Sunday, July 28, 2024

‘I want to be here,’ WSU women’s hoops coach Kamie Ethridge details program vision

‘I want to be here,’ WSU women’s hoops coach Ethridge details program vision

With a new conference, new AD and new team, Ethridge remains

By Sam Taylor Lewiston Tribune  July 28, 2024

In a matter of months, Washington State lost its volleyball coach, men’s basketball coach and athletic director as it prepares to enter a new age of college athletics in the wake of the Pac-12 Conference’s collapse.

One coach who has remained? Six-year Women’s basketball coach Kamie Ethridge.

“I want to be here,” Ethridge said in May. “I don’t think there’s very many jobs that can be better than this job. You know, the fact that we’re able to retain most of our athletes and they’re not hitting the portal, the fact that we can continue to have success in recruiting. I really do believe I’m in a situation where I’m not looking to leave, and I feel very much supported here.”

The former National Coach of the Year and College Basketball Hall of Famer has made the postseason in each of her past four seasons, including three straight NCAA Tournaments. She led the Cougs to the 2023 Pac-12 Tournament Championship in Las Vegas, WSU’s first women’s conference championship in school history.

Ethridge recruited program legends Charlisse Leger-Walker and Bella Murekatete and has assembled a current roster that has included an All-Pac-12 freshman selection in each of the last two years – Astera Tuhina in 2023 and Eleonora Villa in 24.

With renowned recruiting and winning records, Coug fans seemed sure that Ethridge would be gone within a matter of weeks following a 2023–24 season in which the Cougs weathered the loss of Leger-Walker to a season-ending knee injury to reach the semifinals of the inaugural Women’s Basketball Invitation Tournament.

Instead, after WSU had endured the departures of two head coaches and an athletic director in the nine months since news of the Pac-12’s destruction dropped, Ethridge signed a one-year extension, her third straight such deal. Her contract runs through the 2029–30 season.

Ethridge said that former WSU AD Pat Chun, who left Pullman to take the helm of in-state rival University of Washington, painted the picture of how successful WSU women’s basketball could be.

“Believe me, our resources were 12 out of 12. We were 12th out of 12, you know, compared to everybody else in the league, but you don’t have to be first in the league in resources. You don’t have to be the first in facilities. You have to be first in people,” Ethridge said. “And I thought that (Chun) was an example of hiring great people and giving us the support that we needed, you know, and being okay with being who we are.

“We don’t have to apologize for being Washington State and living in Pullman. I love this place. I love the kinds of athletes we can attract here. And I think (Chun’s) vision was something really appealing to me.”

Ethridge said Chun’s vision aligned with what AD Anne McCoy, who has worked for WSU for over 20 years, holds.

While the Cougar coach is staying, WSU is losing someone who Ethridge said “changed the program forever.”

Charlisse Leger-Walker, third all-time leading scorer in program history, announced she was transferring to UCLA in May.

Ethridge said there was no doubt that Leger-Walker would have gone pro if she had not suffered a season-ending ACL injury Jan. 28. The injury gave her three options: Go pro anyway, return to WSU or enter the transfer portal.

“She grew up together with a group of players that— we were so young when they all came in, and now we’re really old, and they’re all leaving, you know, her best friends are leaving and I just think sometimes in life you get to the end of a road and you know, you don’t feel like ‘Oh, I need to start over in the same place,’” Ethridge said.

While Leger-Walker’s departure does leave a program-legend-sized hole in the roster, Ethridge is more than prepared to replace her with a strong international recruiting class and the continued development of program leaders Tara Wallack, Astera Tuhina and Eleonora Villa.

“We literally have 13 players that can all compete for a starting job. I mean, so we’re really really deep. I think we’re really versatile. I think we’re probably as talented as we’ve ever been, in a lot of ways, but it’s inexperienced talent right now. You know, like, like, there’s going to be some growing pains,” associate head coach Laurie Kohen said.

The program has found great success in recruiting and retaining student-athletes because they don’t promise too much up front, Ethridge said.

WSU does not have a name, image and likeness donor base on par with other schools.

“If they want money, then they probably won’t choose us,” Ethridge said.

“That’s one of the attractions of staying here: if I can continue to do it the way we’re doing it and not lose players and compete at a high level without getting into the world of, you know, NIL, I’d gladly you know, want to stay here and see if we can do something special here.”

While organizations such as the Cougar Collective, a collection of WSU alumni who want to support student-athletes with NIL opportunities, do their best, small crowds at WSU basketball games have become the norm.

Ethridge said she wants the women’s basketball team to win more and at the right time in order to catch a similar flame that the men’s team caught.

Kyle Smith’s Cougs were drawing just 3,000 people in mid-February, before getting ranked, beating Arizona in Tucson and hosting Bronny James and USC. That confluence of factors led to three straight 8,000-plus crowds with WSU’s final regular season game seeing a 9,000-person crowd.

Ethridge said the Cougs need to get out into the community and make a lot of friends who will go to games, from elementary school kids and their families to ZZU CRU, WSU’s organized student section.

“We need ZZU CRU to really get committed to us,” Ethridge said. “It usually starts well, we haven’t finished very well. I think we have a hard sport, because sometimes there’s four games a week. And then there’s two games the next week and you just want to take a break the next week. So you don’t go to those games and you know, we’re competing for the same person, right?”

Each player in their end-of-season exit interviews with Ethridge said they considered making the NCAA Tournament a top team goal.

WSU women’s basketball will compete in the West Coast Conference as an affiliate members for the next two seasons. The Cougs will play a full conference schedule alongside fellow remaining Pac-12 school Oregon State, guaranteeing them quality matchups against reigning tournament teams Gonzaga, Portland and OSU.

Ethridge said she is confident WSU women’s basketball can succeed in the WCC and nationally at an even greater level because her program prioritizes people.

From the nutritionist to the academic support staff to the trainers to her coaching staff, the Cougs offer a top-tier experience, Ethridge said.

“Those are the things that are gonna affect your life every single day,” Ethridge said. “So we want to make those elite and if we do that, I think we can continue to succeed in recruiting and getting great, great talent in choosing us and staying in here to be with us [for] four years.”

PHOTO: Coach Kamie Ethridge and WSU basketball team 3/6/2024 at Pac-12 Women’s Basketball Tournament in Las Vegas. (Photo by News for CougGroup.

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

In new AD Anne McCoy, WSU gets a new leader — and a committed supporter of student-athletes

 In new AD Anne McCoy, WSU gets a new leader — and a committed supporter of student-athletes

July 16, 2024 Updated Tue., July 16, 2024 at 9:55 p.m.

By Greg Woods, Spokane Spokesman-Review

PULLMAN – Jake McCoy always knew when his mom was at his sister’s swim meets. He’d be watching the live stream of Taylor’s race, a couple years back when she swam for Washington State, and he’d hear a certain voice start cheering somewhere in the background.

“You can hear our mom,” Jake laughed. “You can hear her screaming. It’s hilarious. But then she sits down, and it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m nervous.’ ”

That would be Anne McCoy, who was introduced Tuesday as WSU’s new athletic director, four months after she became the Cougars’ interim AD and three weeks after she was promoted to the permanent position. A mother of two, McCoy’s elevation comes at a critical time for WSU, which needs someone to guide the program into a hazy new chapter nearly a year after the Pac-12 collapsed.

That responsibility now belongs to McCoy, who made a few things clear in her introductory press conference. Her top priority is securing a permanent conference home for the Cougars, who are competing as affiliate members in the Mountain West and West Coast conferences this upcoming season, and she anticipates that happening no later than July 2025.

“I think as much as the temptation would be to try to finish things or get things nailed down or just make a decision sooner rather than later,” McCoy said, “I just think that we don’t know all the variables yet. And I don’t think we have all the information we’re gonna need to make a good decision and the right decision.”

McCoy also emphasized the importance of fundraising, which previous AD Pat Chun took to “a different level,” president Kirk Schulz said. Chun may have departed for rival Washington back in March, but in McCoy, Schulz sees a successor who can keep that up.

“Raising money, everybody sometimes thinks there’s some magic piece to it,” Schulz said. “A lot of it is vision and shoe leather work, and sitting down with people, having a conversation and talking about ways mutually they can support Washington State University. And guess what – you gotta know a place to be able to do that well.”

Turns out, that was a key reason why Schulz hired McCoy, who has worked at WSU in different capacities since 2001. She knows WSU well, and she knows Pullman well, and that’s not a bad starting point.

But in McCoy, the Cougs are also getting an athletic director who draws on her personal experiences as much as her professional ones. In her rise to the top of WSU’s athletic department, from her start as an intern in Connecticut to her most recent post of senior deputy director of athletics at WSU, she has kept in mind her reason for getting into the business in the first place.

“You had a chance to be part of a student-athlete’s life from the time they came to college, when maybe they were 17 or 18 years old, to when they left when they were 22 or 23,” McCoy said. “And just really watch them grow and get to know them as people, to really feel like there’s a human connection and that you can be part of their journey.”

In that way, there isn’t much difference between Anne McCoy the WSU athletic director and Anne McCoy the mom, her kids explained. The same person who works as her kids’ personal Uber driver – “She’ll go from the hotel to the pool, back to the hotel, to food, to the hotel, to the pool and back,” son Jake said – is the same one who gets to figure out which conference the Cougs will be competing in on a permanent basis.

In fact, she proved it in the process of taking this job. Last month, after Schulz offered McCoy the job while the two were at a meeting in Vancouver, she broke the news to her family at the dining room table in their home. Jake, Taylor and husband Brian had known about the possibility for some time – Jake was the last to find out, he joked – but it wasn’t until she arrived back home that she delivered the news: She had the offer in hand.

“She was like, OK, here’s the situation. Here’s what’s going on,” Taylor said. “How do you feel about this? Because I want this to be like a family decision and something we all do together. Because we’re all one unit here.”

“She wanted to make it a family decision, to make sure that we didn’t have any concerns,” said Jake, who has committed to swim at Tennessee beginning in the fall of 2025. “I was like, concerns? You’re gonna be great at it. I know that. Her biggest thing is staying kind and I know that’s not gonna change.”

Much is changing at WSU. That much is clear, especially because McCoy said Tuesday that “just because we’re not talking about things real publicly right now doesn’t mean there’s not a lot happening.” She didn’t want to elaborate – these kinds of things happen behind closed doors in that way – but whether the Cougs end up in a rebuilt Pac-12 or another conference entirely, the woman leading the charge is the same one who can get too nervous to watch her kids swim.

“She’s usually got a ‘go TT’ for me,” Taylor said, “but then she sits there and acts like she’s gonna throw up during our races. We had a meet this past weekend, and we both had races we were very excited with and she was like, first one there afterwards, after our coach, and was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m so proud of you guys.’ Just our biggest supporter.”

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Drink beer, support WSU student-athletes

Friday, July 5, 2024

Insightful column

 Dave Boling: Washington State coaching icon George Raveling continues to offer wise advice when it comes to college athletics

By Dave Boling  Spokesman-Review 7/4/2024

College sports, having lost their way, need George Raveling more than ever.

It might require a visionary like Raveling to renew the conscience, spirit, and ideals that have gone missing.

Considering that he just turned 87, we better learn from him while we still can.

With extreme graciousness, Raveling answered a recent inquiry for a brief phone interview for background on a story about a former Washington State basketball player with whom he’d been very close.

His answers were so thorough and heartfelt, and he was going so well, that he kept weaving stories without prompt.

He talked for half an hour, and it became clear that Raveling is still an impressive orator, deep thinker, innovator, and activist. And his recollections remain strong of his years as an influential and pioneering basketball coach, as well as an international ambassador for the game.

He recounted his love for WSU and Pullman, and his biggest mistake as a coach (not landing Spokane’s John Stockton). And he gave examples of the life-long relationships that are possible when coaches and players share common space in their minds and hearts.

It was a privilege to be given his time. So, in the final minute, I asked: What’s wrong with college sports?

His answer wasn’t specific nor curative, but he saw the ways in which the environment has changed after court orders turned college athletes into professionals, with even fewer regulations.

And that’s the place to start as we review the impact George Raveling had on the game of basketball – from Pullman, Washington, to all points around the globe.

•••

“We’re teaching kids the wrong values,” Raveling said. “It’s all about money. Sports have become driven, insanely, by money. I worry about these kids when they become adults.”

Some athletes collect millions of dollars, and change schools several times, sometimes playing into their mid-20s – while the connection between athletics and academics seems abandoned.

“I coached during a time when getting an education was important. Today, you don’t even hear any academic discussions,” Raveling said, noticing that classwork seems a quaint and forgotten concept.

George Raveling stands during the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall Of Fame 2014 Class Announcement at the JW Marriott on April 6, 2015 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Getty Images)

Further, Raveling said he sees no one willing or able to step up to discover solutions.

“The biggest thing with college athletics is the same as (the problems) globally – we lack courageous leadership,” he said. “I say ‘courageous’ leadership because it takes courage to stand up and make the right decisions and advocate for the right reasons, and be willing to do the right thing at almost any cost.”

Still intellectually curious, Raveling has tried to pinpoint the core qualities of leadership, asking friends to provide lists of great contemporary leaders, not including the business arena, in which money is too-commonly used as the yardstick.

“No one has yet been able to get to five (on a list),” he said.

Raveling recalled when recruiting was not a matter of name-image-likeness financial opportunities.

“I always felt I had to have better relationships with the players,” he said. “If it’s only about winning and losing, hell, you can go anywhere. I had a responsibility to those players’ parents to be more than a coach. I felt I had to be a leader and a role model. I’m not trying to be self-serving with this, but I saw that as the responsibility of the position.”

•••

Given his retirement from coaching came 30 years ago, it’s worth retracing Raveling’s roots.

As a player, George Raveling was a sensational rebounder. He pulled down 29 in one game against Seton Hall in the 1960 season, and is still on some of Villanova’s top 10 lists more than 60 years after playing.

That should tell you a great deal about Raveling. Rebounding is a function of desire —aggressiveness directed by anticipation, fueled by a hunger for the ball. It’s an effort that takes a miss and turns it into a second chance – a theme in Raveling’s life.

Born in Washington, D.C., Raveling lost his father, a horse trainer, to a heart attack when George was 9. Soon after, his mother suffered what was labeled a “nervous breakdown” and was institutionalized. He was sent to St. Michael’s, a Catholic home for boys near Scranton, Penn.

Villanova offered Raveling a future. He responded by becoming a beast on the boards, averaging 16 per game as a junior.

In his 11 seasons as coach, George Raveling led Washington State basketball to a 167-136 record. He was named Pac-10 Conference coach of the year after the 1983 season. (The Spokesman-Review photo archive)

In a definitive Raveling story by Vince Devlin in the Spokesman-Review in 1983, Raveling recalled being the first Black basketball player to perform in West Virginia’s home gym. At one point, Raveling closed in on a Mountaineer guard breaking toward the basket with the ball.

His punishing foul at the rim laid out the opposing player. Realizing the player he had decked was All-American Jerry West, Raveling said he quickly hoped he hadn’t caused too much damage in such a hostile environment.

For him, the moment wasn’t about being a racial pioneer as much as just playing the game with the aggressiveness he felt it deserved. But it was an example of how Raveling would come to be connected with so many high-profile figures, and play a part of pivotal moments in history.

Several years later, as an assistant at Villanova, Raveling and a friend attended the 1963 March on Washington. They talked their way into duties providing security on the podium for speakers, leading Raveling to be positioned near Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during his “I Have a Dream” speech.

As the historic gathering cheered, King folded up his typed notes and walked toward Raveling, who asked if he could have it as a souvenir. King acceded, and Raveling held onto the historic document without mentioning it until an off-handed comment to a reporter in his first season coaching at Iowa led to its rediscovery.

Raveling turned down million-dollar offers for the three pages of the speech, and they are now displayed at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C.

•••

“So much of my adult life started in Pullman, Washington,” Raveling said. “Think about this, Washington State took a helluva chance when they hired me. I had no head-coaching experience.”

But as an assistant at Villanova, and then Maryland (under Lefty Driesell), Raveling had earned a reputation as a convincing recruiter. He had been the first Black assistant in the Atlantic Coast Conference. But his first two interviews for head coaching jobs ended without offers.

“I’m from the East. I’m an African-American. But Washington State took a gamble on me. Ray Nagel (athletic director) and Dr. (Glenn) Terrell (WSU president) were committed to me,” Raveling said. “My success was due to their loyalty.”

It was 1972, and Raveling was the first Black coach in the Pacific-8 Conference.

“At the time, it was the Pac-8, and of the eight coaches, 50 percent are in the Hall of Fame today,” Raveling said, adding himself to UCLA’s John Wooden, Washington’s Marv Harshman and Oregon State’s Ralph Miller.

“It was a powerhouse basketball conference in that historic framework,” Raveling said. “As good of a basketball conference as there was anywhere in the United States.”

George Raveling, who coached at both Washington State and USC, was inducted into the Pac-10 Basketball Men’s Hall of Honor in 2004. (The Spokesman-Review photo archive)

The Cougars, however, were considered one of the weaker programs. WSU had been to only one NCAA Tournament in its history, in 1941. And a scant total of three Black players had competed for the Cougars before Raveling’s arrival.

On the day he was hired, Raveling was asked about the challenges of recruiting to WSU by Spokane columnist Harry Missildine. “People who say you can’t recruit at WSU must be people who like to deal in negatives. I deal in positives,” Raveling said. “The test of a man is what he can do, not how many excuses he can give you why he can’t do it.”

Race, Raveling said, “was never, ever, an issue at Washington State.”

Raveling’s eventual success, leading the Cougars to two NCAA Tournaments, were part of his acceptance in the region, but his engaging personality was probably more important.

Guard Terry Kelly, a Gonzaga Prep product and part of Raveling’s first NCAA team in 1980, remembered his coach’s infectious personality.

“I felt Raveling’s energy, so did all the news reporters that came down. All those guys felt it; they were giddy when they were around Raveling,” Kelly said. He remembers walking with Raveling out of the gym after practice and his stopping to engage the custodian. “The way coach greeted him, he just lit up. I thought, wow, that’s the way you treat people. He was like that with everybody.”

Coach Jim Walden, in his 2005 book on Cougar football, recalled how Raveling used humor to charm boosters in the homogeneously Caucasian Palouse. Walden said Raveling told a gathering that he had heard some fans suggest they needed more “white guys” on the team, “so this year, I went out and recruited Roosevelt White and Willie White.”

Cheers and laughter. Raveling had them in his pocket.

•••

WSU and Spokane stories started coming back to Raveling, and one of his first was “the biggest mistake I ever made in coaching.”

Spokane Chevy dealer Jerry Camp, who supplied Raveling with his comp car, made only one request of the coach during his time in Pullman.

“He asked me to come up and take a look at (Gonzaga Prep’s) John Stockton,” Raveling recalled. Raveling had gotten Kelly out of G-Prep, but “for some reason, I didn’t think this (Stockton) kid from Spokane was good enough to play at the time. I wasn’t punctual about seeing him and it bothered Jerry, who called me another time. He said, ‘I never asked you to do anything before, but you’ve got to drive up and watch him’.”

About five minutes into the game, Raveling understood. He’d blown it. “I realized I made the biggest mistake of my career. I should have been up there and worked harder. He had even gone to the Cougar Cage Camp and wanted to go to Washington State. I tried to make up for it, but I think his dad thought, rightfully so, that if I really wanted him, I’d have been up there more aggressively.”

Stockton, of course, became a Hall of Fame professional player.

•••

As early as 1977, Raveling was giving off hints that college basketball might not be a broad enough environment for him.

He told Charlie Van Sickel of the Spokane Chronicle: “Many of the things that interest me the most are outside the walls of athletics. Athletics is strictly a vehicle that can move me along the road of life and help me expand as a person until I find that special area where I can make a special contribution.”

After leaving WSU, he coached three seasons at Iowa and eight more at USC. He assisted head coaches Bob Knight on the 1984 Olympic men’s team, and John Thompson on the 1988 Olympic team.

A long post-coaching career as an executive with Nike followed, as he helped build the shoe company’s basketball presence around the world.

Raveling was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013 and the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2015.

Over 22 seasons, his teams’ win percentage was a solid .533. They never won a conference title, and advanced to the NCAAs six times, with a 2-6 record. Hall of Fame-worthy? Raveling’s records short-sell his impact.

In a story on Raveling in the Sports Business Journal in 2017, Hall-of-Fame player Charles Barkley was quoted: “Coach Rav is like my grandfather. He’s the ‘Godfather’ for all the brothers playing basketball.”

And former USA basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo added: “If ever someone could be looked upon as a world ambassador for basketball, that’s George.”

Washington State coach George Raveling talks shooting with star big man Steve Puidokas in the mid-1970s. (The Spokesman-Review photo archive)

In his Hall of Fame speech in 2015, Raveling recalled the time when, at age 13, he held a basketball and felt empowered by it.

You can picture that moment, being lifted from what seemed like a Dickensian youth, living in an open dorm with 80 other hardscrabble boys in search of identities. His future could have gone in any direction, but no one could imagine the course of Raveling’s journey.

The game would take him around the world, and allow him to influence the lives of the famed and gifted. But he continued to treat the janitors and the night watchmen with an equal respect and deference. And he repaid his debt to the game many times over with the impact he made over decades across the globe.

Yes, basketball was his vehicle. But he was always the driver. And there hasn’t been another like him.

 

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Washington State President Kirk Schulz speaks out in 1-on-1


Washington State President Kirk Schulz speaks out in 1-on-1

Pac-12 rebuild timeline, Apple Cup, WSU... and his decision to retire.

By John Canzano, June 27 2024

 

= PHOTO Washington State will play in a two-member conference in 2024. (Photo: Serena Morones)

Washington State President Kirk Schulz will retire in June of 2025. The Pac-12 Conference remains in an existential crisis, tasked with a two-year rebuild. And earlier this week, Schulz promoted a long-time lieutenant to be his permanent athletic director.

I sat down with Schulz for a wide-ranging 1-on-1 conversation. We discussed his decision to retire, the future of the Pac-12, and the timeline for Washington State and Oregon State to pick a path. (Hint: Schulz is against slow-playing it.)

We also spoke about the growing power of the Big Ten and SEC, his decision to hire Anne McCoy as AD, and why Schulz wanted to continue to play the Apple Cup series against Washington.

 

CANZANO:

What went into your thinking when you decided it was time to leave Washington State and announce your retirement?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:  
I started talking with the Board of Regents a year prior to my announcement. I just kind of felt it had been enough. I think 9-10 years in a single presidency is a lot. And so in talking to my wife, my children, and everything — actually, my children, probably more so than anybody else. They were like, ‘Hey, Dad, You’ve taken your annual beating on virtually everything. Maybe it’s time for you to think about doing something else.’

I think you have those conversations with people, and you start evaluating how much longer you want to do it. I’ve always said I wanted people where I worked to say, I wish he stayed a year longer, not he stayed a year too long. I really felt that nine years was going to be about right.

I think the campus will be ready for somebody with some different perspectives. But it’s also given me enough time to allow me to do a lot of the things that I hope to be able to do and see some of the big projects through. So you add all that together, it just felt like the right time. I wanted to give the board plenty of time to do a real national search and go recruit the next candidate, not just sift through resumes because they had to do it in six months. I wanted to take a really mindful approach because, as you probably saw, the two Oregon universities have gone through some abrupt presidential changes. It’s hard to keep the momentum moving at an institution if you’re just constantly pulling one leader in and out. That stability piece I thought was really, really important as well. I’m not interested in being a president anywhere else. If I were, I’d just stay at WSU. I think after two presidencies, it’s enough, and look forward to handing the reins off to my successor and helping them be successful at WSU without interfering. That’s where I am.

 

CANZANO:

The Pac-12 had a lot of presidential turnover during the failed media rights negotiations. Oregon had two presidents and two interim presidents on the job in less than a year. Oregon State hired a new president, too. There was turnover at several other schools, too. Looking back, do you think the turnover played a role in the flow of the TV rights negotiation, or does the Pac-12 end up in the same place anyway?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

I think we probably end up in the same place anyway. You’ve written extensively about the reasons for the Pac-12 breakup and all those things. I think the hubris of a lot of the presidents on overvaluing ourselves in the marketplace did more damage to us in the last three years than anything else. But I don’t think the turnover really affected us that much.

 

CANZANO:

The President of the United States will sometimes leave a letter in the Oval Office for the successor. What would you write to your successor at Washington State? What advice would you give?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

My advice would be to dive in and get to know the people, the culture of the place, the different campuses, the state, Pacific Northwest, before making lots of decisions. I think sometimes presidents come in and feel they’ve got to show that they’re decisive in the first six months by making critical decisions. My advice is always to spend time getting to know everybody and everything. Talk to some people before jumping in and making all kinds of big decisions that you might later regret.

Your question makes me think about the advice I got from a mentor who was President of Virginia Tech years ago. It’s important for the president to have a working relationship with the men’s basketball coach and the football coach. I got that advice 15 years ago, and it’s still just as valid today as it was back then. Presidents can no longer distance themselves from the athletic enterprise the way maybe they could have 10 years ago. If a president is not willing to wade in, I think that’s going to be really tough. That would be the two things — get engaged with athletics and give yourself time to get to know a place before making decisions.

 

CANZANO:

The Big Ten and SEC are in an obvious position of power right now, particularly in college football. Mike Aresco, the recently retired American Athletic Conference commissioner, described it as “Darwinian” how those two conferences exerted their leverage during the College Football Playoff negotiations. How healthy is the SEC/Big Ten power dynamic for the college sports ecosystem?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

If I go back 10 years ago, I think we had commissioners who were seen as leaders at all the conferences. But at the end of the day, (the commissioner) would go back to the Big Ten or the SEC or the Pac-12 and there would be presidents that you would say, ‘OK, they are the real influential decision decision-makers here.’ At the end of the day, they’re going to sit down with the commissioner, and that’s the way it’s going to go.

Clearly, USC played a major role in decision-making in the Pac-12 for years. Within the Big Ten, certainly, Michigan and Ohio State traditionally have played an outsized role in decision-making in those conferences, that type of thing. I watched that shift over the last five years. Now, commissioners are really running things and they consult with presidents. Whether that’s good or not, I think, can be argued. But I do think we’re just in a different world where we’ve got commissioners running athletics and the presidents have taken a step back and frankly have been unwilling, generally, to be engaged at the level they need to until it’s too late.

Once all this stuff went down with the playoff and with the unequal distributions between the conferences and stuff like that, a few presidents are going, ‘Well, this isn't the way we want to do things.’ It’s like, where were you a year ago?!? And so I really think that we’ve watched that shift.

If you look at the last decade in terms of football and who has won national championships, part of the lack of competitiveness from some of the other conferences contributed a lot to the Big Ten and the SEC. We saw a rise in terms of television rights and how many people want to watch Alabama, Georgia, and Ohio State play football every Saturday vs. Pac-12 schools or Big 12 schools. I think the lack of other schools winning national championships also contributed to the fact that you’ve really got two leagues that are winning all of them, and getting the best players. Until somebody can break into that club, I think we’re going to continue to see this disproportionate functionality between the conferences.

 

CANZANO:

Do you think the growing gap can be bridged?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

The question becomes what fans do and how the fans react. Over time, I think if I went to a particular school and we won a bunch of championships, you might say, ‘Hey, this is the greatest thing ever.’ Well, everybody else goes, ‘Well, no, it’s not. We want our opportunity.’

Do we get 10 years down the road and we’ve seen four different schools — and that’s it — win a football national championship? Or do we see others that break in there, win a national championship, and you start seeing a little a bit more parity? It’s been hard for Washington State for decades to compete against Ohio State or Texas in terms of budget and those things. I worry about those gaps continuing to get so large that you worry if you ever have a chance of fielding that special team like the Cougar Rose Bowl team? Or the Gardner Minshew team we had a few years ago, where everything aligns for you in a season and you go out there and you have a great year? We worry if there will be stories that capture America and sports fans everywhere? Or is it the same schools winning every year all the time?

I’m hopeful and optimistic that we will see the Cinderella stories continue to be there, but I just think it’s going to become more and more difficult as the money becomes an even greater influence than it has been in the last 20 years.

 

=PHOTO Gardner Minshew and Mike Leach on the Pac-12 Network set.

 

CANZANO:

The Pac-12 has options: A) rebuild the conference to an NCAA minimum of eight teams; or B) root for chaos in the ecosystem and try to benefit from another round of realignment; or C) merge with another conference. How do you approach that intersection? Especially with one year to go in your tenure.

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

Yeah, John, we’re looking at all of the above. I think if you said, ‘Kirk, have you red-lined any of the options right now — any realistic option?’ Let me put it that way, I would say no… right now, our perspective is to keep ourselves flexible, make sure we don’t tie ourselves to something too quickly, whatever that may look like, and do an assessment then of the different options… to figure out which one seems politically the best as well as the one that’s going to provide Washington State with the best ability to compete and win conference championships.

I’m very committed to ensuring that we have a really great Division I conference — an all-sports conference — on the West Coast. I know some of the premier schools are in Midwest-based or East Coast-based conferences. But at the end of the day, I think the West Coast is going to want a premier conference. Now, does that look like some merger or whatever? I don’t know yet. But I do think that’s still really important to me and I think it’s important to some of my colleagues on the West Coast.

As you can imagine, lots of egos get in the way. We’ve got to be really careful about how we message. I think when we came out of the gate a year ago, there was a little bit of, ‘Hey, we’re just going to go cherry-pick whatever schools we want and everybody’s going to come running.’ I think we found out that we were behaving in a way that people said, ‘Hey, what was just done to you two schools… now you’re talking about doing the same to everybody else and it’s OK?!?’ I think we took a step backward and said, ‘Hey, let’s talk about maybe partnerships instead of acquisition.’

 

CANZANO:

What does the timeline for the Pac-12 look like in your mind?

 

I feel that in my conversations with (President) Jayathi Murthy at Oregon State, I think early in 2025, we’ve got to make a decision about where we’re going to be for the next four or five years. I don’t think we can continue having a foot in multiple conferences and hoping that something’s going to come our way. So I think we’re going to spend the fall planning, looking at our best options. And I think January-February, we’ve got to pick what we think is the best and aggressively move forward.

 

CANZANO:

So that’s where we are in the timeline.

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

I know that supposedly we have more time than that with the NCAA and those things, but if we’re not careful, we’re going to keep kicking the can down the road. It’ll hurt recruiting, hurt coach retention, hurt our student-athletes. They want to know who they’re going to be competing against. And so that’s the timeline, at least I feel, is important for us to hold to.

 

CANZANO:

I’ve written a lot about the $255 million war chest available to the two Pac-12 schools. I’m curious how you’ll use the money. Will you subsidize what media-rights money you would have normally received as a Power 5 member? Will you set aside money for exit fees, acquisitions, or “partnerships” as you call it?

You know, I think a little bit of that’s still up in the air, John. We reduced our athletics budget this last year by about $10 million to $11 million. And that is painful as hell. We let people go who worked for us for 30 years. I mean, it was not an easy set of decisions to make. The reason I bring that up is you’ve got really two choices here. You can say we’re going to use some of those dollars, the majority of those dollars, to ensure that Washington State and Oregon State get the same (TV distributions) we would have gotten from media rights and not 20 percent of what we would have gotten from media rights. I think at least for the next two years, we’re looking at the conference providing a reasonable subsidy coming back to each institution from that war chest to help us preserve our competitive budget and … give ourselves time for that last question about where are we going to be and what that’s going to look like.

I think that has been the approach much, much more so than, ‘Hey, let's sit on a huge bunch of money that we're going to go use to buy schools.’

I think cutting our athletic budget by $30 million so we can go buy somebody else, I think what would happen is people would say, ‘Well, Kirk, that’s great, but you just gutted us forever. Maybe that was too hasty a decision.’ So I know everybody looks and says, ‘Oh, you got all this money.’ But if you start looking at the media for the two schools over a couple of years, some of the legal stuff coming down the road, the need to keep a small conference office there, fees that we do have to pay to the Mountain West and other places to participate, you can burn through it pretty quickly. And we just want to make sure that we’re preserving some of those dollars for the future, but that we’re maintaining as much as possible the excellence we have in our programs right now.

 

=PHOTO WSU president Kirk Schulz, right, shakes hands with Oregon State AD Scott Barnes during the Pac-12 court hearing. (Photo: Geoff Crimmins)

 

CANZANO:

How important is it for the Pac-12 to stay nimble or lean in terms of the number of future conference members? Scott Barnes, the athletic director at Oregon State, told me he thought the number of teams should be on the right around eight or so. Is that strategy still in play, or is that to be determined as you sort things out?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

I think there’s no question that we’re going to try and keep as nimble as possible. And I think you’ve written about this in the past. I mean, we’re watching what happens on the East Coast with the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Clemson and Florida State, lawsuits. And it, unfortunately, feels an awful lot like what the Pac-12 was going through two years ago when USA and UCLA left. And to me, that was really the beginning of the unraveling. And so I think if the ACC were to remain intact with the same number of schools they presently have, I think that probably shuts down some options. I think if there is some change in what their league membership looks like that’s significant, that also may represent opportunities. And I think our fans would say, ‘Kirk, don't tie us into something when you don't know what’s happening with one of the other major Power Four conferences.’ And we just think in the next six months, by the end of football season, whatever is going to happen (in the ACC) is going to happen. I think being flexible gives us the opportunity to look at what we might be doing on the West Coast.

 

CANZANO:

Anne McCoy was promoted to be your athletic director this week. She goes from interim AD to permanent. What did you see that made you say she’s the pick?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

When I called Anne originally to ask her to serve as interim, I expected she knew budget cuts were looming. We had a couple of coach openings. I expected to have to do a very hard sell about why I thought she was the right person. And she came back and said, ‘Hey, I love this place. I've been here for more than 20 years, and I believe I’m the right leader at the right time to take us forward.’ And so she almost went into sales mode with me on the phone.

It was maybe the biggest recruiting call I’ve ever done. It was 10 minutes long, and we had an agreement, and she was off to the races. I had people, John, on campus, who stopped me in elevators that I had never met. They would say, ‘Hey, look, you got the right person as athletic director. You need to pull interim off her name.’ I got that for three months, just different people within athletics. I started getting a lot more of that from donors in the last month who had a chance to sit down and meet with her. I heard that from the faculty and other people.

But I still think I wanted Anne to have the opportunity to show the Cougar Nation what she could do… she’s had an eventful three months, and I think managed it really well with a very level head… I had somebody on my staff who said, ‘Hey, Kirk, don't you dare put Anne in let her do all the tough work, and then go hire somebody from the outside that comes in after somebody’s made the really hard decisions.’ And I thought that was just a really good piece of advice.

About two weeks ago, I sat down with Anne and said, I think I would love for you to serve as our permanent AD. And so then we went through the process of just finishing up her paperwork and stuff like that. She is the right person at the right time for WSU moving forward. She has a lot of internal and external support, and I just think that's really important for us right now.

The Apple Cup will continue to be played in football. You guys have agreed to play Washington in a five-year extension of that rivalry series. How important is that series to Washington State?

 

=PHOTO Washington State will play Washington on Sept. 14 next season. (Photo: Tim Healy)

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

It’s hugely important. I know after everything broke up, we had some segment of our fans that had no desire for us to ever play the University of Washington again. But I will tell you, John, from my experience when I was in the Big 12 and we watched Texas and Texas A&M go different directions, and Missouri, and Kansas, and these others... everybody was angry after a year But two or three years later, people are like, ‘Man, I miss those rivalries. That used to be such a big deal for us.’

So my experience of having gone through that and recognizing that, ‘Hey, realignment sucks, nobody likes it, but let’s not lose some of those long-term rivalries.’ I appreciate the fact that the University of Washington also came to it from that same perspective. That it was important in the state for the two large Division I football-playing schools to continue to play each other. So I think it’s going to be important to our fans. I think it’s fun in the state when those things happen.

You’ve covered sports in Oregon and Washington and other places for years. People get amped up that week, even if the game or teams aren't as competitive as everyone wants. Sometimes people get excited in the offices. Everybody takes a side during that week. I think for us, being able to play in a neutral site in Seattle with a huge population in Washington that lives in that area along that I-5 corridor, it’s a real opportunity for both programs, frankly, to showcase what they're going to be this next year. So is there some part of our fan base that was like, ‘Screw UW’? Absolutely. That part will still be there. At the end of the day, our fans and our athletes, and our coaches want to do this. I think it’s important for us to continue to meet annually and celebrate the rivalry and make sure that different conference affiliations don’t mean that those things go away.

 

CANZANO:

I’m a deadline person. It’s the business I work in. You've got a one-year deadline right now until you retire. How does that feel? Are you at a point where you’re having to make some decisions about the things you really want to get done in the next year, or will that come with three months to go in the tenure?

 

KIRK SCHULZ:

I’ve got three or four things that were really critical for me. One was enrollment stabilization at WSU. I think that’s around the corner for us. We’re in the middle of a major fundraising campaign for WSU and we’ve got lots of positive momentum four years in. What I want to do is hand off to my successor that same fundraising momentum and excitement. The Pac-12 Conference and Cougar Athletics, I want to hand to the next person, ‘OK, here’s where we‘re going to be the next five years.’

I do not want a brand new president to come in and have to navigate that as much as possible. If I look at it, those are probably the things that I want to really focus on and spend my time on this next year. No, I do have three or four things, but it’s not 10… but if I can get those things across the finish line, and hand the baton off, I’ll feel really good about the transition.

 

CANZANO:

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Contact: https://www.johncanzano.com

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