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Harry

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Everything posted by Harry

  1. It is linked there now.
  2. I hear he can flat out recruit... if that is the case we need to pay him so he will stick around. It's too early to question Harrell's comp. He didn't have the personnel last season. With a healthy Fine, the receiver corp they have now, and with a year under their belts in the system this thing could explode. O-Line is the key.
  3. Just a few hours after being introduced as North Texas’ new men’s basketball head coach, Grant McCasland sat down with members of the media one-on-one. Sporting his new Mean Green colors and a smile on his face, he discussed the future of the program he is inheriting. On interest in the North Texas job. “Growing up in this area and in this state, North Texas was one university that had basketball success,” McCasland said. “I played tournaments at the Super Pit and watched several recruiting events at the Super Pit. I watched college games there. My knowledge was more of a fan. But you look at jobs down the road that fit something you would be interested in, I thought it would be a cool opportunity to coach basketball [at North Texas]. I never thought it would be a reality.” On his Texas roots. “This is home,” McCasland said. “This area is. There’s not a lot of opportunities to be a head coach and be this close to family. All of my immediate family is within an hour from here. That’s awesome. It’s unreal. My whole family was here today. That’s as good as it gets. That’s the way we want our program to be modeled after. People that love each other unconditionally but hold each other accountable and tell the truth. That atmosphere is what’s vital to being a successful basketball program.” On Wren Baker and President Neal Smatresk’s leadership “Ultimately it’s people who make the biggest difference,” McCasland said. “I think the leadership right now is as good as it gets for a basketball coach. It’s a unique opportunity to work for Smatresk, Baker and Jared Mosely. I’ve known Wren for a little while, but not really personally. He’s been at some great basketball institutions and he knows what it means to be successful. Smatresk, he knows basketball. He’s seen great basketball and we’ve had some great conversations as to what he envisions the program can be. He gave great insight and made me believe he knows what it takes to have a great basketball program.” Read more: http://ntdaily.com/north-texas-new-head-coach-grant-mccasland-dishes-on-his-texas-roots-style-of-play-and-his-message-to-fans/
  4. He doesn't share his tailgate beers either.
  5. Cheaters never win.
  6. Really hope we can land Hodge. Will depend on whether or not ASU offers him HC it appears.
  7. DENTON - Grant McCasland has been hired as North Texas men's basketball head coach, Vice President and director of athletics Wren Baker announced Monday. "I am excited to welcome Grant McCasland as our 18th head men's basketball coach," Baker said. "Coach McCasland is a rising superstar in college basketball and possesses all of the qualities we desired when we began our search. He has been successful at every step of his career. He's a proven coach and recruiter, but most importantly, he has demonstrated the ability to help young men grow and develop as people. We are fortunate to have a coach of his integrity and caliber leading our men's basketball program. He and his family are from the area and understand Texas values. They will be tremendous assets to this campus and community." McCasland is an 18-year coaching veteran and arrives at North Texas after leading Arkansas State to a 20-win season for only the fourth time in ASU history. McCasland's career winning percentage is an eye-popping 80 percent. The 20-12 record during his inaugural season at ASU is a 10-win improvement, which is the second-best turnaround in NCAA Division I basketball this year. Under McCasland's guidance, the Red Wolves picked up eight non-conference wins over Division I opponents for the first time since 1990-91. McCasland has won 10 different coach of the year awards during his career. "I am extremely excited about the opportunity to serve as the next head basketball coach at the University of North Texas," McCasland said. "I am honored by the confidence that both Vice President and director of athletics Wren Baker and President Neal Smatresk have demonstrated as we went through this process. Their commitment and vision for men's basketball at North Texas is inspiring and I look forward to working with them to build champions and prepare leaders with the young men we have in our program. We are going to strive daily for excellence in every aspect of our program, do things the right way, and establish a winning culture that values relationships throughout. Our family looks forward to joining Mean Green nation and I can't wait to get started in Denton." Prior to Arkansas State, McCasland spent five seasons as an assistant coach at Baylor, helping lead the Bears to NCAA Tournament appearances in 2012, 2014, 2015 and 2016. The Bears also won their first-ever postseason title in program history in 2013, capturing the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) championship. Prior to Baylor, he spent two seasons as head coach at Midwestern State and led the program to back-to-back Elite Eight appearances in the NCAA Division II Tournament. McCasland also has head coaching experience at the junior college level, leading Midland College to the 2007 NJCAA national championship. Working on head coach Scott Drew's staff at Baylor, McCasland helped the Bears average 26 wins per year, posting a 125-55 record, including a 10-3 postseason mark. The Irving, Texas, native helped Baylor rise to national prominence with five 20-win seasons, five postseason appearances, the Big 12's first NIT championship and Baylor's first postseason tournament title in its 107-year history. Before his stint at Baylor, McCasland spent two seasons as head coach at Midwestern State in Wichita Falls, posting a combined 56-12 mark. In 2010-11, McCasland was named the Lone Star Conference South Division and National Association of Basketball Coaches South Region Coach of the Year after leading his Mustangs to a 25-9 mark, winning the NCAA Division II South Central Region title and reaching the NCAA Division II Elite Eight. The previous season saw Midwestern State earn the LSC South Division title, the LSC Tournament championship, the NCAA Division II South Central Region championship and a berth in the NCAA Division II Elite Eight. Prior to his tenure at Midwestern State, McCasland spent five successful seasons as head coach at Midland College, taking the reins of the program prior to the 2004-05 campaign. In his first season, Midland captured the Region V championship and earned a trip to the NJCAA Elite Eight. In the 2006-07 season, the Chaparalls finished 29-8 and won the national championship. In his final season in Midland (2008-09), the Chaps finished 33-4 and lost in the national championship game. McCasland ended his time at Midland with a record of 143-32. Preceding his time at Midland College, McCasland was assistant coach at Northeastern Junior College in Sterling, Colorado, for two seasons. He began his coaching career in Lubbock, Texas, as the director of basketball operations at Texas Tech in the 1999-2000 and 2000-01 seasons. A three-year letterman and four-year player at Baylor, McCasland earned Academic All-Big 12 honorable-mention honors as a senior. He graduated from Baylor in 1999 with a degree in entrepreneurship and management and received his master's degree from Texas Tech in 2001. Grant and his wife Cece have four children: daughters Amaris and Jersey and sons Jett and Beckett. There will be a meet-and-greet next week on Tuesday, March 21st at noon in The Union as North Texas welcomes Coach McCasland and his family to campus. More details will be released in the coming days. McCasland File Personal · Family: Wife Cece; daughters Amaris and Jersey; sons Jett and Beckett Education · College: Baylor, 1999 (B.S.); Texas Tech, 2001 (M.S.) Coaching Experience: · 1999-2001 Texas Tech, director of operations · 2001-03 Northeastern JC, assistant coach · 2004-09 Midland College, head coach · 2009-11 Midwestern State, head coach · 2011-16 Baylor, assistant coach · 2016-17 Arkansas State, head coach · 2017-pres. North Texas, head coach Postseason Experience: · 2004-05 NJCAA, Elite Eight (Midland) · 2006-07 NJCAA, national champions (Midland) · 2008-09 NJCAA, finals (Midland) · 2009-10 NCAA Division II, Elite Eight (Midwestern State) · 2010-11 NCAA Division II, Elite Eight (Midwestern State) · 2011-12 NCAA, Elite Eight (Baylor) · 2012-13 NIT, champions (Baylor) · 2013-14 NCAA, Sweet 16 (Baylor) · 2014-15 NCAA, first round (Baylor) · 2015-16 NCAA, first round (Baylor) What they are saying: James Dickey, former head coach at Texas Tech & University of Houston - "Wren and the University of North Texas have made a great hire in Grant McCasland. Grant is a rising star in our profession and he has won at every level. Grant is a family man with high character. He has leadership, energy, enthusiasm, tireless work ethic and is a very productive recruiter. Grant will be a tremendous basketball coach and ambassador for UNT." Dennis Lindsey, GM for the Utah Jazz - "The University of North Texas has just hired a rising star in the coaching business in Grant McCasland. Grant has deep contacts in the southwest, and with him being a native son to Texas, has the relationships you need to be successful long-term at the University of North Texas. More importantly, Grant is a faith and values based man who will be able to lead his staff and players in the right direction. My son was recruited by and played for Grant when he was an assistant coach at Baylor University. Neither Jake or I am surprised at Grant's success or new appointment. The Lindsey family wishes Grant and the University of North Texas men's basketball program the best of luck!" John Underwood, Big 12 Associate Commissioner - "Grant McCasland has been successful at every level he has coached and will be a terrific ambassador for the University of North Texas, the basketball program and the city of Denton. He has a tremendous work ethic, which will translate into a winning program in a short period of time." Scott Drew, head coach at Baylor - "Grant McCasland to North Texas is a home run. Coach McCasland is a tremendous coach and an even better person. He will be outstanding as North Texas head basketball coach."
  8. Luxury suites generate more dollars for the program so that needs to happen. When you factor in the aged electronics and other building issues it may be better to build a new one over at Eagle Point.
  9. No I agree it looks much better. The external lighting is what needs a facelift. It is dark and not very inviting. I have more extermal issues with that Pit than inside.
  10. My take is the newer arena stands are more vertical with better visuals and louder. Super Pit as a facility is not bad. It's just the lighting and external look that bug me. The biggest thing is it has to be shared with University. It does need to happen but after indoor practice facility and other things more pressing.
  11. The college sports-television industrial complex is at a crossroads. It seems like everyone involved is dealing with one crisis or another. The SEC, Big Ten and (soon) the ACC have or will have their own private fortunes through television networks, but traded a portion of their souls to get there. The Pac-12 has its own network, but no fortune. The Big 12 has a host of issues, stemming from its lack of a network. ESPN and Fox are losing subscribers by the bundle, threatening to bring the entire system down with them. On the other end of FBS, the MAC has submitted itself fully to the whims of television, releasing a schedule earlier this month that calls for zero Saturday games in November. The Mountain West has also handed carte blanche to the television networks in exchange for a pile of cash, and is now wondering if the trade was worth it. As detailed by the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Mountain West is fresh off a conference tournament that saw the second of its two semifinals scheduled for a 9:30 p.m. Pacific time tip off (which resulted in a 9:52 actual tip time)… and its championship game tip at 3 p.m. the following day. “I’ve had several people, at least three people today, text me and say, ‘Is it really 9:30? I just looked at the schedule,’” Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson told the paper “I had to say, ‘Yeah, it’s really 9:30.’ It’s brutal.” read more: http://footballscoop.com/news/mountain-west-leave-tv-online-only/
  12. starting shortly....LIVE VIDEO LINK IS: http://CUSATV.COM/NORTHTEXAS
  13. What are the odds the Texas job comes open for her? Yes the timing on that was tough.
  14. The difference between this hire and Coach Pete is age. We were a retirement nest egg for Pete. Mac stung us as well. Coaching has become a younger man's profession. Ark state to their credit has a simple model in hiring young up and coming coaches. It appears we are following suit.
  15. Guys @Arkstfan is a very close and long time friend of this site. He needs to be treated with respect. Please stand down on your comments. GMG
  16. A-State had a 400K 5-year guaranteed deal on his desk. UNT landed him with a 5-year $600K guaranteed deal if you include the $500K buy-out. In total a $3.5 million dollar contract. This deal placed UNT at the #2 spot in all of C-USA in head coach basketball salaries. So, without a doubt, if you look at where our compensation is now, in the three main sports, there is no question that we are at the top of C-USA. What I am interested to learn is what the buy-out is on the new UNT contract.
  17. Dear Mean Green Family, I am writing today to inform you that we have found the next head coach for your Mean Green men’s basketball program. It is with great excitement that I announce that Coach Grant McCasland will be the 18th Head Men’s Basketball Coach in our history. As you are a loyal supporter of the program, I wanted to share this information with you first. Coach McCasland is an 18-year coaching veteran and arrives at North Texas after leading Arkansas State to a 20-win season for only the fourth time in ASU history. McCasland’s career winning percentage is an eye-popping 80 percent. The 20-12 record during his inaugural season at ASU is a 10-win improvement, which is the second-best turnaround in NCAA Division I basketball this year. The press release with more information on Coach McCasland is available on MeanGreenSports.com. We would love for you to join us next week on Tuesday, March 21st at noon in The Union as we welcome Coach to campus. Let’s give Coach McCasland and his family a warm welcome to the Mean Green family. The future of North Texas Basketball is bright. Please share this great news with all basketball fans across the region. Together, we will light the tower and work relentlessly to bring men’s basketball championships back to UNT. Thank you as always for your continued support. North Texas We Love, Vice President & Director of Athletics
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