, then blasted two more home runs in the eighth to take the lead. Logan Mercado kept Oregon in the game when it was 6-1, facing one over the minimum across 3.2 innings of relief. Dylan Sabia (1-0) pitched two more scoreless innings to get the win after taking over from Mercado, who was in Oregon’s dugout when the Trojans were celebrating their early success Sunday, and also during USC’s win to even the series Saturday. “I was just angry; I was really angry,” Mercado said of his mentality once he took the mound. “Those guys had been hammering us all weekend. The antics the past two games just kind of fueled me to go out there and just pitch angry.” Logan Mercado is not a big guy, but has a big heart. (And arm!) Sunday’s victory gave the Ducks their third straight series win to open Pac-12 play. At 7-2 in the conference, Oregon is a game ahead of defending champion Arizona and Oregon State for first place. How It Happened: UO starter Caleb Sloan was touched for five runs in the first, all with two outs. With two on and two out, USC stroked back-to-back singles for a 3-0 lead, followed by a two-run homer to break it open. Brennan Milone doubled home Shade in the bottom of the first to make it 5-1, but USC got the run back with a solo homer in the second. Mercado entered the game with two on and one out in the third, and retired the next two hitters to end the threat. The Ducks stranded a runner in scoring position all four innings he was on the mound, but Mercado kept them in the game to set the stage for a late rally. “He came in and threw the ball over the plate, had multiple pitches for strikes and he brought a mentality that was infectious in the dugout,” UO coach Mark Wasikowski said. “As he continued to pound the strike zone, you could just feel a little bit more energy, a little bit more momentum. It was all Logan Mercado today.” Sabia took over and pitched a 1-2-3 seventh. In the bottom of the inning, Gavin Grant worked a leadoff walk and two batters later Shade made it 6-3 with his third hit of the game, and third home run of the season. Josh Kasevich led off Oregon’s half of the eighth with his third hit of the day, and Anthony Hall followed with a walk. Two batters later, Josiah Cromwick crushed the first pitch he saw for a mammoth home run to deep left field, tying the game. “I just wanted to get on-time to something,” said Cromwick, who entered the game in the fourth when the UO staff assessed that right-handed hitters were putting better swings on USC’s starting pitcher. “I was looking for something over the middle of the plate, and I was just trying to put a barrel on it.” With two out, UO leadoff hitter Tanner Smith hit Oregon’s third home run in two innings, giving the Ducks a 7-6 lead. Kolby Somers retired USC in order in the ninth for his fourth save of the season. The home runs by Cromwick and Smith came off USC reliever Carson Lambert, who was 3-0 with one save and an ERA of 1.85 entering the day, having allowed only one home run across 11 appearances. “We didn't want to lose,” Wasikowski said. “Simple as that. We didn't wanna lose.” On The Mound: Mercado allowed only a single in the fourth inning, lowering his ERA this season to 1.12 across eight appearances. Sabia needed just 21 pitches to record six outs and earn his first victory with the Ducks. Mercado, Sabia and Somers got the last 20 outs of the game while allowing one base runner combined. At The Plate: Smith’s home run was his team-leading seventh of the season, coming a day after he saw his 12-game hitting streak end in Saturday’s loss. Shade’s three hits got his average up to .451 for the season, and he now leads the Ducks with 23 RBIs. On Deck: The Ducks open a two-game series with San Francisco in PK Park on Tuesday at 4 p.m.
- 1 reply
-
- 1
-
-
From Coach Was: (Courtesy of 247) “That's one of the learning lessons of the day is you play nine a game for the reason that it's nine innings,” said head coach Mark Wasikowski after the game. “If the game ended after two then I guess we lose and we can go home and feel bad about ourselves. Because we had some perseverance and they stuck with it and I credit coach (Jack) Marder for that. I think he brought a lot of energy, especially when we needed it and he did a great job preparing those guys we got some very good swings are obviously late in the game and broke down a bullpen guy that that's very, very good for USC.” “Player of the day,” said Wasikowski regarding Logan Mercado’s efforts. “We had a bad start. We had a bad first guy up and boy just it could have really gotten away from us, had Logan not done what he did. He came in he threw the ball over the plate. He had multiple pitches for strikes and he brought a mentality that the became infectious in the dugout. And as he continued to pound the strike zone. You could just feel a little bit more energy, a little bit more energy, a little bit more momentum. And it was all Logan Mercado today.”
-
Canzano: Never Too Early to Talk Pac-12 Football
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Your team was also incredibly young last year, thus I believe you are set for a great year. With all we've had to swallow of the USC hype--it would sure be great to see you take the South. Thanks for your feedback as always. -
Spring Storylines and Freshmen in Spring Drills
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
I would agree with all I've heard about him, and his interview with the other coaches during signing day. -
The discussion below among Duck fans is superb and I will post the official press release later when it comes out, as it is bound to be TASTY. Some highlights... Never in Oregon Baseball History: The EIGHTH GAME in a row with multiple homers as Colby Shade, Josiah Cromwick and Tanner Smith hit bombs to help bring the Our Beloved Ducks back! The Win went to: Dylan Sabia The Save went to: Kolby Somers Oregon was down 6-1 going into the bottom of the 7th inning, and then added two runs, and then exploded for four runs in the eight as Somers held off the Trojans in the 9th inning. Caleb Sloan was blasted for five runs in the first inning with only one given up by relievers after that. The Ducks got 6 and 2/3rds innings of scoreless hitting against our relievers, and of that Logan Mercado did 3.2 innings of it. His growth is SO SURPRISING considering he was not a very good pitcher last year. Great coaching! My Friends, these Ducks are fun to watch! Never give up!
-
Great to read about the freshmen who should be still be high school--are joining the team. That and some key transfers... 5 storylines we’re watching as Oregon Ducks spring practice resumes DUCKSWIRE.USATODAY.COM Oregon’s spring practices are set to resume on Tuesday, bringing back some fun storylines to watch.
-
That is all I know at the moment!
-
One year later Wayne Tinkle watches Saint Peter's play Cinderella... Wayne Tinkle is facing a rebuild at Oregon State. I caught up with Wayne Tinkle on Saturday. It was just 12 months ago that Oregon State men’s basketball team danced into the Elite Eight as a No. 12 seed in the NCAA Tournament. It was a wonderful story. Now, Tinkle is busy gutting his program. “It’s not as fun when you’re sitting at home and watching from your couch,” he said. On Friday Tinkle informed long-time assistant Kerry Rupp that his contract wouldn’t be renewed. Another assistant, Stephen Thompson, was told he’d be re-assigned to another role in the OSU athletic department. “It was brutal,” Tinkle said. “They’re members of your family. You love each other, you know their spouses and children. We’ve been through so much. It’s a terrible part of the job but it’s the nature of our profession.” After Oregon State was eliminated from the Pac-12 Conference Tournament in Las Vegas a few weeks ago Tinkle’s team checked out of the Delano hotel and headed back to Corvallis. The coach packed up but decided to stay behind. “I changed hotels,” he said. “I got away from all the team hotels. I needed some alone time. I needed some time with the family out by the pool. We had some in-laws there and friends there from college. “I needed that time to decompress.” Oregon State’s 3-28 season was historically disappointing. No Elite Eight participant had ever followed with so few victories in the ensuing season. How did it get so bad at OSU? Ask Tinkle and he’ll tell you that he misfired in recruiting last offseason. Also, that some of the returning players wilted under increased demands and expectations. “We’ve been able to identify what some of the issues were and we’re addressing them,” he said. “Some people may be surprised that some of the guys won’t be back but what we’ve got to do is protect the program. When you’re on the outside looking in, it’s hard to see." “Our culture took a hit — a big hit.” Tinkle would have been a casualty himself had he not been given a long-term contract extension after last season. That deal runs through the 2026-27 season will pay the coach as much as $3 million per season. OSU simply couldn’t afford to make a coaching change and now Tinkle is starting over. He told me on Saturday that he’d like to hire an experienced Division I assistant who can help be a voice in the room during practices and games. Also, he’d like to hire a recruiter who might open some new connections to talent. “I do think we somehow didn’t get the right mix of personalities on the roster this last season,” he said. “It was a grinder of a year. When you add the ride we went on last year — to be totally blindsided is just disappointing and disheartening. Not being able to get the group to come together, it was a disappointment.” I think part of what makes the season so alarming is that it came when we all expected Oregon State might surge. The Beavers played deep in last season’s tournament and we all expected them to parlay that into more success and stability. Instead, the Beavers face planted. “We felt like we weren’t able to coach them,” Tinkle said. Tinkle said he’s watching Saint Peter’s University make their magical NCAA Tournament run. The No. 15 seed Peacocks advanced to the Elite Eight on and will play North Carolina on Sunday with a trip to the Final Four at stake. “It sucks when you’re not involved,” Tinkle said. “It’s cool to see those stories that evolve like Saint Peter’s. Seeing the run they’re going has sparked some memories from our group from a year ago. “That’s what makes it madness.” Saint Peter’s advanced to the Elite Eight. CINDERELLA WATCH: Someone please send Saint Peter’s University a ‘thank you’ card for the work it has done in elevating the men’s NCAA Tournament in the last couple of weeks. My family was circled up in the living room on “National Peacock Day” watching the Peacocks knock out Purdue. I’ll bet yours was, too. The No. 15 seed has now defeated No. 2 Kentucky, No. 7 Murray State and No. 3 Purdue in succession. Up next, No. 9-seed North Carolina on Sunday. This tournament needed Saint Peter’s, didn’t it? A couple of things: The Saint Peter’s players didn’t blink in beating any of those more heralded programs. Not once. The Peacocks may play in a tiny gym in an unheralded conference, but they look and act like they belong. They play unfazed and I don’t expect that to change vs. UNC. Saint Peter's men's basketball coach Shaheen Holloway made a salary of $266,344 in 2019 per university tax filings. Matt Painter at Purdue made more than $3 million in base salary. Seton Hall (Holloway’s alma mater) is currently looking to hire a men’s basketball coach. That’s not tricky math. Just before his post-game interview with CBS’s Jamie Erdahl, Holloway was mobbed by his team. Erdahl asked the coach what he’d said to his players. He told her: “What they gonna say now? Anybody got something to say? We can’t do this, we can’t do that, Cinderella, underdogs. Listen, I got guys that just play basketball. I got a bunch of guys that just play basketball and have fun, that’s all we do.” A No. 15-seed had never made the Elite Eight before the Peacocks did it. Saint Peter’s now has that distinction. No team lower than No. 11 has ever reached the Final Four, in case you’re wondering.