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FOOTBALL Press conference notes

Here are my notes from the press conference today:

David Braun

QB Battle:


Braun said he saw good things out of both quarterbacks, though Bryant seems to be the favorite.

"Brendan Sullivan definitely brings a different dynamic in terms of his athleticism and some of the things you can do with his speed. Ben is is making some really sound decisions in the drop back pass game, getting the ball on time. Both are doing a great job of competing here today...

"Ben and Sully have been doing a tremendous job and we're excited to give them a couple more opportunities before we crystallize who we're going with going forwards."

Team is locked in going forward:

Braun said at Big Ten Media Days that the team needed to turn a corner at some point in its fall camp and focus on going forward rather than what had happened in the past. He said they've reach that point now.

"That realization has happened, that time was this week as we entered the third week of camp. We went through a tough week last week, we have a tough week ahead and our focus has shifted direction [forwards]. Our focus is on serving these young men and the people in the building and the best way to do that is to go out and work to win one in New Jersey."

Braun starting to feel more comfortable as head coach:

"It's very different as each day has gone by I've become more and more comfortable, but I still have a lot to learn. Coach Holtz has been a great resource, Jeff Genyk is a former head coach and I've also been talking with Matt Entz who is the head coach at NDSU. [Asking them] I never envisioned this, how would you handle this situation, and I still have a lot to learn."


Players

Ben Bryant on QB room:


"It's been a great process coming in here. I mean, everyone's welcomed me with open arms in the quarterback room. I can't speak enough about how awesome they've been. Any question I have they are willing to answer it and help me out and coach Jake, such a good coach and this is honestly one of the smartest quarterback rooms I've ever been around."

Bryant on if he or the transfers have asked any previous players about hazing:

"Since we've been here, our experience has been great and we've never felt like we had to have those conversations. All we know is what we know, and we know that we've had a great experience and we're excited to go out and play ball.

Richie Hagarty and Ben Bryant on team building:

Bryant: "Every day we start our team meeting with competition between position groups, and that's something that I think everyone enjoys. Our staff has done a really good job of putting that together and everyone's all excited and cheering each other on and that's been a really fun thing for us."

Hagarty: "Stuff outside of football, they brought in [basketball] hoops one day, playing Mario Kart, stuff like that to get away that brings us together."

Hagarty said that the team's Mario Kart ringer is strength coach Alex Spanos.


Stories to come from this afternoon from me and tomorrow from Austin Siegel.
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David Braun on Fan Support

Let's support this team!

In an ESPN article "Northwestern Coach "Very Calculated" About Bonding Activities by Adam Rittenburg, Braun expressed this hope:

"I certainly hope that this community, our alumni, all those that are associated with Northwestern University and Northwestern athletics, will come out and show full support for 103 young men that have worked their butts off over the course of the last four weeks and have come together to do something really special," Braun said. "I'm really confident that that's exactly what's going to happen."

David Braun

Go Cats!!

To those who have ever met Fitz in person..

If you have ever met Fitz in person, even if only briefly, if he had knowledge about the actions being alleged, would he have tolerated the egregious hazing that took place and not done anything about it? I am sure that he would know that some less serious hazing takes place every year and at every other campus in the nation, and it is all part of a ritual. But if he had known about the serious hazing being alleged, do you think he would have done nothing and tried to cover it up?

Upon reflection

Have thought about what happened and maybe it’s the optimist in me but maybe there is some good to come out of this. Don’t get me wrong, I am sorry for Pat Fitzgerald. For all he did for this program and for what happened and the likelihood that it was a mean spirited hit job by a spiteful a-hole out to ruin him, he did not deserve this at all. I wish he didn’t have to bear this. However, let’s be real here. We were never going to be a Championship team under Fitz. St. Gary got us there, but Fitz had what 17 years and never got us there. We were 4-20 the past couple years, and our offense and defense stunk. Our recruiting sucked and this year it was as bad as it’s ever been under his watch. If there was ever a time to clean house, this was it.

And so as much as I’m sad that Fitz couldn’t leave on better terms, it is for the best. The program would have been mortally wounded and walking dead had he not been fired. Now we can rip off the scab and extract the toxins and clean it and allow it to heal. Maybe painful, but the only way we can recover.

What the firing enables us to do is to potentially reboot and have a chance to be something better. I have always thought we were selling ourselves short thinking this was the best we could do. A program that once won 3 titles in the span of 6 years won zero under Fitz. Illinois passed us under his watch. Color me underwhelmed.

Absolutely he made his contributions to this program. The 10 win seasons. He got the facilities built. The stadium (hopefully), but with divisions going away did anyone believe Fitz and his bullshit offensive philosophy was ever going to give us a chance to win the B1G? Was he the guy to take us to the next level? I doubted it before and especially after 4-20 but with this hanging over us, clearly he wasn’t. Now at least we can have a fresh start. We might not make the most of it and we might just suck now forever, but at least we have a chance now for some real change.

And I’m not nearly as pessimistic about who we could bring to Evanston. Always take a job when you’re at the nadir. Nowhere to go but up. See Gary Barnett. Never take one at the peak. See JON. Expectations are low, and this is still the B1G, $$$$ is big, no pressure to win, state of the art facilities, won’t even likely have to run kids off to make room for your own. One thing we’ve got to thank Fitz for is that he made this an attractive place to be. And that’s what I’m hearing. Wilbon made the point - people calling him telling him they’d be attracted to the job. We know Ed Orgeron is interested and say what you will but how many candidates have a national championship ring and knows how to recruit at an SEC level? Brian Hartline is intriguing to me. Big time. Who cares if he moves on if he earns that right by making us winners again? And we may actually end up with a modern offense that can actually score points! I’m getting a hard on just thinking about that. Again, perhaps I’m just an unbridled optimist, but I think we can get a major upgrade here. Not saying Schill and Gragg won’t eff this up, but until they do hope springs eternal. Time to move on and hopefully on to better days ahead. Thank you Fitz for what you have done. It’s time for us to bring in someone to take what you have built for us, and who can take us further and enable our full potential and now we can.

FOOTBALL NU closed Wednesday’s practice

Wednesday morning’s practice was scheduled to be open, but NU sent us an email tonight announcing it was closed. (I blame the T-shirts.)

They will have the regularly scheduled press conference afterward, though. Coach Braun, Ben Bryant, Richie Hagarty and AJ Henning will be available.

Next week’s practice was already closed, so last Wednesday turned out to be the only time we’ll see the Cats in camp.
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WLP Second-Half Schedule Previews

Hey Gang,

The team previews for the second half of Northwestern's schedule ended up getting spread across 2 episodes.

Nebraska and Maryland start at the 24-minute mark of Episode 540.

Iowa, Wisconsin, Purdue and Illinois are covered in Episode 541.

Our biggest takeaway overall is that we're higher on Iowa than most seem to be. The defense there is going to be unreal, and if the Hawkeyes roll out even a COMPETENT offense, that team will be stellar. With Cade McNamara and a slightly improved line, that looks possible.

In terms of meat on the bone for NU: Nebraska, Maryland, and Purdue actually all look like fairly decent matchups. The Huskers basically have a write-off season, Maryland could have issues on both lines, and Purdue's going through a pretty major reset.

Thanks as always!
Sam, John, and Scuzz/The West Lot Pirates
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If I was God and wanted to save college football

I originally posted this in July ‘21 after the SEC announced the addition of Texas and Oklahoma, before the addition of four PAC teams to the B1G. I still pretty much feel the same:

“I would appear in a vision to Kevin Warren and tell him that if he had the courage, I would help him:

1) Negotiate a merger with the PAC 12
2) Poach Duke and NC from the ACC
3) Accept the burden of adding Kansas, KSU, Iowa State and while holding his nose, Oklahoma State.
4) Form four divisions: the PAC 8 (The old PAC 8 teams) The B1G East ( the current East Division minus Michigan with Duke and NC added), the B1G 8 ( the old Big 8 except Nebraska, plus the Arizona’s and Utah), and the B1G Midwest, ( current West plus Michigan.)

I would tell him to organize a semifinal championship that would pit a 1 v 4 seed and 2 v 3 seed the week before Thanksgiving.

Further, I would ask him to negotiate with the Tournament of Roses to enter into an exclusive deal, move the parade and Rose Bowl to Thanksgiving weekend, and make the Rose Bowl the B1G COLLEGE National Championship, emphasizing the idea that the member schools remain committed to the college part of intercollegiate outside the football field.

As a gracious God, I would still let ESPN have its “National Championship Game” with The B1G Winner or an All B1G team versus Alabama of the southeast regional semipro league at some multi billion dollar NFL stadium, a game somewhat like the old College All Star game at Soldier Field.”
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WLP Second-Half Previews

Hey Gang,

The team previews for the second half of Northwestern's schedule ended up getting spread across 2 episodes.

Nebraska and Maryland start at the 24-minute mark of Episode 540.

Iowa, Wisconsin, Purdue and Illinois are covered in Episode 541.

Our biggest takeaway overall is that we're higher on Iowa than most seem to be. The defense there is going to be unreal, and if the Hawkeyes roll out even a COMPETENT offense, that team will be stellar. With Cade McNamara and a slightly improved line, that looks possible.

In terms of meat on the bone for NU: Nebraska, Maryland, and Purdue actually all look like fairly decent matchups. The Huskers basically have a write-off season, Maryland could have issues on both lines, and Purdue's going through a pretty major reset.

Thanks as always!
Sam, John, and Scuzz/The West Lot Pirates

Reinstate Fitz

I’m serious. I’ve seen enough to know that he did all he could up front to prevent what happened. None of what happened could therefore be considered his fault. It’s clear there was a rush to judgement, and we all saw how bad things could get.

With the expansion of the B1G and NIL, we can safely say goodbye to the already tenuous link between the academic mission of the university and the athletic/media one. There’s just too much money on the table which will help the other sports and the University as a whole. The football program is now no more than a marketing vehicle.

Put Fitz back and let him hire the players he needs without academic standards hamstringing him.

Third rail: Questions on NU football religion/flag waving

This is going to be my last football post concerning Fitz's departure, lawsuits, hazing etc. From now on, just the team and football field performance. I've always been a Fitz fan and think he's a principled leader with some blindspots who should have known more. Salty times.

But there are few things I always wondered about, vis a vis the culture of the university: And how much do these things need to "fit"?

a) the military/navy SEAL/flag waving patriotism: I get how intense training and toughness relate to football. But I've personally felt the flag waving came across gratuitous. Not casting shade on vets, but at the same time that doesn't mean that we need to mention and invoke the military constantly. If we're a service academy, sure. But we're a snobby private school with Alums that run Hollywood. What a juxtaposition! It never really seriously bothered me, but in hindsight I wonder, was that a factor in terms of Fitz's friction with faculty? Or is that a minimum requirement for any football program trying to recruit kids from Texas? I really don't know and would like to hear views.

b) The overt expression of religious beliefs - In our case the Christian kind. Same thing - no shade on Christians including those who like to display their religious beliefs. There seems to have been a lot of religiously expressive displays from our players over the years. Not sure if this is just how all of America is, how all of collegiate athletics is, or if there's a higher concentration of that within our football team? To my untrained eye, I've always felt we had more of those things on display versus most other football programs.

All taken together, I can see how the left-leaning faculty (who may not be terribly tolerant) would wonder why they have this NASCAR-type character coaching religious players - as the most visible face of the university. I would personally feel that any faculty with those views are petty - but knowing their type, it wouldn't surprise me. I've never been a fan of all the performative patriotism - but no need to hate on the guy if that's what he and the team want to express.

Not really taking sides on this - but am eager to hear any observations on the subcultural vibes of the program and whether they are unique or different versus other teams. It's also a question of how a coach "brand" might fit with NU in the future. For example, a David Shaw type I can see being a match with the reality of the NU faculty and alumni base. That doesn't mean we'd win with him.

Still, I do fear that there may be a cultural faultline that could make it hard to find our footing - most recently reflected in the "Cat's against the world" T-shirt kerfuffle.

Thoughts on Hazing

In America we appear to be wildly inconsistent about hazing and how to respond to it. I happen to know two kids currently enrolled as Freshman at the US Naval Academy. Do they perform hazing? In the most generic sense, yes. They make it uncomfortable for the plebs for various reason with the ultimate goal of creating a strong minded person. Like many of you, I was in a Fraternity. Was there hazing? Of course. Fortunately, I would always categorize my experience as a "low level" hazing - cleaning, drinking, learning useless info, etc.

I was a Beta, which of course famously had a pledge die at PSU in 2017. Numerous brothers were blamed for the death in a court of law. To my knowledge, no one in the National or Regional leadership was directly penalized. Was it because they were "removed" from the situation? A common refrain is that "Fitz should've known" and he should pay the punishment. Given that logic I don't know how any Fraternity exists. My nephew, at a different school, was a pledge just a year ago, for a different fraternity. Even his Dad, a "brother" at the same chapter, was aware of the chapter's hazing practices applied to his son. Yes I assume most, if not all, fraternity situations are probably not as gross as the reported incidents in the NU locker room. That brings me to the next issue.

It frustrates me that numerous people have acknowledged hazing incident within the football team and it appears they did not attempt to elevate the issue. Without blaming the victim(s) I would like to explicitly know why they did report the issue. Some said something similar to "Fitz must've known". If he did nothing, then why did they not elevate to the AD, NCAA, State of IL? I know some of incidents were reported by players. I will regretfully admit their immaturity. The members of the staff, no matter how low their position, should have used their maturity and reported the issues. I wish they would not have assumed the problem would go away and intervened. I struggle with not finding them culpable. Regardless, asking why someone didn't report earlier, allows us better assess the culture prevalent in the locker room and the team. Maybe this will unveil issues with Fitz.

I listened to Barnett and he further cemented the idea that Fitz was Player's Coach to a fault. I suspect he had too much trust in his Leadership Council. In conjunction with his "open-door" policy, he thought that no major issues would occur. Sure he wanted strong team unity, but not to expense of the allegations where the team becomes fractured.

We have been told this hazing has occurred for many years. Returning to the question as to why was the reporting was only done recently, bothers me. I never played organized football in HS. I ran X-Country where we "hazed" ourselves by the miserable conditions of running. I sense that many of players experienced some hazing in HS. When at college, they could accept the elevated hazing to help develop the bonds and metal toughness akin to the millitary. This is just a theory, but given the words of praise by many former players for Fitz I would otherwise have a hard time resolving their experiences with hazing.

I believe many issues could have been resolved with better environment. I have worked in the Defense Industry for multiple decades. Every year we are required to have Ethics and Security Training, We must watch ethics vignettes based on real live industry situations. Our security training asks us to report issues. They train us for indications of a person potentially violating a security policy. The phone number to report Fraud, Waste and Abuse can easily be found either on signage around the facility. Although I wasn't directly involved, I knew a Manager that was accused of fraud. The company evaluated the accusations and decided to fire the Manager and several others associated with him. Uncannily, I heard the suspected whistleblower appeared to have issues with the Manager. The Manager sued my company and his pension was ultimately re-instated.

I brought that story up because it parallels the situation with the football team, but most importantly how our Culture was easy to report a potential issue. At a minimum, I hope NU can properly create a culture based on training and access such that no one feels discomfort from a hazing event. If they do have a hazing issue, they know it can be reported without any concern of potential retribution.

In summary, I suspect some elements of hazing will always exist. I wish we could normalize the response to hazing, but that's just dreaming. At a minimum, with annual training and an open culture to report problems this will not happen again at NU and other institutions.
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