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Saturday’s Game

My wife and I are coming up from Louisiana for Saturday’s game against NC State. Our oldest Daughter and Husband are driving down from Ohio, the Middle Daughter and Fiancé are flying up from Florida and the youngest is a Grad student at Bellarmine after graduating from U of L will be at Cardinal Stadium.

We will be there tommorow...... what about you?

Show the players that you haven’t quit on them.

I expect big things!

Get your @$$ to the stadium... this isn’t the 1970’s.

Go Cards
L1C4

Louisville & Purdue Athletics Revenue Comparison

For those who want to check out whose is bigger, here is the most recent published data on Athletics Revenue at Louisville and Purdue.

One note of caution, Louisville Revenue has increased significantly over the last many years, but is now likely to reduce a bit for a year or two.

But, anyway:

Here is the 2016-2017 Revenue (note, this is the last year for which USA Today provides data):

Louisville #22 $120,445,303

Purdue #46 $84,841,133

FB RECRUITING: What I'm hearing on Louisville TE commit Sam Snyder...

It was reported by Dave on Monday that TE commit Sam Snyder was worried having not checked out other schools and had given the impression that he was on the fence with his commitment to Louisville (this was his report HERE). Snyder is an extremely important piece to the recruiting class as he is not only at a position of need but also appears to possess a high ceiling. After speaking with someone with direct knowledge of Sam Snyder's recruitment things appeared to have settled down substantially.

According to the source, late Monday evening Sam Snyder received a call from Pete Nochta, Richard Owens, and Vince Tyra. They told Snyder that with the new coach coming in Sam's offer is secure and they really need him at tight end. The source said that Sam and his family felt reassured and comfortable by this conversation. Therefore at this time, it sounds like his commitment to Louisville is solid.

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I Keep Hearing Pundits Brohm shouldn't Take the Job

as we are a depleted train wreck with funding issue and that he should wait for a better time. well, my simple question is when it is a better time than now? when someone else has brought us back to glory and there's no job opening? or does he wait until he's 70 and we suck and we give him a sympathy job in hopes of inspiring a future fan base? does he come after building purdue into a big 10 power and decides winning there isn't worth it anymore?

quite simply, the job is open now and even though purdue would be pissed they'll know it's his hometown. additionally, in terms of having the upper hand in negotiations, pretty sure he can ask for most reasonable things plus a bag of chips. if he has ever dreamed of being the head coach at louisville, his alma mater, his hometown where his parents still live, then this may be the only opportunity he ever gets and for pundits to say don't take it then not a single one of them has ever had the opportunity to coach at their alma mater. the only reason brohm doesn't come here in my honest opinion is he doesn't want that local pressure in case he fails. otherwise, on average, it's 20 degrees warmer here than in west lafayette and a lot closer trip to recruit in florida.

NCAA Soccer Bracket .... this just in. The ACC is freakin' GOOD. We're 4 overall seed.

The NCAA Men's Soccer Championship Bracket is loaded with ACC teams.

https://www.ncaa.com/brackets/soccer-men/d1/2018

9 of the 12 ACC teams made the field of 48.

HALF of the top 16 seeds that receive a first round bye are ACC teams. And how about Syracuse? They finished 1-4-3 in league play and the committee still gave them the 16th seed overall.

#1 Wake Forest
#4 Louisville
#5 North Carolina
#6 Duke
#7 Notre Dame
#10 Virginia
#12 Virginia Tech
#16 Syracuse
NC State


Pretty good stuff.

CFB Head Coach Buyouts as of Dec 1, 2018

This is what it takes for schools to buy out their coach's contracts right now.

This is from the USA Today data base:

1. $68,125,000 Texas A&M SEC Jimbo Fisher
2. $38,058,402 Ohio State Big Ten Urban Meyer
3. $35,000,000 Clemson ACC Dabo Swinney
4. $33,600,000 Alabama SEC Nick Saban
5. $32,143,750 Auburn SEC Gus Malzahn
6. $27,197,500 Georgia SEC Kirby Smart
7. $26,354,166 Washington Pac 12 Chris Peterson
8. $25,416,667 Nebraska Big Ten Scott Frost
9. $22,396,250 Iowa Big Ten Kirk Ferentz
10. $21,958,333 Florida State ACC Willie Taggart
11. $21,516,667 Purdue Big Ten Jeff Brohm
12. $20,833,333 Oklahoma Big 12 Lincoln Riley
13. $19,291,667 Iowa State Big 12 Matt Campbell
14. $18,650,000 South Carolina SEC Will Muschamp
15. $18,375,000 Penn State Big Ten James Franklin
16. $18,193,750 Virginia ACC Bronco Mendenhall
17. $17,111,110 Michigan Big Ten Jim Harbaugh
18. $16,250,000 Oklahoma State Big 12 Mike Grundy
19. $15,625,000 Kentucky SEC Mark Stoops
20. $15,416,667 Texas Big 12 Tom Herman
21. $15,000,000 Virginia Tech ACC Justin Fuente
22. $14,056,250 Louisville ACC Bobby Petrino
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Lawyer Speak Question, When A Coach is bought out does it restrict him from coaching?

i believe in most buyout cases, the person being bought out usually has some restrictions on future employment, almost like alimony if the a spouse gets remarried the alimony stops. les miles just condensed his buyout from LSU so he could coach next year meaning under his buyout, he wasn't able to coach. So even if we buy petrino out, is there a chance the full amount is not reached? anyone know about his contract or things liek this?
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Just some thoughts for the financial

junkies on this board. Yeah that “could” mean you zipp. How about this theory. AD Tyra offers J. Brohm about a 1/2 million more per year than he’s getting from Purdue. But then sweetens the deal by guaranteeing an additional 1.5 million per year to be paid from the ACC/ESPN TV deal that kicks in during 2019. Some something for all of you financial gurus to think about. It just might work. Dadgumit, am I a financial genius or WHUT!

GO CARDS - BEAT EVERYBODY!!! God Bless America!!!
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New Coach What We Need

I have seen several suggestions on a new Coach. Some I Like, some I do not. In the selection process, we need to consider we play in a league the ACC, in which great defense is path to long term success. The ACC is a conference more like the SEC, then the Big 12. or PAC 12 All this talk about hiring offense minded HC's is misplaced IMO.

We need a HC that will build a solid foundation with Defense. Not a guy that is gonna chuck the ball all over the yard . That will not work in our league, just like it hasn't worked in SEC. See NC experiment with Fedora. Babers will not be successful long term in the ACC, not a good enough defensive foundation in his program. FSU experiment with Taggert will also end in failure.

Teams that have been a long term success in our league have always had a great defensive product: See Clemson, VT, FSU, Miami.

UL has had it's best success in recent memory with who? I will tell you who it was A DEFENSIVE MINDED COACH CHARLIE STRONG.

If you want to look with our league think Narducci or Adazio instead of Babers or Fedora.

Let's build a program the right way like Saban does, base it on defense, not the the guy who throws the ball all over the yard.

Stop the run first defense, and run the football first on offense, these are the keys to long term success in our league, IMO

WSJ: Forget the Playoff, College Football’s Burning Question Is About Taxes

Forget the Playoff, College Football’s Burning Question Is About Taxes
Repeal of write-off for seat donations upends a key means some schools use to raise funds; questions about ‘priority points’

The University of Iowa is telling donors it won’t give them a tax receipt if they get points for improved seating, a response to the tax law’s repeal of the seat donation write-off.
By
Rachel Bachman and
Laura Saunders
Updated Nov. 16, 2018 12:00 p.m. ET

On seven game days every fall, more than 50,000 football fans stream into the University of Iowa’s Kinnick Stadium eager to cheer on the Hawkeyes.

For years, many of the alumni and fans pouring into the stadium were able to write off much of their season-ticket cost on their federal tax returns. Not anymore.

Fans at other schools also are grappling with changes. Last year, some athletic donations at the University of North Carolina and the University of Mississippi could qualify as a tax deduction and also give the donor access to better seats. In 2018, people making those gifts must choose between the deduction and seat access. At Penn State, donors can be eligible for better seats at home games as well as a tax deduction for certain gifts.

The tax treatment of college football donations has turned into a bewildering tangle thanks to last year’s tax overhaul, the most far-reaching rewrite of the U.S. tax code since 1986. Buried in the bill was the repeal of a write-off for so-called seat donations. Internal Revenue Service guidance on lingering questions about the change isn’t expected for months.

Seat donations are a longtime practice of many athletic departments. Under this policy, fans of prominent college sports programs across the country typically donate $50 to $4,000 or more per seat to a school’s athletic foundation. In return, fans get the right to buy season tickets in stadiums’ premium locations. Under prior law, fans could take an 80% tax deduction for the seat donation.

These seat donations became integral to college athletic fundraising. Often the donation far exceeds the cost of the tickets.

At many schools, donations and other tax-deductible donations also yield “priority points,” loyalty rewards that accumulate over years. Donors with the most points get first crack at choice seats when available, plus other benefits.

But now the seat-donation write-off is gone. Faced with its loss, schools last year urged fans to pay for several years of seat donations in 2017, and many did.

Among them was Gary Priestap, a 74-year-old University of Michigan fan who owns a small financial-services firm in Brighton, Mich. He is one of the nearly 90,000 Wolverines’ supporters who have season tickets to the Big House.

‘They want to have a major impact, and we’re having to tell them we don’t know if the gift is going to be deductible if they get priority points.’

Last December, when he learned that the tax law would repeal the deduction for his 16-seat suite at Michigan Stadium, he paid an extra two years of the $57,000 donation required for his $72,000 suite.

Mr. Priestap has calculated the tax change wouldn’t be as burdensome as he initially feared. Still, he says it would increase his out-of-pocket cost for the suite by 25%.

“The program, the success that they’re enjoying this year, makes it really fun to have,” Mr. Priestap said of the Wolverines, who are 9-1 heading into Saturday’s game against Indiana. “If they were 2-10 or something, it wouldn’t be nearly as much fun.”

Seat donations can make up half or more of the funds raised by athletic foundations. At the University of Georgia’s athletic foundation, seat donations provided $40 million of $80 million raised for fiscal 2018. At Ole Miss, seat donations raised $20 million out of $31 million in total contributions to its athletic foundation in fiscal 2018.

At Ole Miss, donors making gifts beyond seat donations must choose between taking a tax deduction and receiving priority points that help secure better seats at home games.

Some schools are seeing donor attrition due to the change. At the University of Oklahoma, “there’s been some impact because we’ve heard directly from some donors who have decided not to renew tickets,” athletic director Joe Castiglione said. “More than a handful” of fans have cited the tax change as a reason, he added.

Schools hope fan loyalty will help offset the deduction loss, and another tax change could also be a buffer. Millions of filers won’t be breaking out charitable donations for 2018, because the overhaul nearly doubled the standard deduction to $24,000 for married couples and $12,000 for singles. Fans who make this switch won’t feel the loss of the deduction.

The repeal of the seat donation write-off is expected to raise $2 billion in federal tax revenue over 10 years.

A looming question is how the repeal affects priority points—the loyalty rewards that determine a donor’s place in the fan pecking order. Points accumulate over years, and the more points a donor has, the closer he can move toward the coveted 50-yard line or the more extra tickets he can secure for a rivalry game.

A key phrase of the law says contributions aren’t deductible if they could lead “directly or indirectly” to a right to purchase seats.

This phrase raises the possibility that fans who make other athletic donations, such as a large gift to a capital campaign, can’t take a tax deduction if they also get priority points that provide prized home-stadium seating benefits. But the law isn’t clear.

This lack of clarity is leading to difficult conversations with potential major donors to Georgia giving $100,000 or more, said athletics official Matt Borman.

“They want to have a major impact, and we’re having to tell them we don’t know if the gift is going to be deductible if they get priority points,” he said.

Guidance from the IRS, the referee on this issue, is likely to arrive after many schools have required fans to sign up for next season’s tickets. It also will arrive after athletic foundations have issued letters to many donors detailing 2018 deductions early next year.

Tax specialists say it’s hard to predict how the IRS will rule. The agency has sometimes been lenient on popular issues where valuation is difficult, such as the taxability of frequent-flier miles.

Michael Graetz, a tax scholar at Columbia University and Georgia fan, said, “It will be hard for the IRS to ignore donations that improve a giver’s seat—but it’s not out of the question, especially if the priority points have little value.”

Absent IRS guidance on priority points, schools are taking different approaches.

Penn State has a plan that allows fans making non-seat donations to get priority points for seating perks and still get a tax deduction.
Penn State is telling donors that while they can’t deduct seat donations, they can deduct other athletic donations that yield points.

For example, a seat requiring a $600 donation isn’t tax-deductible but will earn priority points. But if a fan gives, say, $2,000 on top of that, then the extra $2,000 is both tax-deductible and earns priority points that can improve home-game seating.

“Penn State is complying fully with the new law,” said a spokeswoman.

Iowa, meanwhile, is telling donors it won’t give them a tax receipt for a donation that earns points that can improve seating. Not having such a receipt makes taking a deduction difficult if not impossible.

At Ole Miss, donors making gifts beyond seat donations must choose. If they get priority points with home-stadium seating benefits, they can’t deduct their gift. If they want a deduction, they can have points that help with parking and with seating at away games—but not better seats at home games. North Carolina is adopting a similar program.

But just as imagination helps when designing a football offense, so can it enhance tax strategies. Beginning this season, Ole Miss offered 22 prime tailgate sites near a stadium entrance for a $17,500 donation per season. The sites have all amenities except catering. Many sites were rented for this season, said a spokesperson with the Ole Miss Athletics Foundation.

The donation for the tailgate sites is 82% tax-deductible.

Write to Rachel Bachman at rachel.bachman@wsj.com and Laura Saunders at laura.saunders@wsj.com

Calling all football alumni

Cardinal Football Alumni:


The U of L football program has plans to end the 2018 season on a high note and needs your support! Athletic Director, Vince Tyra, and the Cardinals Athletic Staff would like to invite you to an alumni tailgate on Saturday, November 24th in conjunction with the big rivalry game vs. Kentucky.


Prior to the game, there will be a tailgate for all former Cardinal football student-athletes in the Trager Center beginning at 3:00 pm. There will be complimentary food, drinks and activities for kids until 6:00 pm, at which time we’d like everyone to enter the stadium to support our current seniors in a pre-game recognition ceremony. Tours of the newly renovated Schnellenberger Football Complex will also be available from 3-4:00 pm.


We are able to provide you and a guest with complimentary tickets to the game. (Additional tickets for immediate family members will also be available for purchase for $85.) Kick-off is at 7:00 pm. (A map listing nearby pay lot parking options is attached.)


*Please Note: Due to NCAA rules, high school students will not be allowed to attend this event or receive a complimentary ticket. Sorry for any inconvenience, but we must adhere to NCAA guidelines.


If you plan to attend, please contact Denise Murphy at denise@gocards.com or 502/852-7775 by Monday, November 19th at 5:00 pm. We will need to know if you need tickets and/or plan to attend the tailgate. Also, please share this with any of your former teammates that may not have received this e-mail.


We hope you will be able to join us and all your former Cardinal teammates and Cardinals from across the different eras. This is a great opportunity to visit with friends while supporting YOUR program as we move into 2019 and the future of Cardinal Football!

College Football Today 2020 QB Recruit Rankings & Utah State vs Colorado State CFB Live


2020 QB Recruits





College Football Bowl Projections


College Football Today makes projections on who will be facing off in this years college football bowl games and predictions will be made as bowl games are finalized.



Utah State Football

Case made in our week 10 Top 25 polls arguments at College Football Today.


  • Kirk Herbstreit made a case for Fresno State that did not match up to the one we had already been making since mid-season. Their only loss was to Michigan State in their first game, but they have ran every opponent after that off of the field. We did not think the AP would put them all the way at 18. But I guess justice was served for the Utah State Aggies. They travel to the home of College Football Today to take on the Colorado State Rams and we will be watching the greatness which is Coach Matt Wells, lead the now nationally ranked Aggies against well, Aggies. Both Fresno and Utah State are in the AP Top 25, because the case was presented on both sides and they obviously seen these stats posted last night by College Football Today by HeroSports.com. Also, Fresno State lost to Minnesota and I think they had the worst QB and offense we have seen in the nation, when we attended Coach Frost's first victory as the Huskers Head Coach. - Closing Article Here.
College Football Today will be covering Utah State vs Colorado State for all of your USU Top 25 news!




Utah State Football Ranking




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The Leader in College Football Today

Conspiracy Theory on Bobby

What if I told you Bobby tanked this season because of the way TJ was handled. TJ did give him a chance at redemption when he was toxic and nobody but mid-majors were interested in him.

What if I told he was tired of coaching and had no reason to be loyal to UofL so he just tanked it knowing he was going to bank $14 million and he could ride off into the sunset with a smile on his face and be a full time caddy for his daughter.

What if I told you I dont necessarily believe any of this, but you gotta admit, at times this year it almost looked like Bobby was trying to lose..

We'll never know.

Scott Frost & Jeff Brohm

I have said a couple of times I don't know what direction Jeff Brohm will go but I would be surprised if he didn't come home. This reminds me of the University of Central Florida situation with Scott Frost and Nebraska. UCF was undefeated and declared themselves as a National Champion and it was recognized by the NCAA.
UCF is a large University with a fertile recruiting base and a solid fan base. Then Nebraska comes calling and he leaves all that recruiting and success behind to return home to Nebraska. The UCF fan base was certain he wouldn't leave because of all their success and the recruits he was bringing in. Doesn't this sound like the current situation with Jeff Brohm, Louisville & Purdue?
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