Welcome to the HornSports Forum

By registering with us, you'll be able to discuss, share and private message with other members of our Texas Longhorns message board community.

SignUp Now!

Steve Patterson - Athletics Director

fyi, here's the new SAE chant, sing along while trying to force in a couple of tunes that are completely made up:
"Here's to....

Drinking in moderation...

Here's to....

Never harassing ladies!!

Here's to... always getting verbal consent...

multiple times during both foreplay and intercourse!!

Here's to our friends that don't look like us

we're not racist!

Black people are great to some extent!!

Now let's go have some fun today!!! If that's possible in the hyoersensitive times we live in full of fake outrage and blooooooogs!!!!

Not my words, that was on Tosh.0 last Tuesday.

 
Oh no, I don't mean it to sound like he made the decision.  It was made before he was hired.  He was, however, given the dirty work of doing it.  Nobody else, including Luck, wanted anything to do with it.

My point with the ticket policy was that wasn't his decision.  that was, also, made before he was hired.  Everyone knew it would be an unpopular move - just like they did with the force out of Mack.  Patterson had that dropped in his lap as well.

My point is, even though he is an unadulterated jerk, he isn't to blame for everything.  Even though I would like to. :)
i don't disagree with that. hey, i got a s**tload of loyalty points i didn't have a few months ago, so there's that.

 we desparately needed new blood in both programs and we now have that. the future seems more promising than it did not too long ago.onward thru the fog.

 
You don't have to like the person. It's all about the results he's able to achieve for the University. Though its always nice to be able to like the person, it's not necessary.

 
The mistakes Patterson has made are mistakes one would neither expect nor accept from someone at the top of their profession. This is not about Patterson making "unpopular, tough decisions." He has made rookie mistakes, devalued the UT brand, whored out the athletics program for no gain whatsoever and materially harmed university/alumni relations. He needs to go and he should be let go for cause for his lying about the funding for the tennis facility.

 
The mistakes Patterson has made are mistakes one would neither expect nor accept from someone at the top of their profession. This is not about Patterson making "unpopular, tough decisions." He has made rookie mistakes, devalued the UT brand, whored out the athletics program for no gain whatsoever and materially harmed university/alumni relations. He needs to go and he should be let go for cause for his lying about the funding for the tennis facility.
Patterson may have made some "mistakes" but overall I think he has done a good job. Certainly there has been no "devaluing," "whoring," or "material harm."

As for your last claim, IMO it was Fenves who was closer to "lying" about the funding than Patterson.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
This sums of the problem with Patterson, he doesn't know if he's pissing off donors and he doesn't care.

In the Statesman report, Patterson says he doesn’t know if he has alienated donors and said he isn’t concerned about doing so either.

Report: Trouble brewing between Texas AD Steve Patterson and president Gregory Fenves

TEXAS_FOOTBALL_STRONG_35095691.jpg


Texas Athletic Director Steve Patterson is in trouble with President Gregory Fenves, according to a report by the Austin American-Statesman.

Fenves, who has been in office for over a month, has already met with Patterson twice to discuss athletic department issues and a third is tentatively scheduled for Friday.

Patterson has been under fire since a report published in June by HornsDigest’s Chip Brown revealed that the Longhorns’ athletic director had alienated donors and fans with lack of communication and unexpected changes for season ticket holders.

In the Statesman report, Patterson says he doesn’t know if he has alienated donors and said he isn’t concerned about doing so either. He added that he is more concerned about making important decision for those who participate in Texas athletics. But he did recognize that he could have done a better job communicating at times.

Patterson has been the Longhorns’ athletic director since Nov. 2013 and his contract goes through Aug. 2019. His salary started at $1.4 million and includes a minimum 2.5 percent increase each fiscal year. His contract doesn’t list a specific buyout clause.

A source in the report didn’t speculate whether Patterson would potentially be fired but said he is in trouble with Fenves. Any move to end Patterson’s tenure at Texas would require approval from the UT System Board of Regents.

http://collegesportsblog.dallasnews.com/2015/07/report-trouble-brewing-for-texas-athletic-director-steve-patterson.html/

 
My favorite two lines from the Patterson memo?

A minimum donation of $50 to the Longhorn Foundation provides members access to purchase parking. This is a new benefit.
Sure, pay $50 annually for the privilege of paying for a parking spot? Sounds good

Rob Carnochan left to pursue a better career opportunity at Miami.
The Miami marching band is better than the Showband of the Southwest? That's news to me

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Brian Davis is very critical of everything UT, of course he does have that ax to grind.

 
Sherrington: Why Texas' Steve Patterson would be smart to lighten up until his signature work pans out

TEXAS_BROWN_34816403.JPG


On the warm-and-fuzzy scale, athletic directors typically register somewhere between IRS agents and hit men, yet everyone remains happily employed as long as the numbers line up and the right people get eliminated.

Just the same, Steve Patterson’s bedside manner may do him in first.

We know this because Texas’ new president, Greg Fenves, has been in office only since last month, and sources tell our Chuck Carlton that he’s reportedly coached up his athletic director twice and tentatively scheduled another session in customer relations for Friday.

Where all this counseling leads, we don’t know for sure. Despite mounting reports of Patterson’s arrogance or insensitivity, getting canned so early in his tenure seems a stretch.

You’d think he’d be welcome at least until it’s clearer whether his signature work, Charlie Strong and Shaka Smart, will pan out.

In most cases, media and fans judge athletic directors on their hiring record. If balance sheets were interesting, we’d all be accountants.

Even so, Patterson has managed to make his personality a talking point pretty much since he was hired 20 months ago. Unless you’re a pro rassler or a Kardashian, that’s not good business.

Let me ask: When’s the last time you heard or read a story criticizing the personal style of Texas A&M’s athletic director, Eric Hyman? TCU’s Chris Del Conte? Baylor’s Ian McCaw? Oklahoma’s Joe Castiglione?

Raise your hand if you knew Rick Hart was SMU’s AD.

Nothing against any of the above, especially Hart, who made a terrific football hire in Chad Morris. My point is that, for the most part, Hart and the rest of his colleagues go about their business professionally, quietly and, apparently, without malice.

We don’t hear much about any of them until it’s time to hire or fire a coach. Once the dirty work’s done, they retreat to their fundraisers.

Funny thing is, if the search committee trying to find DeLoss Dodds’ replacement had done its homework, it’d have known Patterson isn’t exactly Mr. Rogers. A columnist for the Oregonian, John Canzano, has practically made a cottage industry of Patterson anecdotes, none flattering.

Consider this personal favorite from Patterson’s days as a Portland Trail Blazers executive: Convinced that a trade rumor had leaked from his office staff, Patterson lined up his people and threatened to fire everyone to get the source. One secretary started crying.

Turns out the reporter got the information from a fax Patterson left in full view.

Still, no one called Patterson an ogre in the year and a half he was Arizona State’s AD. Texas officials also were blown away by Patterson’s varied sports background, the breadth of which is, indeed, impressive. He thought so far outside the box, he made Oliver Luck, the perceived favorite and a man of considerable credentials as well, seem like an anachronism.

College sports is big business these days, as all the have-nots lament. It’s good to have someone in charge who knows how to tap new streams. Heaven help you for falling behind in the weight-room gap.

But even as colleges claw for every last bit of revenue available, they’d be wise to remember that the customers are, at heart, a sentimental bunch, some actually under the impression that college athletics should occasionally rise above the interests of the bottom line.

Crazy, right?

As a longtime University of Texas professor, Rick Cherwitz, wrote last month in a Fort Worth Star-Telegram guest editorial after Patterson more than doubled the price of faculty and staff season football and basketball tickets, faculty members no longer feel like “family.â€

“Instead,†Cherwitz wrote, “we became another one of the institution’s many ‘corporate customers.’ â€

Patterson recently attempted to address such charges in a memo to donors. Among other revelations, including travel plans for the marching band, he notes that donations have been flat for five years. He also reports a net loss of $8.1 million for the athletic department in 2013-14, first since the millennium.

It all sounds fairly reasonable until you consider that Texas has been the biggest bellcow in college athletics for years, and donations to athletic programs often are tied to the fortunes of the football and basketball teams.

One of the reasons Patterson fired Mack Brown and Rick Barnes and hired such good replacements was to improve the prospects in the won-loss as well as the balance column.

Until Strong and Smart get some time to turn it around, Patterson would be wise to lighten up. It’d be too bad if he weren’t around to enjoy his best work.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/columnists/kevin-sherrington/20150716-sherrington-why-texas-steve-patterson-would-be-smart-to-lighten-up-until-his-signature-work-pans-out.ece

 
Back
Top Bottom