I agree with you to a certain extent, but really if that is what you want, I guess you picked the wrong university.ponyboy wrote:I guess I slipped into a more macro view. Having a larger alumni presence in Dallas would help football, which is of course the immediate subject. But it'd help in other areas of the university too.
A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Case in point.JesuitPony wrote:Great post and great plan. I wish I lived closer so that I could attend more home games.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Wait a minute. Calallen is suggesting things we do to make things better. I've added another idea: that we consider changing the geographic mix of incoming students. If it's a good idea, you then implement that new strategic direction. All of these ideas involve changing the university from what it is to something better.mustangxc wrote:I agree with you to a certain extent, but really if that is what you want, I guess you picked the wrong university.ponyboy wrote:I guess I slipped into a more macro view. Having a larger alumni presence in Dallas would help football, which is of course the immediate subject. But it'd help in other areas of the university too.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Mandating that more of our student body be in-state would decrease the quality of the student body. Ain't happening, nor should it.ponyboy wrote:Wait a minute. Calallen is suggesting things we do to make things better. I've added another idea: that we consider changing the geographic mix of incoming students. If it's a good idea, you then implement that new strategic direction. All of these ideas involve changing the university from what it is to something better.mustangxc wrote:I agree with you to a certain extent, but really if that is what you want, I guess you picked the wrong university.ponyboy wrote:I guess I slipped into a more macro view. Having a larger alumni presence in Dallas would help football, which is of course the immediate subject. But it'd help in other areas of the university too.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Calallen's ideas involve improving the football program, not the university as a whole. We can improve football, game atmosphere, etc. without messing with the core of our student body. Some subtle tweaks are fine, but changing the composition would completely change our course.
Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
why don't we not try at all. wait we already did that.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
I'm not suggesting you mandate a result. There are other ways to achieve a goal than mandate. And why shouldn't it happen? What is the purpose of this school? What's the end goal? What does success look like? Is it an ever increasing national academic presence, a la Rice or the University of Chicago? Both of their football teams suck, one really badly since they cancelled football years ago.East Coast Mustang wrote:Mandating that more of our student body be in-state would decrease the quality of the student body. Ain't happening, nor should it.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
The university's mission as a whole isn't to have a nationally competitive football program. Stanford, Northwestern, and more recently Vanderbilt are all private institutions that draw students from across the country, and they're all competitive at the highest level of college football at the moment. No reason we can't do the sameponyboy wrote:I'm not suggesting you mandate a result. There are other ways to achieve a goal than mandate. And why shouldn't it happen? What is the purpose of this school? What's the end goal? What does success look like? Is it an ever increasing national academic presence, a la Rice or the University of Chicago? Both of their football teams suck, one really badly since they cancelled football years ago.East Coast Mustang wrote:Mandating that more of our student body be in-state would decrease the quality of the student body. Ain't happening, nor should it.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Good examples, but it seems to me more complex than that. Anyway, apologies for dragging us off course. Cheers.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Doesn't matter. In 10 years we will have separate but unequal football divisions. The train has left the station and we're not on it.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
If I understand this correctly, the choice is between a first group consisting of private schools that is strong (USC) to very strong (NW) academically (this removes TCU) and has D1 programs in a power conference vs. a group of schools that are very strong academically but no D1 programs? Well, that is a tough question because taking all things into account, in my opinion (based on your list), my order of preference would be UChicago > NW > W&L > USC > Emory > >> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >tcu.ponyinNC wrote:
I lay this at the feet of RGT and the Trustees. My one question to them - do you want to be TCU, USC or Northwestern? Or do you want to be Emory, W&L or U Chicago?
If I had to choose a happy medium, I'd choose for SMU to strive to be like a ND, which is more comparable in size to us and has very strong academics and is a powerhouse in D1 atheletics.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
And, 100% Christian and Republican? Man, that would indeed be one intellectually incestuous [deleted]!ponyboy wrote:To add to your plan, here's one thing I'd do strategically. I'd make it a goal that 80% of incoming students are from Texas and 50% from DFW. We are small enough without adding to the fact that the overwhelming majority of students graduate and go back to California, Illinois, Missouri. We'll never develop even a reasonably sized local alumni fan base with the current model where non-Texans outnumber Texans.
Let's cripple the national reputation of the university in order to promote the football program. Didn't we already experience that some years back?
You are frightening me, Ponyboy.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
You are quite the reader, pulling such an amazing amount of content from so few words.
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Re: A ten-year plan for SMU Football competitiveness
Sorry ponyboy, but we are a national university, and become more national vs. state every year I believe. There is nothing wrong with that, otherwise we'd be a public school (texas) or a regional private school (tcu, baylor, etc). That is not what we want to be, and the student body quality reflects the differences. SMU will not trade that off to have more local alumni for increased football attendance.ponyboy wrote:You are quite the reader, pulling such an amazing amount of content from so few words.
We have plenty of local alumns and alumns that will travel, if we have a good product on the field.