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Three Pac-12 teams (Utah, Oregon and USC) crack the AP preseason poll, which matters more than you think

August 15, 2022 by www.denverpost.com Leave a Comment

The Pac-12 placed just three teams in the Associated Press preseason top-25 poll on Monday, tying the Big 12 for the smallest contingent among the Power Five leagues and continuing a downward trend for the conference that isn’t as meaningless as it seems.

Utah landed in the No. 7 spot, the highest starting position in school history, and was followed by No. 11 Oregon and No. 14 USC. The SEC led all leagues with six teams in the top-25, including No. 1 Alabama.

The preseason human polls and computer rankings are often dismissed as meaningless projections, but they matter locally as a potential spark for ticket sales and philanthropy.

The AP poll also carries lasting impact at the conference level because of the multiplier effect. The more ranked teams to start the season, the greater the likelihood of large-scale representation during the season.

Those in-season rankings affect decisions made by TV networks, which tend to devote premium broadcast windows to matchups between top-25 teams.

“The preseason rankings aren’t real, but they affect how teams move up and down once you start clobbering each other in conference play,” said Sam Schwartzstein, who served as the XFL’s director of operations, innovation and strategy from 2018-20 and has studied the analytics behind attendance and TV ratings at the college level.

“You want to end up with as many ranked vs. ranked games as you can get.”

The Pac-12 has followed a fairly clear arc in the AP preseason poll since adding Colorado and Utah in the summer of 2011.

Poorly represented at first, it enjoyed a stellar middle stretch before the recent downturn:

2011

Three: No. 3 Oregon, No. 7 Stanford, No. 25 USC

2012

Three: No. 1 USC, No. 5 Oregon, No. 21 Stanford

2013

Five: No. 3 Oregon, No. 4 Stanford, No. 21 UCLA, No. 24 USC, No. 25 Oregon State

2014

Six: No. 3 Oregon, No. 7 UCLA, No. 11 Stanford, No. 15 USC, No. 19 ASU, No. 25 Washington

2015

Six: No. 7 Oregon, No. 8 USC, No. 13 UCLA, No. 15 ASU, No. 21 Stanford, No. 22 Arizona

2016

Five: No. 8 Stanford, No. 14 Washington, No. 16 UCLA, No. 20 USC, No. 24 Oregon

2017

Four: No. 4 USC, No. 8 Washington, No. 14 Stanford, No. 24 Washington State

2018

Four: No. 6 Washington, No. 13 Stanford, No. 15 USC, No. 24 Oregon

2019

Five: No. 11 Oregon, No. 13 Washington, No. 14 Utah, No. 23 Washington State, No. 25 Stanford

2020

Three: No. 9 Oregon, No. 17 USC, No. 22 Utah

2021

Five: No. 11 Oregon, No. 15 USC, No. 20 Washington, No. 24 Utah, No. 25 ASU

2022

Three: No. 7 Utah, No. 11 Oregon, No. 14 USC

Schwartzstein, a former Stanford offensive lineman, used predictive modeling to devise business strategies for the XFL.

He believes the Pac-12 should take whatever steps are necessary to “get your content engine in front of as many people as possible.”

That process starts long before the first kickoff and tracks closely with a page from the Pac-12 playbook that hasn’t been used in years: The conference should consider sending the head coaches and top players on a late-spring media tour to the East Coast, Schwartzstein said, with stops in New York City and ESPN’s headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut.

It did just that during the early years of former commissioner Larry Scott’s tenure as he attempted to raise the conference’s national profile. But the annual trips eventually ended, in part because of resistance from the head coaches.

Stanford’s David Shaw made a solo appearance in Bristol in the summer of 2018 for the so-called ‘car wash,’ in which college coaches experience a barrage of interviews with ESPN reporters, make appearances on ESPN shows and chats with ESPN executives.

The conference could send coaches and players to New York City, as well:

Of the 63 media members who vote in the AP poll, 11 live in New England or the mid-Atlantic region. (The dispersal of AP voters is based on the total number of FBS teams in each state.)

With the growth of video-conferencing options like Zoom, in-person trips to the East Coast aren’t essential for preseason promotion.

But the timing of any endeavors is vital: The Pac-12 should make every effort to commence its PR campaign before the middle of July, when other Power Five leagues stage their in-person media festivities.

The accepted approach of laying low through the first half of the summer, until the Pac-12’s own media bash in Los Angeles at the end of July, makes it difficult for teams and players to gain meaningful traction with voters — especially when the AP’s preseason ballots are due Aug. 1.

But above all, changing the PR dynamic requires buy-in from the coaches and players.

The conference office simply has no mechanism to require key football personnel to participate in late-spring and early-summer media events that could sway voters, impact the rankings and position the Pac-12 to benefit from the multiplier effect.

“The rankings drive attendance, and they drive TV decisions,” Schwartzstein said.

“The Pac-12 needs to be thinking about how it can get as many teams in the preseason rankings as possible.”

*** Note: Jon Wilner is an AP voter. His preseason poll can be found here .


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*** Send suggestions, comments and tips (confidentiality guaranteed) to [email protected] or call 408-920-5716

*** Follow me on Twitter: @ WilnerHotline

*** Pac-12 Hotline is not endorsed or sponsored by the Pac-12 Conference, and the views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the Conference.

Filed Under: Sports teams in the pac-12, pac-12 teams, pac-12 team

Romney booed at Utah GOP convention but motion to censure him fails

May 3, 2021 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

Senator Mitt Romney was booed on Saturday at the Utah GOP convention, although a motion to censure him over his vote to impeach former President Donald Trump failed.

“You can boo all you like,” Romney told the crowd as the outgoing GOP chair tried to deflect, according to the Salt Lake Tribune . “I’ve been a Republican all of my life. My dad was the governor of Michigan and I was the Republican nominee for president in 2012.”

Romney was one of seven Republicans who voted to convict Mr. Trump at his February impeachment trial . Romney also voted to convict Mr. Trump on one of two charges against him at his 2020 impeachment trial, becoming the first senator in history to vote to convict a president in his or her own party.

“Aren’t you embarrassed?” Romney asked the crowd as he was booed and called a “traitor” and “communist.” “I’m a man who says what he means, and you know I was not a fan of our last president’s character issues.”

Mr. Trump issued a statement taunting Romney on Monday, saying it was “so nice” to see him booed. Since Mr. Trump has been banned from Twitter, he has begun issuing statements similar to his tweets.

“So nice to see RINO Mitt Romney booed off the stage at the Utah Republican State Convention,” Mr. Trump said. “They are among the earliest to have figured this guy out, a stone cold loser!”

The motion to censure Romney failed, with 798 voting against to 711 voting in favor, according to CBS Salt Lake City affiliate KUTV . In prepared remarks, Romney said he was “no fan” of President Biden’s policies.

“In his inauguration speech, he promised bipartisanship,” Romney said. “I guess by bipartisanship he means the Democrats on one side, and the Socialists on the other. This week, he correctly said that China is an existential threat to our democracy. His answer to that is apparently two years of free pre-kindergarten. And, of course, $6 trillion in spending. A lot of which we will borrow from the Chinese.”

Romney wasn’t the only Republican to be booed at the convention. Utah Governor Spencer Cox was also booed over COVID-19 restrictions.

Senator Susan Collins, who also voted to convict Mr. Trump, said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union ” that she was “appalled” by the booing. “We are not a party that is lead by just one person,” the Maine Republican said.

Other Republicans who voted to convict Mr. Trump have also faced blowback from their local parties as the GOP grapples to deal with Mr. Trump’s influence. The Wyoming Republican Party voted to censure Congresswoman Liz Cheney, the most prominent Republican in the House to vote to impeach Mr. Trump, and Congressman Adam Kinzinger of Illinois was censured by the state House.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Republican Party, mitt romney

In private speech, Romney warns of “extraordinary challenge” to preserve American democracy

March 15, 2022 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

McLean, Virginia — Senator Mitt Romney, of Utah, offered more than 200 Republican donors a stark message on the fragility of American democracy during private remarks on Monday night at a fundraiser in Northern Virginia.

According to five attendees, Romney told the crowd that he has a chart in his Senate office tracing the history of civilizations over the past 4,000 years. He said it is a reminder of how they can rise and collapse, and of how unusual American democracy is in global history.

From the Mongol Empire to the Roman Empire, Romney said, autocracy is the chart’s “default setting,” with authoritarian leaders at every turn.

“We are really the only significant experiment in democracy, and preserving liberal democracy is an extraordinary challenge,” Romney said, according to the attendees, who gathered at the Hilton Hotel in McLean.

Attendees described Romney, the GOP’s 2012 presidential nominee, as delivering the remarks as a warning for the group, which included many longtime members of the Republican establishment, as the U.S. confronts Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and as former President Donald Trump continues to exert power inside the Republican Party.

Romney was the introductory speaker at a closed fundraiser for Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney of Wyoming. Cheney’s primary race has a national following — she’s facing a challenge from Harriet Hageman , a Trump ally who has been endorsed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy , of California.

Cheney, a Trump critic, is the vice chair of the House select committee investigating the January 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol and Trump’s role in efforts to block the certification of President Joe Biden’s election.

Trump has been furious with Cheney ever since she voted to impeach him last year after the attack. At the time, she was in the House GOP leadership.

At Monday night’s event, which raised over $526,000 for Cheney, Romney framed the survival of American democracy as a battle on two fronts, with the possibility of significant erosion unless leaders are vigilant.

Abroad, he said, it faces threats from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is following an authoritarian playbook “rehearsed time and time again, over the many thousands of years of world history.”

At home, Romney said, “what has kept us from falling in with the same kind of authoritarian leader as Vladimir Putin are the strengths of our institutions, the rule of law, our courts, Congress, and so forth.”

“People of character and courage,” Romney said, “have stood up for right at times when others want to look away. Such a person is Liz Cheney.”

The crowd roared its approval, attendees said.

Cheney’s father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, and mother, Lynne Cheney, were spotted by CBS News as they exited the fundraiser. Attendees said Cheney’s parents did not make formal remarks at the fundraiser but did socialize with guests at the opening reception.

The fundraiser was organized by veteran Republican power brokers Bobbie and Bill Kilberg, who have decades of links to past Republican presidents.

In an interview late Monday, Bill Kilberg said the event went “exceedingly well,” not only in terms of the fundraising total, but for rallying Republicans who are increasingly worried about their party and nation.

“I think people are really hungry for a sensible, rational alternative in our political dialogue,” Bill Kilberg said. “They’re not happy with the direction of the Republican Party and they’re not particularly happy with the direction of the Democratic Party.”

“They saw two, sensible, intelligent, rational conservatives, and they were excited. It’s been a long time since we had that opportunity.”

“Romney got a standing ovation,” he added, when he praised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and when he spoke about American democracy. “He said we have to appreciate how fragile this system is.”

“That was the essence of Liz’s remarks as well,” Bobbie Kilberg said. “She said, if someone doesn’t have respect for the rule of law and the democratic system, then it’s all for naught.”

Congresswoman Cheney offered a brief greeting but did not speak with CBS News as she left the event with her family.

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Robert Costa

Robert Costa is CBS News’ chief election and campaign correspondent based in Washington, D.C.

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The seven Republicans who voted to convict Trump in impeachment trial

February 14, 2021 by www.stuff.co.nz Leave a Comment

Seven Republicans voted Saturday to convict former President Donald Trump in his Senate trial, easily the largest number of lawmakers to ever vote to find a president of their own party guilty at impeachment proceedings.

While lawmakers acquitted Trump of inciting the January 6 Capitol attack, they voted 57-43 to convict him – short of the two-thirds majority needed to find him guilty.

Still, with seven Republicans joining all 50 Democrats in voting “guilty,” the Senate issued an unmistakable bipartisan chorus of condemnation of the former president that could have political implications for a Republican Party conflicted over its future.

“If I can’t say what I believe that our president should stand for, then why should I ask Alaskans to stand with me?” Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska told reporters.

READ MORE: Trump remains dominant force in Republican Party following acquittal Republican leader says Trump ‘morally responsible’ for Capitol attack Four final takeaways from Trump’s impeachment trial US Senate reaches deal to skip witnesses in Trump impeachment trial

Besides Murkowski, other Republican senators voting against Trump were Richard Burr of North Carolina, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Susan Collins of Maine, Mitt Romney of Utah, Ben Sasse of Nebraska and Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania.

Democrats holding out long-shot hopes of convicting Trump would have needed 17 Republicans to prevail, which as expected proved an unreachable goal.

That hope died after the influential Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said he would vote to acquit because he believed lawmakers had no jurisdiction over a former president.

Even so, McConnell delivered searing words against Trump in a speech after the vote, saying the former president was “practically and morally responsible” for provoking the attack on lawmakers as they formally certified Trump’s Electoral College defeat by Joe Biden.

Five people died, and the House impeached Trump for inciting insurrection.

Most of the defecting Republicans had clashed with Trump over the years. Burr and Toomey have said they will retire and not seek re-election when their terms expire next year, and Murkowski and Collins have histories of clashing with Trump over health care and other policies.

Perhaps the day’s most surprising Republican defector was Burr, a 16-year Senate veteran who keeps a low profile in Washington and after years as top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee is used to telegraphing little about his views.

Burr, 65, will not seek re-election next year and will retire. In a written statement, he said Trump made unfounded claims about a fraud-riddled election “because he did not like the results.”

He said Trump used the presidency to “inflame” the rioters rather than urging them to stand down. “The evidence is compelling that President Trump is guilty of inciting an insurrection against a coequal branch of government,” Burr said.

Also striking was the “guilty” vote by Cassidy, who was re-elected in November from a deep-red state where Republican support is widespread.

Cassidy, 63 and a physician, had initially sided with the vast majority of Senate Republicans who voted last month to block the trial from moving forward. But he blasted a shambolic performance by Trump’s legal team at the start of the trial while praising Democrats for presenting a compelling case.

“Our Constitution and our country is more important than any one person. I voted to convict President Trump because he is guilty,” Cassidy said in a one-sentence statement issued after his vote to convict.

Toomey, a traditional conservative, decried Trump’s efforts to overturn election results – Trump’s targets include Toomey’s Pennsylvania – and to encourage his supporters’ march on the Capitol.

“All of this to hold on to power despite having legitimately lost,” Toomey said. He said that because of Trump’s actions, “for the first time in American history, the transfer of presidential power was not peaceful” and said Trump had “betrayed the confidence millions of us placed in him.”

Sasse has long criticised Trump’s authoritarian streak. Last week he excoriated pro-Trump Republican Party officials in his home state, telling them in a video message that “politics isn’t about the weird worship of one dude.”

“Tribalism is a hell of a drug, but our oath to the Constitution means we’re constrained to the facts,” Sasse said Saturday. He said he wouldn’t vote against his own conscience “simply because it is politically convenient.”

Romney’s “guilty” vote at Trump’s initial impeachment trial last February made him the first senator to ever vote to convict a president of the same party.

The trial that ended Saturday was Trump’s second – making him the first president to ever be tried twice for impeachment – and the fourth in presidential history.

Presidents Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1999 were acquitted and received unanimous support from their Democratic Party.

AP

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‘We’re All Praying for Him’: 12-Year-Old Little Leaguer in Coma After Fall from Bunk Bed

August 16, 2022 by www.breitbart.com Leave a Comment

A 12-year-old little league player who traveled to Williamsport, Pennsylvania, to fight for a Little League World Series championship now finds himself fighting for his life after falling from a bunk bed at the event’s dormitory complex.

Easton Oliverson, a player for  Snow Canyon Little League in Utah, fractured his skull in a fall from the top bunk of his dormitory bunk bed on Saturday night, his uncle Spencer Beck tells TMZ Sports.

Little League Baseball

According to Beck, his nephew was rushed to a hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. On a positive note, though the boy remains in a medically induced coma, the family is optimistic that Easton – nicknamed Tank – will make a full recovery.

“He’s a really good kid, very loving,” Beck said. “Full of smiles. Just a fun, fun kid — so we’re all praying for him.”

Snow Canyon Little League

Little League International released a statement of its plans to support Easton and his family.

“At the request of his family, Little League International encourages all to join us in keeping the Snow Canyon Little League player and his family in our thoughts and prayers, as we wish for a full and complete recovery.

“Little League International will continue to use all available resources, including those provided by UPMC in North Central Pa., through the Player Wellness Center, to support the player, his family, and his coaches and teammates, as we navigate this unfortunate situation.”Easton’s team will play their first World Series game on Friday.

“While our hearts are heavy we are committed as a team and have an opportunity to take part in something that is only dreamt about by others,” the team said in a statement. “We teach our players to do everything with a purpose, that hasn’t changed, it has perhaps been added too with something far greater than ever.

The family has set-up a Venmo account – @MiraclesForTank – where well-wishers can donate to assist with medical expenses.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Easton Oliverson, Little League, Little League World Series, Sports, bed wetting at 12 years old, 12 year old still wets bed, little jobs for 12 year olds

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