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The Front Porch?

PAPoke

Well-known member
This is going to be a long post, but this is stemming from discussions I’ve read, or participated in around Wyoming athletics being the “front porch" of the University. I’ve shared this in other threads, but I am a Wyoming Grad (Master's, 2016), and am currently working at a large college in the southeast while also finishing my doctoral degree in Higher Education Leadership. I aspire to be a senior administrator one day, so this nerdy shit is right up my alley. If you’re not interested in data, facts, or otherwise, probably just skip this post. I don't mean to sound like a jerk, I just wanted to ground this in the factual data that I could pull.

With all the NIL articles lately, the 3-million dollar ask from State coffers, and the Tom Burman op-ed that came out a few weeks ago, I wanted to dig into the actual numbers. This post is only going to address being the “front porch” for the University, insofar as it brings awareness to the college in a meaningful way. There is no question that athletics brings visibility to the University, but is it actually turning into more students? I am only focusing on traditional, undergraduate students. Graduate students are a different beast statistically, and are statistically irrelevant when it comes to participation in University Athletics.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the “why” behind the proposal. Candidly, I support the theory of it, but I was curious about the data. I asked Ragtime why Athletics should get that kind of priority over, say, a new library, better dorms, or the student rec center—things that make meaningful differences in the college experience. The default answer we always hear from Leadership—the one AD Tom Burman just pushed in his recent op-ed—is that Athletics is the “front porch” of the University. The idea is that the national visibility from guys like Josh Allen or a big bowl game creates this “halo effect” that drives applications and keeps the school healthy.

I’m a poke for life, but I’ve also spent my career managing institutional portfolios and looking at data. So, I decided to pull the official UW Common Data Sets from 2013 to 2024 (2025 isnt out yet) to see if that “front porch” is actually getting people to walk into the house. Honestly? The numbers don’t support it.

The “Visibility” Blanket:
To give Burman and the PR team credit, the “visibility” is working. Since the Josh Allen era started (around 2016-17), applications to UW have actually climbed to record highs. We went from about 4,300 apps a decade ago to 6,217 this past year. On paper, that looks like a massive win for the brand. People are definitely looking at the porch.

The Yield Crisis:
But here is the part nobody at the Rochelle Athletics Center wants to talk about: While more kids are applying, way fewer are actually enrolling. In 2014, our “Yield Rate” (the percentage of admitted students who actually show up) was 38.3%. Today? It has plummeted to 23.8%. Think about that for a second. Three out of every four kids who get accepted to Wyoming, as first time freshman, are now saying “No thanks” and doing something else. If athletics is supposed to be the “hook” that makes Wyoming look attractive to a kid from out of state (or even in-state), the hook probaly isn't getting any bites. We’re getting more “window shoppers” than ever, but they aren’t buying the product.

In a recent article, UW President Ed Seidel touted that applications to the school “are up,” even highlighting a “burst” of applications coming from Buffalo, New York, because of the Josh Allen connection. To be blunt, this is either intellectually dishonest or some great PR spin. While it makes for a nice headline to say people in Buffalo are hitting the “Apply” button, that metric is completely hollow without context. High-fiving over a “burst” of applications from New York is meaningless when total undergraduate enrollment has simultaneously dropped by nearly 20% since 2013. We are losing actual students on campus, while celebrating increased applications (“window shoppers”) from Buffalo, and pretending it’s a sign of institutional health.

The Enrollment Reality Check:
Despite being a “national household name” (Burman’s words, not mine) thanks to Josh Allen, and despite Women’s Basketball being a model of D1 consistency (winning 18-23 games almost every year), the actual University is shrinking. Total Undergrad Enrollment has dropped from 10,117 in 2013 to 8,130 today. We have lost nearly 2,000 students while we were busy being “honored on ESPN.”

When you do the “Moneyball” math (shoutout to that Cowboy State Daily article on Coach Wicks), that loss of 2,000 students is a catastrophe. If you estimate tuition, fees, and housing at roughly $8,000 per head, the University is missing out on $16 million a year in revenue compared to a decade ago, before you even consider inflation, cost of goods, or the cost to acquire those students.

Why State Funds are a Hard Sell:
This brings me back to Ragtime’s idea. If we ask the state to lock up $100M in an investment account to pay for NIL, or request that $3M to support Athletics, we have to prove that Athletics is solving some of the University’s problems. But the data shows the opposite. We had a “Banner Year” in 2021-22… Men’s Basketball won 25 games and made the tournament, WBB racked up another 17 wins and FB went to, and won a Bowl Game. In the admissions cycles to follow, our Yield Rate hit a then-record low of 27%. Winning games on Saturday isn’t stopping the bleed in the classrooms on Monday.

Coach Wicks is out here grinding, using algorithms to find kids willing to take “minutes over money” because our NIL war chest is empty. I love that “Cowboy Tough” mentality, but we have to be honest: if the goal is “University Health,” part of the current strategy doesn’t seem to be working, and frankly, it probably hasn't in many, many years.

I want to be clear: I am not discounting the “secondary” impacts of a D1 program. I know athletics drives tourism, hotel stays in Laramie, recreation tax dollars for the state, and charitable contributions to the University. Those are real benefits. But from where I sit in personally and professionally, I have to prioritize the things that keep the university’s doors open, and that is the student body. The simple reality is that if there are no students, there is no university left to provide those benefits to the state in the first place. At least until NIL kills the current model and these athletics programs detach from Universities altogether. Then, we can have more conversations about the value of state-supported professional sport programs. This may be intentionally obtuse, but as long as the athletic programs use "University of Wyoming," the University is first.

Conclusion:
I want the Pokes to win. I want us to stay D1 (though I do think FCS is a better fit, wonder how many of y’all will stop reading there). But we should stop using “Admissions Impact” as a shield for why we need more money for Athletics. The data is clear: Winning does not drive enrollment.

If we want the state to invest, we need to stop pretending it’s for the “good of the academic mission” and just admit we want to win because we’re proud of this state. But if I’m a legislator looking at a 20% drop in students, I’m putting that $100M into lowering tuition or building better dorms long before I’m putting it into an NIL collective.

We could build a world-class front porch. But the house is losing its roof, particularly in this post-COVID storm. We’ve got to figure out how to fix both, or the “visibility” won’t matter because there won’t be anyone left to see it.

Data - FWIW, I pulled this myself, so there may be some errors.
Screenshot-2025-12-30-at-8-09-55-PM.png


Sources:

UW Office of Institutional Analysis: Common Data Sets (2013-2024). [https://www.uwyo.edu/oia/cds.html]
Tom Burman Op-Ed: “What University of Wyoming Athletics Does for Our State” (Nov 2025).
Cowboy State Daily: “Pay To Play: University Of Wyoming’s Battle To Remain Division I In An NIL World” (Dec 2025).
Cowboy State Daily: “University Of Wyoming Wants Extra $3 Million From Legislature After NIL Deals” (Dec 11, 2025).
 
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I wish I could find proof of this, but I seem to recall Uche Nsonwu-Amadi wrote his masters thesis on the positive effect winning athletics programs have on enrollment. PAPoke wrote a well thought out post above. However, I am not sure I buy his assertion that athletic success doesn’t have an impact on enrollment. The “success “ to which he refers was minimal in the big scheme of things and unsustained.
 
I wish I could find proof of this, but I seem to recall Uche Nsonwu-Amadi wrote his masters thesis on the positive effect winning athletics programs have on enrollment. PAPoke wrote a well thought out post above. However, I am not sure I buy his assertion that athletic success doesn’t have an impact on enrollment. The “success “ to which he refers was minimal in the big scheme of things and unsustained.

It's called the "Doug Flutie Effect." Win and people will want to go to your school. Lose and you might as well be the Rocky Mountain version of UTEP. Although to be fair, UTEP did win a shared conference football title in the mid-2000s (WAC). Winning cures a bunch of problems.
 
RE: "Doug Flutie Effect...You’re right that it’s a real thing, but you’re misapplying what it actually measures. In higher ed administration, we look at the entire lifecycle of getting a student in a seat. The Flutie Effect lives at the very top of that funnel (Awareness); it does nothing for the bottom (Yield).

In admissions, there are prospects, applicants, admits, confirmed, and enrolled.

The Flutie effect, for Wyoming, is stopping somewhere between applicants and confirmed. The data just does not support the assertions y'all are making that Athletics puts more butts in seats.
 
RE: "Doug Flutie Effect...You’re right that it’s a real thing, but you’re misapplying what it actually measures. In higher ed administration, we look at the entire lifecycle of getting a student in a seat. The Flutie Effect lives at the very top of that funnel (Awareness); it does nothing for the bottom (Yield).

In admissions, there are prospects, applicants, admits, confirmed, and enrolled.

The Flutie effect, for Wyoming, is stopping somewhere between applicants and confirmed. The data just does not support the assertions y'all are making that Athletics puts more butts in seats.

Sadly...

The whole doing classes via online during the height of the COVID mess IMO played a major role in the current mess UW and a lot of other colleges/universities are having to deal with.

Read somewhere that on average one private college/university goes belly up per week. Nobody wants to actually attend college in person. They can just learn it all online.
 
I meant for this to be a quick post, but I got lost in data.

I disagree with that sentiment based on my experience and the data. Colleges have certainly had to adapt to a new modality of learning, but the vast, vast majority of kids are still coming to campus to learn.

I’ve heard the argument that "COVID changed everything and now kids just want to learn online," but the data actually tells a different story for Wyoming, and, without the benefit of data, a majority of the public, land-grant institutions (certainly the ones I've worked at). College remains a place for kids to socialize. Students could not wait to come back to campus when they reopened.

According to official university records, here are the numbers for online degree-seeking freshmen (aka students who are taking 0 in-person classes):

Fall 13Fall 14Fall 15Fall 16Fall 17Fall 18Fall 19Fall 20Fall 21Fall 22Fall 23Fall 24Fall 25
206522432410111735
I will continue to admit that my interpretation of this data could be wrong, but I'm not seeing that just yet.

While there’s been a slight relative growth post-COVID, and one could reasonably extrapolate that into kids living in Laramie and taking classes online, the number of fully online kids, who would never attend an athletic event, is insignificant. These numbers are statistically a drop in the bucket. We are talking about a handful in a class of thousands. The idea that "nobody wants to attend college in person" simply isn't supported by the facts. Facts and data cannot always tell the entire story, but I do think this tells a compelling one.

In fact, the University requires the in-person experience. Per policy, all incoming freshmen are required to live in the residence halls, unless they meet a very specific set of criteria, and even then, they're expected to attend classes in person. The business model is residential by design. If we are losing 2,000 students, it’s not because they’re all moving to Zoom; it’s because they’re choosing a different "House" entirely.

I realize this post is more about the University than Athletics, now that I've finished digging into the data. Ah well. Maybe someone will find this interesting... Again, I believe the Flutie effect could be a real positive influence in the enrollment metric at a place like Nebraska, Colorado-Boulder, or even Fort Collins, but at Wyoming... I'm increasingly skeptical. I, like many of you, continue (and will continue) to give to UW, because I believe in the power of the University, but the data really doesn't care how I feel.

The "Front Porch" (Athletics) is doing its job of getting the UW name out there. I would say NCAA Football 2014 also did a great job (IYKYK). People are looking at the porch, and they like the price tag. But for some reason, they aren't signing the lease.

I'd love to know if UWYO admissions has survey data that indicates why students are applying, but not enrolling. I'll have to dig into that later. My guess is that an admit rate above 90% combined with a falling yield suggests the market views the uwyo as a "safety school." Students apply (Visibility) but only enroll if their preferred "House" (Selectivity) rejects them.

RE Private colleges:

Private colleges are indeed closing at a high rate, but context matters. Those are almost exclusively tiny schools (sub-1,500 enrollment) with ballooning tuition. For example, a school like Regis has a Total Cost of Attendance (COA) north of $45k. UW is still a bargain at under $15k for in-state students.
 
@PAPoke Couldn't one argue this is just the Enrollment Cliff that all schools are dealing with?
You could argue that, but I don't think data really supports it as a "blanket" excuse. If the cliff meant a total lack of interest, we would see a linear decrease in applications too. Instead, we have record-high apps and record-low yield.

In reality, the "cliff" has just made the rich richer and the poor poorer. Elite and well-positioned flagships are seeing record applications because students are "hedging" by applying to more schools via the Common App, and those schools are using that volume to become more selective.

At UW, we are getting the "looks" (the apps), but we aren't closing the deal. If applications are at an all-time high but enrollment is down 20%, it’s not a "lack of students" problem; it's likely a product problem. This, in my opinion, is not an Athletics problem, but could be the lipstick on the pig so to speak.

We’re marketing a world-class "Front Porch," but when students look at the actual "House," they're choosing to live somewhere else.
 
This is a pretty damn good post, and backed by some actual data. I don't really buy the winning puts kids in classrooms theory.. living in Missoula for the last 20 years UMs enrollment fell off a cliff, despite having a football team who hasn't fallen out of the top 25 in every season I've lived here (maybe once?), having a women's basketball team for who a long period of time won the Big Sky every season and went to the NCAA tournament, and a men's team who has spent many of my 20 years here being at or near the top of the Big Sky. In that same period of time Montana State's enrollment has sky rocketed (like 17K now?). Athletics might get your name out there but it's not all winning.
 
This is a good post, and IMO, one of Burman's biggest failures. I don't think the lack of enrollment (or boost to enrollment) is all athletics as you point out. In favor of TB, you might argue that by increasing applications, athletics is doing its job. After all, what more can athletics do besides gain exposure, generate interest, and get students to apply. After that, academics, student life, etc. take over. Thus, you assertation that focusing on parameters that are specifically aimed at those things likely makes more sense to convert applicants to enrollment. I think the counter is that what if the aforementioned about TB is correct and athletics is driving a large chunk of the applications? Your enrollment percentage may go up but applications down if athletics is ignored or allowed to flounder in the new era of college athletics? Enrollment is tough. Community College enrollments are also down which is a feeder system for UW. The number of deaths is nearly matching the number of births in WY which means most population increases, if there are any, are from people moving in and likely not connected to UW. WY also has one of the fastest growing percentages of aging population with declining under 18 population. Definitely a challenge and highlights the importance of boosting applications and subsequent enrollments.

Where I think TB has really dropped the ball is defining athletics outside of just a recruitment tool through exposure. UWYO is unique being the only game in town and the only university that uses the state symbol as THE logo for the University. No knock-off or incorporation of state logo into university logo; it is the logo and very recognizable nationally. In terms of TV viewership and national audiences, what gets that logo in front of eyeballs more than UW athletics? Cheyenne Frontier Days? License plates? Coordination of UW's platforms with the tourism board for a combined advertising approach is missed opportunity and low hanging fruit. Here is the economic impact analysis by the WOT: https://assets.simpleviewinc.com/si...inal_03e37a84-1d26-4579-8f13-39f3a104542c.pdf

If WYO athletics can boost awareness of That's WY by small percentages, theoretically that could increase state revenue substantially. A lot of the markets we play in are conducive to the That's WY campaign. Leveraging UW athletics to support state ventures also more closely ties UW to stakeholders. With UW's unique situation in the state, there has to be better ways to partner with UW (and specifically athletics) to elevate both UW and the state. I'm sure the economic impact to Laramie is vital. There needs to be a greater effort by the athletic department to have an outreach component within the state (camps, coaching clinics, motivational lectures--virtual or in-person to youth, etc.). If the state is kicking in on NIL, that should damn sure be part of the contracts.

From the academic standpoint, and where TB has dropped the ball, is define exposure and benefits thereof. Does athletics contribute to retention rates which facilitates federal funding? UW has solid retention rate percentages. What about overall donations, alumni engagement, etc.? (side note: why aren't we developing better programs/incentives to recruit kids of alumni?) How much does having athletics enhance these? Does the exposure from athletics also contribute to employee applications? I'm sure if digging in the weeds, there are a lot of aspects athletics that contribute to the university overall. Similar to the WOT report, WYO athletics needs to quantify its importance. This isn't on WYO media or message board posters; it rests with one person, the AD at UWYO.
 
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Starts and ends with the reality that the University is not really that great. Having recently gone around the country with a senior touring other schools, UW is not in the same league with most other institutions. Even in fields where we should be distinguishing ourselves - agriculture, engineering, etc - we are meh. I always get pushback when I say it, but outside of a few professors and researchers (very very few), UW is not excellent or close to excellence in any area.
 
Starts and ends with the reality that the University is not really that great. Having recently gone around the country with a senior touring other schools, UW is not in the same league with most other institutions. Even in fields where we should be distinguishing ourselves - agriculture, engineering, etc - we are meh. I always get pushback when I say it, but outside of a few professors and researchers (very very few), UW is not excellent or close to excellence in any area.
Disagree. Look at the research of the School of Energy Resources. I am completely unaware of all of the 'great' programs across the country doing more for practical research in areas such as energy production from unconventional formations and enhanced hydrocarbon recovery, carbon capture and storage, products from coal and coal ash, critical mineral and rare earth element recovery and hydrogen development.

The only other school that I am aware of in the conversation is the Colorado School of Mines.
 
PAPoke - Excellent post. I'm not sure it adds much, but as a data point of one, I have a kid who is senior in HS and currently applying to colleges. I attended UW as did my wife, and we have attended many UW sporting events so UW has been prominent in our minds all through the kids upbringing.

Having said that, it's almost certain that my kid will be one of those that applies and doesn't attend. Not sure if there's any broader data, but one thing that surprised me is with all of the schools now mostly using the Common App, it becomes really easy to "window shop" apply, as you put it. A quick Google search suggests that UW started using Common App around 2018 which somewhat corresponds to the drop in yield rate in your data. I wonder if other schools have seen this?

My kid has already applied to UW as a safety school, but likely won't attend for a couple reasons:
1) Quality of the school. As LawPoke notes, it's real. Deny all you want, but other schools are notably ahead of UW in many ways. UW is very much a safety school, at best, for any kid looking nationally.
2) My kid could care less about attending athletic events. I know it seems inconceivable to many on this board, but some people just aren't into it.
3) The new leadership in the Wyoming legislature, notably the Freedom Caucus, is saying things that really matter when people are looking at schools. They are actively talking about reducing funding to the University and wanting to micro-manage what happens in Laramie. My kid wants no part of a university where this is happening. https://wyofile.com/wyoming-freedom-caucus-plans-on-doge-ing-state-budget/
 
Starts and ends with the reality that the University is not really that great. Having recently gone around the country with a senior touring other schools, UW is not in the same league with most other institutions. Even in fields where we should be distinguishing ourselves - agriculture, engineering, etc - we are meh. I always get pushback when I say it, but outside of a few professors and researchers (very very few), UW is not excellent or close to excellence in any area.
We had a top 10 geology program when I went, and they still are top 25, I think.
 
PAPoke - Excellent post. I'm not sure it adds much, but as a data point of one, I have a kid who is senior in HS and currently applying to colleges. I attended UW as did my wife, and we have attended many UW sporting events so UW has been prominent in our minds all through the kids upbringing.

Having said that, it's almost certain that my kid will be one of those that applies and doesn't attend. Not sure if there's any broader data, but one thing that surprised me is with all of the schools now mostly using the Common App, it becomes really easy to "window shop" apply, as you put it. A quick Google search suggests that UW started using Common App around 2018 which somewhat corresponds to the drop in yield rate in your data. I wonder if other schools have seen this?

My kid has already applied to UW as a safety school, but likely won't attend for a couple reasons:
1) Quality of the school. As LawPoke notes, it's real. Deny all you want, but other schools are notably ahead of UW in many ways. UW is very much a safety school, at best, for any kid looking nationally.
2) My kid could care less about attending athletic events. I know it seems inconceivable to many on this board, but some people just aren't into it.
3) The new leadership in the Wyoming legislature, notably the Freedom Caucus, is saying things that really matter when people are looking at schools. They are actively talking about reducing funding to the University and wanting to micro-manage what happens in Laramie. My kid wants no part of a university where this is happening. https://wyofile.com/wyoming-freedom-caucus-plans-on-doge-ing-state-budget/
Excellent point on the Common App.

In the 2024–2025 season alone, nearly 1.5 million first-year applicants submitted over 10 million applications. On average, students now apply for almost 7 colleges. Up from roughly 3–4 a decade ago (source).

That very would could explain the record number of applications we're seeing, and why so many New Yorkers are applying, it's a low-effort opportunity. The Common App likely has made the overall applicant pool far more volatile and unpredictable as it relates to yield. I can't prove this yet, but I would be willing to bet that schools that opt into the Common App likely do receive higher applications and lower yield.

RE: Quality of UWYO education - There are pockets of programs that are still fairly high ranked; Agriculture Sciences is Top 45, Geological and Earth Sciences is Top 20, but the rest of our programs, including research, are largely in the bottom half of most rankings. If interested, you can see official headcounts by college here (https://www.uwyo.edu/oia/_files/enrollment/collegeoff-fall25.pdf).

Per UW World News & World Report Rankings
#222 in National Universities
#122 in Public Universities
#176 in Undergraduate Engineering Programs
#160 in Nursing
 
PAPoke - Excellent post. I'm not sure it adds much, but as a data point of one, I have a kid who is senior in HS and currently applying to colleges. I attended UW as did my wife, and we have attended many UW sporting events so UW has been prominent in our minds all through the kids upbringing.

Having said that, it's almost certain that my kid will be one of those that applies and doesn't attend. Not sure if there's any broader data, but one thing that surprised me is with all of the schools now mostly using the Common App, it becomes really easy to "window shop" apply, as you put it. A quick Google search suggests that UW started using Common App around 2018 which somewhat corresponds to the drop in yield rate in your data. I wonder if other schools have seen this?

My kid has already applied to UW as a safety school, but likely won't attend for a couple reasons:
1) Quality of the school. As LawPoke notes, it's real. Deny all you want, but other schools are notably ahead of UW in many ways. UW is very much a safety school, at best, for any kid looking nationally.
2) My kid could care less about attending athletic events. I know it seems inconceivable to many on this board, but some people just aren't into it.
3) The new leadership in the Wyoming legislature, notably the Freedom Caucus, is saying things that really matter when people are looking at schools. They are actively talking about reducing funding to the University and wanting to micro-manage what happens in Laramie. My kid wants no part of a university where this is happening. https://wyofile.com/wyoming-freedom-caucus-plans-on-doge-ing-state-budget/
Perhaps it's not the Freedom Caucus and it might just be the BOT and terrible university presidents? Not one person has mentioned them. It's amazing how many of you think that increasing spending equates to better outcomes. The reverse is also not true. Much like the athletics program has suffered from poor leadership, so has the university.
 
Perhaps it's not the Freedom Caucus and it might just be the BOT and terrible university presidents? Not one person has mentioned them. It's amazing how many of you think that increasing spending equates to better outcomes. The reverse is also not true. Much like the athletics program has suffered from poor leadership, so has the university.
I believe I’ve mentioned the mess of our University President’s office quite a bit on here. Creating a separate ‘computing’ school (when we already have a computer science program) to provide his ‘partner’ with a Dean/Director position and then attempting to divert funds from engineering to fund such school should have been a firing from Day 1 IMO.
 
Perhaps it's not the Freedom Caucus and it might just be the BOT and terrible university presidents? Not one person has mentioned them. It's amazing how many of you think that increasing spending equates to better outcomes. The reverse is also not true. Much like the athletics program has suffered from poor leadership, so has the university.

I agree with you...

While people want to argue about political factions, the data suggests the problem is coming from inside the house, specifically the Boardroom.

Since 2013, executive leadership at UW has been in a state of Institutional Whiplash.

Look at the record:
  • Sternberg (2013): Resigned after 4 months. Likely the shortest presidential tenure in modern higher ed history.
  • McGinity (2013–16): 2.5 years, largely as an interim stabilizer.
  • Nichols (2016–19): 3 years. Her non-renewal was a national headline and a case study in board-presidential friction.
  • Theobald (2019–20): 1 year as "Acting" bridge leadership.
  • Seidel (2020–26): Currently in year 4, but leaving (June 30th, 2026) after a formal vote of "no confidence" from the faculty in April 2025.
If you read the 2019 HLC Peer Reviewers' Final Report, the accreditors didn't just notice the turnover; they opined on the root cause. This is something we should continue to be concerned about.

The report explicitly calls out "over-reach by the board into the day-to-day management of the university". They found that because the Board directly appoints VPs and Deans (bypassing the President/Provost), the University's leadership structure is fundamentally undermined.

The HLC concluded this has led to a "weakening of shared governance at UW".

The national average for a university president is roughly 6 years. At Wyoming, we are averaging 2.4 years.

When you have SIX leaders in 13 years, you don't have a strategy; you have a collection of short-term "priorities" that never take root. It's no wonder Burman has had so much leeway, I doubt many presidents have had enough time to focus on Athletics.... No Idea what the BOT is doing about him. At this point, it's probably a feature, not a bug.

We can spend millions on "Marketing and Visibility" (the Front Porch) to hide the instability, but you can't fix the "House" (Enrollment and Retention) without a foundation.

Fixing a 20% enrollment drop requires a 10-year plan. Right now, we can't even get a President to last three without major controversy or drama. We are putting a stick in our own spokes and blaming the pavement when we fall off our bike.
 

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