New Texas AD - Chris Del Conte

Interesting. I have presumed for awhile now that much was going on behind the scenes. I have heard bits and pieces here and there, but knew the full story would probably be more interesting that most fans would imagine...
 
The Iron Law of Institutions - the more power someone has within a given institution, the more they tend to care about their own power within the institution relative to the power of others within the institution, while caring less about the overall institution itself.
 
Partial below........



Former Texas president Bill Powers dropped a few bombs before leaving office in June of 2014 that had a profound impact on the misaligned world of UT athletics ultimately inherited by Perrin:


But then to save his own skin as UT president against virulent opposition from four regents appointed by former Gov. Rick Perry, Powers found himself promising he’d help replace Dodds and Brown in 2013 - so an influential group of donors could attempt to hire Alabama head coach Nick Saban.

It all blew up in Game of Thrones fashion on Friday the 13th in December of 2013 - the night of UT’s football banquet. (More on that in a minute.)

NO. 3 … The influence of Jeff Hunt
Powers also allowed UT alum and confidant Jeff Hunt - a paid media consultant to the Pac-12, Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott as well as the Pac-12 networks - to push then-Arizona State AD Steve Patterson for the same job at Texas after Dodds was let go in October of 2013.

Powers authorized the hire of search firm Korn/Ferry International to assist in its AD search, as well as appointing a search committee.

In the end, Korn/Ferry’s top candidate ended up being then-West Virginia AD Oliver Luck.

But Powers allowed an “outside-the-box” candidate - Patterson - to also be interviewed by the search committee at the urging of Hunt.

According to records obtained by HD, Hunt’s consulting firm - Pulse Point - became a part of Powers’ presidential payroll at $300,000 per year beginning in 2010 (when UT was seriously considering joining the Pac-10).

A move by Texas to the Pac-10 was something being pushed like crazy by Hunt to Powers, a Cal graduate who supported Texas joining the Pac-10 and rubbing shoulders academically with the likes of Cal and Stanford.

In hindsight, Hunt having any involvement in pushing Patterson as an AD candidate at Texas had conflict-of-interest written all over it, considering Hunt’s close relationship with the Pac-10 and commissioner Larry Scott, a longtime friend of Hunt.

At Texas, not only was Hunt, a confidant of Powers, he is a longtime confidant of Texas women’s athletic director Chris Plonsky, dating to when Hunt was an intern for Plonsky when she was the sports information director for women’s athletics at UT in the 1980s.

With Plonsky’s blessing, according to sources inside the department, Hunt would later attempt (in 2015) to become the head of communications for Texas athletics under Patterson (the position previously held by senior associate AD Nick Voinis). But that move was thwarted by Greg Fenves, who also cut Pulse Point from the UT president’s payroll once Fenves took over as UT president in June of 2015.

But before Hunt was cut out of the UT president’s inner circle by Fenves, he was able to convince Powers to have the AD search committee interview Luck before it interviewed Patterson.

So the committee traveled to Fort Worth (the weekend WVU played at TCU in 2013) to talk to Luck first - on Saturday, Nov. 2. According to sources close to the situation, Hunt was made aware of something Luck said that stood out negatively to some committee members.

Luck told the committee if anything was going to happen to Mack Brown (in terms of being let go), Luck would prefer that happened before he took over as AD.

Sources said Hunt made sure that was relayed to Patterson, who confidently told the committee in Arizona the next day (Sunday, Nov. 3) that as president of the Portland Trailblazers (from 2003-07), he sought 92 staff cuts and got 88 approved by ownership.

“Hunt basically gave Patterson the answers to the test,” one source close to the situation told HornsDigest.com.

Patterson also boasted to the committee about how he oversaw the construction of then-Reliant Stadium as a member of the Houston Texans’ front office and how building a new UT basketball arena “would be fun,” sources said.

Ironically, the UT athletic department grew from 360 full-time employees to more than 400 in his 22 months as AD, and Patterson ultimately advocated for keeping Brown on as football coach - helping derail any attempt by donors to go after Saban.

In fact, Patterson, after being lobbied by Mack Brown all week about how Patterson would never be in charge as AD if Saban were the football coach, announced at breakfast on Dec. 14, 2013, to 17 recruits on their UT official visit, that Brown was returning as their coach in 2014.

(Two sources close to the situation told HD Powers failed to terminate Brown at a private meeting before the 2013 football banquet, in part, because Mack not only brought his agent/lawyer Joe Jamail to the meeting but also brought Mack’s wife, Sally, like Powers, a Cal graduate whom Powers liked and respected very much.)

Once word got out that Brown had not been terminated, the influential donors contacted Powers and threatened to end their financial support for the university (tens of millions of dollars) if Brown stayed on as football coach, sources told HD.

So, right after Patterson told the recruits on their official visits Brown was staying on as head coach, Powers contacted Patterson and told his new AD - one month into the job - he had to inform Brown immediately that Brown was being terminated.

Sources told HD after Patterson delivered the Code Red to Brown, the 16-year head coach tried to call Powers for hours and never got a response.



THE WRECKAGE OF STEVE PATTERSON
Well, that was just the background on the condition of UT leading into the hire of Charlie Strong as football coach. As we know, UT again turned to Korn/Ferry - this time for its football coaching search.

It was well-known among insiders that Korn/Ferry headhunter Jed Hughes was giving a high recommendation to Louisville’s Charlie Strong. That’s why immediately after the UT job came open, Strong was promptly a favorite to land the job in Vegas.

According to a source close to UCLA coach Jim Mora, Patterson offered the Texas job to Mora before hiring Strong. But Mora, citing his family’s desire to be in southern California, turned it down, the source said.

As you know from all the reporting we did here at HD on the Patterson regime ( Patterson alienated key UT personnel and donors - link to my big story about Patterson facing increased heat) and was dismissed by Fenves 22 months into a six-year, guaranteed contract paying him an annual salary of $1.4 million.

Patterson was told by UT president Greg Fenves in mid-September 2015 he would be fired for cause or he could accept a contract settlement, which ultimately totaled $2.9 million.



PATTERSON OUT, PERRIN IN
Enter Houston attorney and former Longhorns’ defensive end under Darrell K Royal - Mike Perrin, who will turn 71 in November - as Fenves’ choice to replace Patterson on an interim basis.

To say Perrin’s wife, Melinda, didn’t factor into the decision would be naive. Melinda Perrin, the daughter of former Texas attorney general and chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court John Hill, has been an active member of the Longhorn Foundation Advisory Council and formed a close relationship with Fenves’ top deputy in the UT president’s office - Nancy Brazzil.

Mike Perrin, a great listener meticulous about details, as a lawyer, began surveying the damage left behind by Patterson.

Perrin reviewed service contracts entered into by Patterson - ranging from Disney (for customer service training) to Aspire (which provided more than a dozen employees - paid for by UT - to help sell season tickets and served as donors’ personal concierge within the Longhorn Foundation).

Upon further review, Perrin was turned off by the Aspire contract and terminated the deal because it called for Aspire to get an increasing cut of the season-ticket revenue. Basically, the more tickets Aspire helped sell, the more money UT had to turn over to Aspire.

“We don’t need anyone to help us sell tickets,” Perrin told HD.



PERRIN, A BIG-MONEY DONOR, RE-CONNECTS THE BIG-MONEY DONORS
One of the most important things Perrin did immediately after becoming Texas’ AD was reach out to UT’s big-money donors - considering Perrin himself is a UT big-money donor.

“Steve Patterson didn’t leave a wake of good feelings,” said prominent UT donor Corby Robertson, a Houston businessman and football teammate of Perrin under DKR who has known Perrin since they were 17.

“They hired a business guy (in Patterson), and I’m not sure the business guy understood the culture and the passion of UT athletics," Robertson said. "And Steve (Patterson) was not a warm and friendly guy, which doesn’t help at a place where everyone graduates with a degree in football.

“Bringing Mike in made total sense, because Mike has helped the UT law school, the Longhorn Foundation and been an adviser to leaders at the school. His wife, Melinda, has chaired everything at UT there is to chair.

“Mike’s been my teammate since 1965, and any team he’s been on, he’s made a significant contribution. Confidence, trust and appreciation are things he exudes. He has no ego. It’s not about Mike. It’s about the university, and he’s been able to articulate that to alums, faculty and students.”



SUPPORTING CHARLIE STRONG
Robertson said Perrin did everything he could to come in and support Charlie Strong.

One of the first things Perrin did was bring back Strong's preferred communications director - John Bianco - who had been fired by Patterson after Jeff Hunt conducted a survey of some members of the media about Bianco's job performance.

Even though it took a rescue mission to Tulsa with Fenves in tow, Perrin helped make sure Strong got the new offensive coordinator he wanted (Sterlin Gilbert).

Perrin and Fenves were holding out hope Strong could turn things around, and were prepared to bring him back in 2017. All Strong had to do was make sure Texas beat Kansas to reach six wins.

But the losses to Kansas and TCU, ensuring Strong's third-straight losing season, sealed Strong's fate.

“One of the hardest things you’ll ever do as a manager is fire someone," Corby Robertson told HD. "And I know that took a toll on Mike. But in the end, Mike had to help make a hard decision. And now Mike should be judged on how Tom Herman does.”



BRINGING TRUST BACK TO UT ATHLETICS
Prominent UT donor Mike A. Myers, whose name is on the school’s track and soccer stadium, said, “Mike Perrin was the right guy to come and get things settled down after Steve Patterson because Mike is a guy absolutely everyone trusts. And that’s the way everyone felt about DeLoss (Dodds).

“If Mike tells you something, you can take it to the bank. And a lot of us weren’t feeling that after DeLoss left as athletic director and before Mike got there.

"We were losing our sense of family, and Mike helped bring that back at a time when it was absolutely imperative. He’s made the athletic director position and the athletic department better for the next person. And everyone should be incredibly grateful to Mike for that.”

Perrin is known for his yellow legal pads. He has one in front of him in every meeting he’s in. He listens and takes meticulous notes.

“That’s the lawyer in me,” Perrin laughed.



TO PUT IT MILDLY, MIKE PERRIN IS THOROUGH
Maybe too thorough, Robertson laughed, when asked about UT's search for new baseball coach David Pierce that seemed to drag on for an eternity (just more than a month) and probably helped at least six coaches, including those at TCU, Texas Tech, Florida, LSU, UCLA and Oregon State, get raises.

“Those agents were reaching out, and I’m sure Mike was making sure every ‘i’ was dotted and every ’t’ was crossed in terms of consideration of candidates,” Robertson said.

“I know Mike liked David (Pierce) from the beginning and had a connection with him. So maybe all that other stuff was Mike being really thorough - and that’s because he cares and wants as much information as he can get before making a decision.”

Perrin was also criticized in some circles for failing to allow Under Armour to bid on UT’s lucrative apparel contract - instead agreeing to re-up with Nike in the fall of 2015 without considering other bids.

But sources said Nike had legitimate concerns about if Patterson and chief financial officer of athletics Steve Hank had violated Nike’s exclusive negotiating period by talking to Under Armour.

Sources told HD at the time Under Armour would’ve paid Texas a record $260 million over 10 years while making Austin its college apparel/branding headquarters.

Sources said there were concerns about how much Under Armour would expect from Texas in terms of helping to promote UA’s college apparel sponsorships.

In the end, there were also legal concerns - big, legal concerns regarding Nike’s exclusive negotiating period - if Texas went with Under Armour, sources said.

And Perrin didn’t want any more clouds or negativity tied to Texas athletics at that time - especially considering Nike had been a good partner for Texas dating back to their first deal in 2000.

Steve Hunt seems like a total *** hat who shouldn't be involved in any heavy decision making.
 
TCU student ticket policy under Del Conte: students get in free, they only need student ID, and it is general admission for students. The student sections are the sections immediately behind the visiting team bench.
 
Define "team" - same people that already screwed it up multiple times?

You came from a Christian university. I don't care what your boss is, he works for Christians at the pleasure of Christians. Save your politically correct "Happy Holidays" for his office, or do we need to call Oliver Luck now?
 
Define "team" - same people that already screwed it up multiple times?

You came from a Christian university. I don't care what your boss is, he works for Christians at the pleasure of Christians. Save your politically correct "Happy Holidays" for his office, or do we need to call Oliver Luck now?
What are you talking about?
 
I don’t know. The real thing is nice but in bad weather it can be a quagmire. Due to advances, the issues with turf causing knee injuries seems to be a thing of the past.

One thing though: I wish they would get more creative with the field graphics, particularly in the end zones. I don’t have the answer but what we have there now — and have had for a while — is pretty mundane.
 
Didn't Deloss install grass with suction fans to drain water? Seems we had a problem with sod flying everywhere during games, plus the cost of replacing patches of turf weekly.

Reliant Stadium in Houston has had a problem with the natural grass surface since the stadium opened. AND NO, it has nothing to do with the **** McNair puts on the playing field.
 
IIRC they installed the turf so that more games could be played (i.e. rental income from HS teams). Herman had to ok it so the assumption would be less were and tear on the legs and possible lowering the probability of knee/"high ankle" injuries.
Now if CDC can just find a receiver coach who can teach routes and when to come off the route to help the scrambling QB. No evidence yet that Herman has found one.
 
Didn't Deloss install grass with suction fans to drain water? Seems we had a problem with sod flying everywhere during games, plus the cost of replacing patches of turf weekly.

Reliant Stadium in Houston has had a problem with the natural grass surface since the stadium opened. AND NO, it has nothing to do with the **** McNair puts on the playing field.

NRG is putting in the Hellas turf. Hellas is Austin-based.
 
That night after the banquet in 2013, I had Mack and Case McCoy autograph a picture from our beat down of OU. Mack and I spoke for a couple of minutes and I shook his hand, thanked him and told him I was looking forward to the next season. I felt good about everything because he had that "2008" look in his eyes that I had not seen in a long time. I hugged Sally, and wished them a Merry Christmas. She sort of laughed and indicated Christmas at their house was bowl preparation. Asked her if she had any cookies in her purse and she laughed.

Since that night, only the wins against Notre Dame and OU have made me feel ownership in Longhorn football. I never believed that an empty suit like Patterson would have taken the gig knowing he was going to have to fire/hire a football coach and basketball coach in his first 90 days.

Sometimes the under belly needs to not be seen. The first President Bush, DeLoss and Mack all had one common quality that you want in someone: loyalty. In their cases, it was loyalty to a fault and their eventual undoing.

Just thinking out load.

:cowrose::soapbox::hookem2:
 
Didn't Deloss install grass with suction fans to drain water? Seems we had a problem with sod flying everywhere during games, plus the cost of replacing patches of turf weekly.
....

That system was pretty expensive as I recall
The infograpgh in the newspaper at the time made it look pretty cool
 
This surprises me. In the time of careful cost accounting I’m thinking this is a very expensive alternative. Plus I didn’t think our current turf was that old, could be wrong on that. I do remember bragging about our old grass system with its drainage vacuum system, etc. It worked pretty well in that Mo game when a deluge hit and there was a lightening delay. That was amazing. Water poured down the upper deck (west side) like a huge waterfall. Players loved it as I remember. Couldn’t tell you the year but it was long ago and a great game cause we won.
 
I haven't been able to make a game in a few years or so, but I see a lot of complaints about the gamely experience. I'll tell you, as much as I don't give a crap about the SECSECSEC!!, watching one of its games on TV has a much more festive, football looking look. It just looks 1000 times better than the overly green field and way too bright orange Bevo at midfield that Texas currently sports.

If the By Gawd University of Texas Athletic Department can't afford to do this, that's a problem. It doesn't take money from the University, so the cost should seem to be immaterial to the average fan.
 
It just looks 1000 times better than the overly green field and way too bright orange Bevo at midfield that Texas currently sports.
I agree. I’d like to see the University get creative and come up with something, on the field (graphics), that viewers all over the country would notice and remember. (No, not an orange field aka Boise State.) Some fields, like Tennessee, are unforgettable and create a special feel...
 
I turned on one of those nameless early bowl games and the field was that bright Boise blue. There was no doubt in my mind where that game was being played.
 
Burnt orange turf... if we get it right it'll just look pants and helmets running all over the field. Can even bring back the track while we're at it :hookem:
 
I might add the word TEXAS above the logo at the 50 yard line, like they did with the numbers above the logo on the old helmets.
 
I might add the word TEXAS above the logo at the 50 yard line, like they did with the numbers above the logo on the old helmets.

Next year (2019) is the 150th anniversary of college football. Wonder if they will put a decal of a football with 150 in on the helmets it like they did in ‘69 for the 100th year.
 
The perspective from IT --

" ....His outreach has been impressive. You can gather that from his interactions on Twitter but he's the same way behind the scenes...... He's essentially intimated that many people won't be there this time next year ..... we'll see downsizing as early as the end of this school semester..... as much as 200 people

This may appear to be financially motivated to outsiders but that has nothing to do with it. To Del Conte, it's about removing bureaucratic bloat and operating with greater efficiency. This bloat is seen as a culture killer and source of entitlement. Culture within the department is something he's actively trying to change. If you're not on board with it, or fight it, your employment there is terminal.

He knew this problem existed coming in but he did not know to this degree...."
 
Where do we send our recommendations for "wasted space"?

Am I limited as to how many times a day I can make the same nomination?

:hookem2:
 

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