Thursday, December 04, 2014

Settled Dust

Yesterday, I posted on the chaos surrounding the Jim McElwain/CSU/Florida ordeal and the opinions developed as things progressed. This morning gave us the finality that we were seeking. Now that we have a much better idea about what is going down in Fort Collins, I have more thoughts. First, the facts;
  • McElwain has been released from his contract and has been hired as the head coach of the University of Florida football team.
  • In return, Colorado State will get a buyout totaling $7 million. Florida will contribute $3 million over six years, McElwain will contribute $2 million (unknown time frame), and $2 million will be paid for a future game between the two schools in Gainesville.
  • The agreed-upon buyout is the largest in college football history. WE'RE NUMBER ONE!! WE'RE NUMBER ONE!! 
  • Offensive coordinator Dave Baldwin has assumed head coaching responsibilities in the interim, including our upcoming bowl game. 
  • Tony Frank, with the assistance of Interim Athletic Director John Morris, began a nationwide search for a new head coach. According to Morris this afternoon, the athletic department had received between 40 and 50 inquiries about the position. 
Now the opinions:
  • Tony Frank held strong as Jeremy Foley pressured him to reduce the buyout. The publicity of the whole matter should have provided Florida with all the leverage to negotiate down the buyout. However, the buyout ended up reducing by only $500k. That is on TFrank. What a stud. Thankfully, I did not have to lose any faith in that man. If this were Twitter, I would say #TonyFrankIsMyPresident. Jon of Jon of all Trades sent me this article, which explains the resolve of our fine president. 
  • If the negotiations on the buyout had failed, I do not know how McElwain could have returned to coaching at CSU. It would have been impossible for him to recruit players knowing that he was looking to leave on the next plane out of town.
  • I'm not sure that I agree with how Jim McElwain handled the whole situation. From what I could gather from those journalists following the events closely, his players were in the dark until after ESPN reported that the deal was finalized. Maybe McElwain was unsure if the buyout could be negotiated, but the players and his coaching staff deserved to know what was going on. 
  • As much as I deny it to myself and others, I knew that McElwain was going to leave (despite my longing for second Sonny Lubick tenure). It was the timing that surprised me. I was shocked that the courting by a power team in a power conference happened this year. After another successful season in 2015? For sure. But not after one great year. 
  • In my last post, I called CSU a "stepping stone" school. Is it really? Besides Jim McElwain leaving for the money and grandeur of the SEC, only one other coach in recent history has left for greener pastures (Tim Miles to Nebraska, at the "greener" part is debatable). Sonny Lubick was declining rapidly when he was let go. Steve Fairchild was 3-9 for three straight seasons when he was let go. Maybe CSU is not such a stepping stone school after all. . .
  • This whole situation would have gone differently if Jack Graham were still at the helm. With his passionate and fiery demeanor, it may have actually been much uglier than it ending up being.
  • The hiring of the next coach should be interesting for a couple reasons - first, we do not have a true athletic director. John Morris has been the interim AD since the firing of Jack Graham, but he admitted at his press conference today that Tony Frank would be leading the hiring process with Morris' assistance. The lack of stability at the AD position may be an issue for an incoming coach. Secondly, it is tough to envision a football coach search with a team that has a record of 10-2. That record makes the job a lot more enticing to those quality coaches looking for a new position. 
  • I truly believe that Dave Baldwin will be retained as the head coach for next year. He has been an integral part (if not the most integral part) of our success on the offensive side of the ball. No other FBS school has a quarterback/wide receiver/running back combo that we have in Grayson/Higgins/Hart. Plus, Baldwin has previous head coaching experience and our questions at the AD position make this an easy and safe choice. Hopefully it is a smart choice as well. 
  • I cannot tell you how many people stopped by my desk today to make sure I was okay. Clearly, I display my loyalties toward CSU loudly and proudly. Shockingly, I took the news far better than a lot of people I know and countless people that I do not know that I encountered on social media. Based on some of the reactions, you would have thought we were eliminating the football program like poor UAB. Poaching of your coach by an SEC team means that you are doing something right. 
  • A lot of people had issue with McElwain leaving the program just months after talking about CSU as his home. I cannot blame the man for leaving - the pay increase and chance to compete for a national championship are both incredibly enticing. I wish him all the success in the world, except when they play us in a few years. If you question his motives, that is your deal. The players that were sitting in that locker room today when he broke the news to them all came out of that meeting with the same message - they were thankful for the time they had with him, they were excited to move forward toward a bowl victory, and they understood why he made his decision. 
  • Let's hope that the climb continues and we continue to make strides toward national relevance on the gridiron. 
  • I really hope that the person responsible for those "The Grind" videos sticks around. They are incredible. Check them out. 
  • Any chance we can slide into the Pac12 or Big12 now?!!
Go Rams. 

Wednesday, December 03, 2014

I Thought He Was Like Sonny

As I sat at my desk at work yesterday, I picked up my phone to quickly check Twitter. The little bird was saturated with news of a chartered plane flying from Jacksonville, Florida to Fort Collins, Colorado. On that plane happened to be Jeremy Foley, the Athletic Director from the University of Florida. The rumors were swirling that he was on his way to Fort Collins to offer the head coaching position for his Florida Gators team to our current head coach, Jim McElwain. I was pretty much glued to social media and the radio into the evening, formulating the opinions you see here:
  • Colorado State University is not part of the Power Five conferences. While the SEC, Pac12, Big12, Big10, and ACC sit at the big boy table, our Mountain West Conference gets to wait outside for whatever scraps are thrown our way. This disparity was displayed quite clearly as the College Football Playoff rankings were released this year. Despite the records of Colorado State and Boise State, three and four loss teams from the Power Five conferences were consistently ranked in the top 25 above any MWC team. Where the Mountain West does have a huge amount of value is apparently grooming the next round of Power Five coaches, the latest of these being McElwain. This whole event has highlighted yet again that CSU is considered a "stepping stone" school, only there to move on to a higher profile and more lucrative position. 
  • When McElwain signed his contract, it included language for a significant buyout. At this point in time, that buyout is valued at $7.5 million. The buyout was inserted into the contract for one very specific reason. It was meant to deter other teams from trying to lure our coach away from Fort Collins. Our AD at the time of the contract signing, Jack Graham, made sure that the language dissuaded any changes to that buyout. Our coach was here to stay. During the chaos yesterday, an article appeared online that during the finalization of the contract, the President of the university agreed to negotiate that buyout amount in the event that McElwain's "dream job" became available. Again, the specifics of this are not entirely known as this information is mostly coming from Jack Graham. Should the deal with Florida go through and McElwain departs, I am interested to see what happens with that buyout. Right now, it seems like it did not accomplish what it was meant to accomplish.
  • I have had a steadfast belief that Tony Frank was and is a great university President. He is engaging, active in the University, and has lead the entire campus in a positive manner. If he truly did make a handshake agreement to negate the terms of the McElwain's contract that were explicitly agreed upon to protect the interests of CSU, my respect for the man will take a hit. 
  • I understand that there were multiple issues that led to the termination of Jack Graham's contract as Athletic Director. However, his indelible mark on the department was twofold: a complete change in attitude about where we should be going in terms of athletics (Bold New Era) and an uncanny ability to hire and retain quality coaches. He was directly responsible for the hiring of McElwain from Alabama, Larry Eustachy (MBB) from Southern Miss, and Ryun Williams (WBB) from South Dakota. All three hires have produced a better on-field or on-court product since before their arrival. If McElwain truly does bolt for the SEC, it would have been great to have Graham in place to hire his successor. 
  • The logical next step is to start talking about who is the next coach of the CSU football team. Dave Baldwin is the clear internal favorite; he has previous head coaching experience at SJSU and has created a top-25 offense this season. 
  • Another interesting name that has popped up is Bob Stitt from Colorado School of Mines. I doubt this happens because without an established AD, I don't see any risky hires being made. Hiring a successful D-II coach and noted offensive guru would be an interesting proposition. Considering he is coming from a lower tier program, he might be content to actually stick around for a while. 
  • I had hopes that Jim McElwain was a reincarnation of the greatest CSU coach of all time, Sonny Lubick. They are good friends, having recruited together when McElwain was an assistant at Eastern Washington. Sonny's conversations with McElwain and his history in Fort Collins were a large reason why McElwain accepted the CSU job in the first place. During his successful tenure at the help, Sonny was also desired by other programs in the top conferences (most notably Miami, where he had been a defensive coordinator). Each time an opportunity arose, Sonny respectfully declined as he loved Colorado State, he loved Fort Collins, and his wife was not moving anywhere! At his introductory press conference, McElwain spoke about that same path that Sonny had laid out for him. Here he was in a great city with a great university heading up what could be a great football program. Fast forward three plus years and we are (potentially) seeing where the true loyalties of our head football coach lie - the SEC and cash money. This is the part that upsets me the most. Here is a guy who was given a chance to be the head football coach of a D-I school. His mentor and friend established the criteria for how coaches are judged in Fort Collins. He talked the talk and then bailed when the money came. So frustrating. 
  • I am undoubtedly biased toward Colorado State University. My unwavering support for the Green and Gold started during my older sister's tenure in Fort Collins, continued through my time and my younger siblings' time up there, and will extend past my kids' time up there (if they are awesome and amazing as we hope them to be). My dedication to the University makes it extremely difficult to reconcile myself with the fact that one of our own wants to leave. CSU > Anywhere else
  • That being said, would I turn down the pay raise that he is bound to receive? 
What are your thoughts on the chaos surrounding CSU? 

UPDATE:
Apparently Tony Frank is holding strong to the buyout amount identified in the contract. Keep doing what you do, TFrank. Thanks, Robert, for the link to the article.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Buckets are for Sissies

It started with a video, then another, then another, then another. Now you can't go on any social media outlets without seeing someone dumping a bucket of ice water on their heads in order to raise awareness for ALS.

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, commonly referred to as Lou Gehrig's disease, is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that slowly breaks down the ability of the nerves to effectively communicate between the brain and the muscles. Lou Gehrig's disease attacks the nerves providing muscular and involuntary movements to the body. Motor and life-dependent functions like walking, talking, eating, and breathing all can be impacted by the disease. Eventually, paralysis takes over the body. Despite a single FDA-approved drug and a few clinical trials that can help slow the progression of the disease, a diagnosis of ALS is a death sentence - there is no cure.

Because of the horrendous nature of this disease, everyone must be thrilled that the #ALSIceBucketChallenge is generating so much support and awareness (and funding) for this cause. Instead, there has been some pockets of disgust. I have seen articles at Vice, Slate, and Time (among others) that question the true intent of this internet sensation. Their arguments against the campaign range from the lack of continuity in future fundraising to a redirection of philanthropic moneys from other charities to the egocentric mentality of the whole ordeal. To those detractors I say: who cares?

The end result is this: people get to have fun making jackasses of themselves by doing something stupid. Those idiots doing stupid stuff may or may not have a better understanding of what ALS is and how bad it can be. Clearly, a large chunk of those same idiot people made some sort of donation to ALSA. Donations related to the ice bucket challenge have totaled over $22.9 million, well above what ALSA typically receives in a similar time frame. That money is being spent by an organization that supports research on the disease and advocates for those stricken with it.

The viral chain finally reached yours truly through the Facebook account of my little brother. I had 24 hours to complete the challenge (and donate money because that's really what this is all about). After a fine time at the Rockies game drinking a beer and watching some truly horrendous relief pitching, I had some fun with the challenge. On my deck. At 11:00 at night. (Notice the extra care given to the Modesto Nuts hat. Priorities, you know?)


You are on the clock, John Robinson, Jason Cole, and Dan Scelza.

Saturday, March 08, 2014

You owe me $100.

After the premier of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, my buddy over at EksAxis wrote a blog (found here) about this bit:

Jon's post asked: "Let's say you had just become host of your own personal Tonight Show, and got to re-create this bit with any 14 famous people of your choosing. Who would you choose?" Here's my list, in absolutely no particular order.

1. Jimmy Fallon - Let's start with the whole reason for this post. Fallon has quickly become my favorite late night TV guy for various reasons. He realizes that his job is fun and it shows in every one of his shows. The show comes up with such creative and fun ways to use celebrities (Brian Williams Raps, Lip Sync Battles) and he has fun at his wildly entertaining job. Plus he has one of the greatest hip-hop bands of all time as his house band. The Roots, Jimmy, and their guests create music with classroom instruments! That is fun. Did I mention that he has fun with his job? The guy is awesome.

2. Tim Howard - The baddest and baldest dude on the USMNT.

3. Kevin Spacey - A great impressionist, Spacey is hilarious and under appreciated.

4. Shakira - That hair. And the truth is radiating from her coxal bones.

5. Gary Allan - My favorite country artist and master of the old school twang. His first album after his wife's completely unexpected suicide, Tough All Over, is dark, melancholy, and possibly my favorite album of all time.

6. Dave Grohl - The coolest dude in music.

7. Jim Gaffigan - HOOOOOOOTTTTT POCKETS!

8. Todd Helton - My favorite living baseball player. The Toddfather is a classy, down-to-earth legend that just so happens to enjoy Igloo cups of wine and scratch tickets.

9. Stan Kroenke - The guys owns the Colorado Avalanche, 63% of Arsenal, the Denver Nuggets, the St. Louis Rams, the Colorado Rapids, the Colorado Mammoth, the Pepsi Center, Dicks Sporting Goods Park, and probably you and me. (Although because of the NFL ownership rules, his son Josh technically owns the Colorado clubs.) I want to work for this guy.

10. Taylor Swift - Mostly, I would like Taylor to be on my show because she is a super talented musician whose songwriting is unmatched. (I dare you to watch this and deny her talent. And her head flinging capabilities.) But besides that, it would drive my family nuts that I would include her on this list. My brother might blow a gasket. And that makes me smile. :-)

11.  Sheryl Sandberg - Having a daughter changes the way you view the world. I would love nothing more than to show Mackenzie there are no limits to what she can accomplish in her life. Sheryl is proof that being a strong and successful woman is not a bad thing and it is possible to succeed in a man's world.

12. Joe Mauer - My favorite active baseball player. Just watch that swing. . .

13. Justin Timberlake - Talent for years.

14. Robby Gordon - My favorite racer. The guy has competed in NASCAR, IRL, SCORE, King of the Hammers, and the toughest race in the world: the Dakar Rally. He owns his own race teams, builds his own cars and trucks, restarted the Stadium Super Trucks Series, and competes at the highest level of any type of racing in which he dabbles. He also threw his helmet at Michael Waltrip after Waltrip wrecked him under caution.

So who do you choose?

Until the next post,
Mikey

Friday, March 07, 2014

Exponents

It was bound to happen. I ended 2013 on a high note on this blog, cranking out more posts than I have the years prior. Even more than that, I boldly publicized that I had several posts in the hopper. Then 2014 started and the posting stopped. Seems sketchy.

At least I have somewhat of an excuse. For the past four years, I have been working almost exclusively on one project. One. For four years. In the engineering world, that is damn near eternity. My involvement started during the pursuit phase of a major design-build project; I spent countless hours updating at-grade crossings to more accurately estimate the construction costs. After we had won the project, I got the opportunity to leave my home office and be a civil designer in a project office, cranking out InRoads designs and producing roadway plans. As the project evolved, my role followed suit. Slowly responsibilities were added to my plate and my experience and resume grew to what there are today. I understand that this last paragraph does not explain my lack of posting, hang with me.

Right before the end of 2013, I had a few discussions with my various bosses about my next project. After all, my life on that project had to end at some point (maybe?). It was during these discussions that another project popped up. It was smaller in size, but similar in style - we were teamed with a contractor to pursue a design-build project here in Colorado. And the boss men wanted me to work on it. After everyone reemerged from their cookie and pie comas that first week of January, I had some more sit downs with my managers. The thought of leaving my comfort zone that I had resided in for the last four years was becoming a reality. On January 6th, my boss and I met with Jason and Mike to let them know it was happening and to start the transition of handing them the reins to the tasks under my watch. On January 20th, I officially moved back to the Denver office to pursue this new project.

When I left my office to start my life on that project, it was the second half of 2010. Between then and now, my company moved to a new building and hired a crap-ton of people. When I rolled into my new digs on that Monday, I was the new guy. Between meeting all the new people, getting reacquainted with all the old people, learning my new office, and that little thing called "doing my job," things have been a bit crazy. And THAT is why I have neglected the old Flickerblogger site. No longer.

When you are a young engineer coming out of school, you feel like the knowledge base that you are absorbing is massive. I felt like every day I was learning something new or becoming better at something - design, production, whatever. However, it was during the last four years that I realized how linear my growth during the previous five years truly was. I was learning and growing in a steady and constant manner, but it was slow in comparison to what the last four years provided. Those years showed me what real career growth could be: it could be exponential. As more and more tasks were thrown my way, my learning was steep, fast, and consistently increasing. It was a crash course in engineering; a trial-by-fire method of learning the ways of our industry. I am incredibly grateful for the opportunities that were presented to me and there are a crew of people who helped me along the way. To Karen, Charlie, Scott, John, and Ken: thanks for giving me opportunity after opportunity and thanks for being receptive to the myriad of my questions along the way. And to the rest of you jokers (especially Jason, Alana, Mike, Nate, Sally, and Anthony), thank you for making my work life fun. Now let's go win the next one.

Until the next post,
Mikey