|
Post by 91aztec on Dec 4, 2019 15:17:29 GMT -8
If you compare the team to a company, the company has had considerable success due to the results of one division. But profits were being dragged down by a severely underperforming division. Last year, the CEO demanded better performance from that division and the manager (friend of the CEO) responded by instituting a change (i.e. a “spread offense” - or so he said it was). At the end of the year, the change didn’t work and the bad performing division STILL was underperforming and dragging down company profits. The shareholders are angry and want the underperforming manager fired from the company. We know how a successful CEO should respond. But will he? I like it!
|
|
|
Post by hoobs on Dec 4, 2019 15:55:48 GMT -8
We are fundraising for a stadium. Do people really think SDSU is going to pay him not to coach? Exactly because of the fundraising angle, this is when a few of the most important donors from the Aztec Club need to firmly get into Wicker's ear on the subject...
|
|
|
Post by fastaztec on Dec 4, 2019 16:15:55 GMT -8
We are fundraising for a stadium. Do people really think SDSU is going to pay him not to coach? Exactly because of the fundraising angle, this is when a few of the most important donors from the Aztec Club need to firmly get into Wicker's ear on the subject...
|
|
|
Post by fastaztec on Dec 4, 2019 16:16:15 GMT -8
Exactly because of the fundraising angle, this is when a few of the most important donors from the Aztec Club need to firmly get into Wicker's ear on the subject...
|
|
|
Post by pbnative on Dec 4, 2019 16:26:38 GMT -8
We are fundraising for a stadium. Do people really think SDSU is going to pay him not to coach? What does stadium fundraising have to do with employee salaries? And why would SDSU have to pay him not to coach when there is no long-term contract with a buyout? Donations go into the non-profit Campanile Foundation, Salaries come out of athletics operational budget. Campanile Foundation isn't going to contribute funds to coaches salaries, and athletics isn't going to contribute excess operational funds for the stadium.
|
|
|
Post by AccessBowlTime on Dec 4, 2019 16:38:42 GMT -8
When have we ever had a coordinator who was given more than a one-year contract? If Horton has one, that would be a first. That said, the poster could be correct who opined that, knowing Rocky, all the criticism of Horton will make him determined to bring Jeff back just to show how wrong the rest of us all are. If doing so proves the opposite and Rocky was to admit it was he who was wrong, that might be a first too. Or maybe a second.
|
|
|
Post by ramrodd23 on Dec 4, 2019 16:48:25 GMT -8
When have we ever had a coordinator who was given more than a one-year contract? If Horton has one, that would be a first. That said, the poster could be correct who opined that, knowing Rocky, all the criticism of Horton will make him determined to bring Jeff back just to show how wrong the rest of us all are. If doing so proves the opposite and Rocky was to admit it was he who was wrong, that might be a first too. Or maybe a second. There are a few, not many non head coaches that has multi year deals. Clemson football defensive coordinator Brent Venables is one. Venables greed to a five-year, $11.6 million contract. SDSU coaches do not have multi year deals.
|
|