SnowyRange
Well-known member
http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/uw-athletics-match-could-lead-to-budget-fight-in-wyoming/article_f8950f5c-69e7-5ee1-b0b6-d6ce75d0d67c.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
“I could not imagine standing in front of a room full of constituents and say, “Yes, I know we cut the education budget. I know we trimmed social services. I know that key faculty are leaving for better pay at other universities. I know that we are replacing tenure-track positions with poorly paid adjuncts and I know that a significant number of UW support staff are eligible for food stamps ... but, hey, we went to the Fiesta Bowl!’”
You know how you tell them? Hey, we went to the Fiesta Bowl which returned 10 million to the general University fund thereby offsetting our cuts.
SnowyRange said:You know how you tell them? Hey, we went to the Fiesta Bowl which returned 10 million to the general University fund thereby offsetting our cuts.
Not to undermine your general point, because I agree, but the Fiesta bowl might net more like $1.5-2mm, not $10mm.
Directly, in bowl payout yes. But what about increased donations, merchandise sales, advertising money, the unknown value of free marketing and essentially free recruiting. It might not add up to $10 million, but the value of it is a lot more than the $1.5 million of actual cash they would get for being in the game.
Wyovanian said:Gotta love the mindset that only serves the reinforcement of the provincial stereotype. I'm sure many of the folks opposed to the match are mostly the same folks who find driving in Denver and SLC "terrifying".
The lack of forward thinking makes me sick. I bet some of those rainy day funds could be put to good use diversifying Wyoming's economy so these bust cycles don't kick our ass so hard.Wyovanian said:Gotta love the mindset that only serves the reinforcement of the provincial stereotype. I'm sure many of the folks opposed to the match are mostly the same folks who find driving in Denver and SLC "terrifying".
LanderPoke said:The lack of forward thinking makes me sick. I bet some of those rainy day funds could be put to good use diversifying Wyoming's economy so these bust cycles don't kick our ass so hard.Wyovanian said:Gotta love the mindset that only serves the reinforcement of the provincial stereotype. I'm sure many of the folks opposed to the match are mostly the same folks who find driving in Denver and SLC "terrifying".
Wyokie said:Wyovanian said:Gotta love the mindset that only serves the reinforcement of the provincial stereotype. I'm sure many of the folks opposed to the match are mostly the same folks who find driving in Denver and SLC "terrifying".
In their defense, driving I-25 from Denver to Fort Fart is a bitch both ways! Then again, Dallas is far worse!
MrTitleist said:Wyokie said:Wyovanian said:Gotta love the mindset that only serves the reinforcement of the provincial stereotype. I'm sure many of the folks opposed to the match are mostly the same folks who find driving in Denver and SLC "terrifying".
In their defense, driving I-25 from Denver to Fort Fart is a bitch both ways! Then again, Dallas is far worse!
Denver to Fort Collins is the easiest stretch to drive.. lol. Hit me up when you cruise downtown Los Angeles at rush hour.
ragtimejoe1 said:I understand the above perspectives, but I say control what you can control. Do we blame the people for not understanding or does the University/AD bear the brunt of the criticism? IMO, it is the latter. If you don't get your message out there, how can you blame people for not understanding your message?
You do things like this:
http://boisestatepublicradio.org/post/how-winning-football-games-can-impact-academics-boise-state" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Then you follow up with an economic impact (to UW, Laramie, County, and State) study.
You create a vision of excellence, how we are going there, and how it benefits UW and all of Wyoming. You stomp out all notions that UW is destined for failure regardless. You stomp out every single whisper of "throwing" money away on athletics.
Instead, you reframe the debate about how much to invest in athletics and where the optimum return is.
Too long has the message from within our own University been: "Poor me. Things are so hard at WYO. Recruiting kids that want to be in Laramie takes extra money. We have so many challenges that we need more state money. etc. etc.". It is not hard to see how that very message can morph into what we are seeing now from legislature and others in the state: "WYO will never compete anyway. WYO will never get athletes to compete. WYO should just drop down where they can be more competitive. etc. etc.".
I get the "blame the people" thing, but UW and the AD damn sure haven't helped themselves in this regard either.
WyoBrandX said:I agree RTJ. They should be saying - winning in athletics - even if you don't like it - does more good for the university in both the short term and long term - and allows them to increase their budget on their own - while giving the university great publicity.
Its nothing more than a temporary shot in the arm to get them rolling.
WyoExpat said:If you think this year is hard, my guess is that next time around the Athletic Department will have to argue that it is still more important than even more obviously critical state functions that were spared this year.
Even sports fans like myself have a hard time believing that UW Athletics is among the highest legislative priorities state when every dollar counts so much and entire programs are on the chopping block around the state.
Great post!wwplayer said:As a long-time follower (but not member) of these message boards, I finally decided to join to add my 2 cents to this discussion. I was born/raised in Wyoming and am a proud graduate of UW, where I got a heck of an education. Like many others, lack of career opportunities in my field led me elsewhere (New York, and now Chicago). I haven't actually been (physically) back to Wyo since '85, before my parents moved east, but I still follow my 'Boys religiously. THE WYOMING COWBOYS remain my connection to the university, the state, and the mindset. Without the sports teams to root for, it would be very easy to just forget Wyoming even exists, except as maybe a pleasant distant memory. I'm sure there are a lot of UW grads scattered across the country who probably feel the same way. So I never can understand the reluctance of the state legislature there to invest - yes, invest - in things that can tie all of us residents and expats alike together, over all of the long years. I'm not a sports-crazed person - rarely follow pro sports of any kind - and am actually in education and the arts. But I see the HUGE importance of UW sports in the long view, and think that the typical short-sighted, tragically tight-fisted, parochial attitude of many (thank God, not all) of Wyoming's "ruling class" to be just plain stupid. It's a big country, and because of Wyoming's small population and location, it's really, really easy for the state to be completely ignored. Why make it even worse? I have planned a fairly decent gift to UW as part of my estate, but why is that? As I said before, I haven't been back to Wyo since '85, so why should I even feel any connection to the university and state at this point? UW football and basketball are what keep me still connected. Ya gotta' get (and keep) your brand out there!!!