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82SiouxGuy

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Posts posted by 82SiouxGuy

  1. No wonder Mussman couldn't recruit any OLs (sarcasm). I'm still not buying it. Most players and parents aren't going to respect  a coach that  recruits by being negative about other teams.

    You will have to tell Dale Lennon that he doesn't know what he's talking about. Lennon is one of the people that said the nickname issue was hurting UND with recruits before the name was dropped. He said that he saw it when talking to recruits that he was also interested in recruiting. It sounds like you would be surprised by how effective it is to go negative in recruiting, just like it is in politics.

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  2. The university needs to stop suppressing the rights of the Sioux people and should return the rights to the logo to the Sioux tribes. Some may use it and some may not but it should be THEIR CHOICE! I don't care if they ever approve the logo for UND to use. Keeping the logo from the Sioux people makes the university racist and Kelley should be ashamed .

    The tribes never had the rights to the logo. It was commissioned by UND. It was created by a member of a different tribe. It is a piece of art owned by the University of North Dakota and they have absolutely no reason to turn it over to anyone else.

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  3. The way you say that makes it sound like they are being forced against their will.  Who do you think benefits from this stipulation?  Which side do you think pushed it into the settlement?

    Most of the merchandise still in stores with the Fighting Sioux name on it was produced before the nickname was officially dropped. All licensing contracts ended on a specific date, and many stores like the Sioux Shop and Scheels ordered large amounts of merchandise before that date. They still have some of that merchandise and are allowed to sell it as long as they have it. They are not allowed to order more merchandise.

     

    As a part of the settlement agreement with the NCAA, UND must maintain the trademark for the nickname or they could assign it to a tribe. They have been maintaining the trademark by selling very limited quantities of specialized shirts, like a couple of dozen per year. They have not lasted in stores for any significant length of time. They make very little money with this arrangement, probably only a couple of hundred dollars per year. I'm pretty sure that both sides had reasons they wanted UND to control the trademark.

  4. Here is the link http://www.smargon.net/nicknames/- it was misleading as it came in a discussion about school nicknames but it appears you are correct in that a quick check of a few on the list didn't show any with sports - I wasn't going to go through the entire list.

     

    Interesting that "Tribe" was has been brought up and only has one school using it from this list. While it would be a good fit for UND and could easily be used with no Native American references, there is no way that name would clear the liberal watchdog group. 

    I've gone through that list before. I didn't check every name, but I'm pretty sure I checked more than half. Some schools could get away with Tribe, I think it would be a tough sell at a school where there was an active group opposing the NA nickname.

  5. I'm sure it's been noted that there are more than 50 universities that don't currently have nicknames - I'm assuming some must have athletic teams and aren't on any NCAA lists. 

    Please go through the list and find them. The only other school I have been able to identify that plays actual college athletics without a nickname is Hollins University. They are a small, private women's college in Virginia with about 800 students. They compete at the NCAA Division III level. They have only had athletics for a limited period of time compared to most colleges. They never had a nickname of any kind, and never had a nickname that got them put on any kind of restricted list. All other schools I have looked at that don't have an athletic nickname don't actually have athletics. Most of them are law schools, art schools, med schools or some other specialty schools.

  6. Correct me if I'm wrong, but natives get a pretty good gig at other schools I think as well. A friend/acquaintance of mine was 1/16th native and got her tuition covered. Whether that was the tribe or the school of the government covering it though... Not sure.

    There are a lot of different scholarships available out there, and that is true of most schools. Some are tied to heritage like being NA, Norwegian, whatever. The tribes do have their own scholarships. The Bureau of Indian Affairs has some scholarships. Some are based on grades, sports, the field of study you want to pursue, and a lot of other reasons. Income, or lack of income, is a major factor in qualifying for a lot of scholarships and grants. The scholarships can range from a few dollars to full tuition. Just because your friend is 1/16th of some tribe doesn't mean that her tuition was covered because of that heritage. Or it could have been a reason. But the same thing can be said about a lot of students who aren't NA. I have nieces and nephews in college right now, all of them getting some kind of scholarship. None of them are NA. I've also known NA students who weren't getting much for scholarships, if any at all. All NA students getting their tuition paid for is a myth.

  7. Yeah sorry this thread isn't deserving of more respect than anything else, just wanted to keep the pro-Sioux talk to a minimum, as we've already covered^

     

    My underlying assumption is that choosing to move on as North Dakota (or continue) you will only piss off the people who want a new nickname. If you pick sundogs, you piss off probably half of the other nickname supporters (because most of these people, IMHO are pro-change, not pro-any specific nickname), in addition to the North Dakota people. Clearly it is sh*t or get off the pot time for the University. They have to do something but does that something have to be drastic?

     

    Bubba being the guy he is, I don't see the football unis changing much at all, if ever, for a new nickname

     

    82siouxguy, an organic name isn't always BAMF but it usually is accepted, which again is my goal. As far as North Dakota being divisive, in these non-scientific polls (which is the only information we have available, and so will be utilized), it is by far the largest plurality, the largest unified group since we lost the name.

    Jdub, that is a good point. A storyline that might be delicate, but worth noting nonetheless, is that even though the old nickname has gone, the American Indian Studies program and tuition assistance for that demographic has stayed. These are attached in my mind (correct me if I'm wrong) because they were tied to the adopting of the old nickname? Of course I don't need to explain that to a forum, someone from the University needs to explain that to the world. But I think the PC police won't be happy enough for that, so it would be time for a change - - rebranding.

     

    Thats the third time that I've brought it up now, homer, thanks for the count. I'm no marketing guy, but if the university opted instead of running from North Dakota, to embrace it, don't you think we could figure it out? The athletic administration has been preaching to the athletes that a new nickname is mandatory for moving on. That might be the most commonly accepted stance but is it the only way? Think outside the box - I think we have to. We had the best nickname/logo combination out there, and now are faced with 5 pretty lame replacements. Whether we like it or not we are not like any of the other 346 d1 schools, I think that lets us react differently.

     

    At the very minimum, we would have to change the rhetoric surrounding North Dakota. We all (or at least me and everyone I spoke to) reacted pretty poorly when we were stuck with North Dakota four years ago. That perception could easily be changed, its as easy as having the administration endorse it, top-down, the same way the 'need a nickname' campaign was enforced. 

     

    That's more of a rebranding the way we think of North Dakota, I still think the school could throw $300K to a marketing committee.

    Edit: after looking at Homer's post again. Yeah I don't have any gold mine ideas. But I know we could be encouraged to accept it as opposed to hate it (4 years ago). Thats a start. Which group will be easier to sway? I would argue the nickname people, whose numbers are probably artificially inflated by people who just think its time, without real reasoning. Not necessarily you guys, who have clearly thought things out. 

    According to many of the unscientific polls done before this week, Roughriders often outperformed no nickname. For example, there was a poll done in this forum when it was down to 7 choices. Roughriders had 42 percent of the vote and North Dakota had 27. That would make Roughriders a bigger unifying choice than North Dakota according to your logic. Just because people like different nicknames also doesn't mean that their major support is picking a new nickname rather than going without. So even the fact that an unscientific poll has no nickname as the largest plurality out of 6 options doesn't mean that it would lead if the options were any nickname versus no nickname. The vocal group of no nickname supporters made a public fuss this week when they thought that option was going away, another example of the squeaky wheel getting the grease. Your calling it a unifying group doesn't make it so.

     

    But either way, unscientific polls have very little meaning. You can't make decisions based on unscientific polls. That's just making it up as you go. And whether you want to discuss it or not, a significant portion of the no nickname group are actually just looking for a way to keep the Fighting Sioux nickname alive. Some realize that it probably won't come back officially, some actually believe that it will come back. The thing they have in common is that they can't let the name go and will do whatever they can to keep it alive. As jdub noted, this could lead to further issues for UND in the future.

     

    You asked a question about the NA programs being tied in some way to the old nickname. That question has been answered by the University many times. There were no official ties between increasing NA programs and the Fighting Sioux nickname. Maybe there should have been, maybe it would have led to better relations with the tribes. North Dakota has a fairly significant number of NA tribes and population for the size of the state. UND saw that as an opportunity and chose to try to develop it. I haven't seen any data lately, but I would be at least somewhat surprised if UND didn't have more NA students than any other school in the region. A significant reason for that would be the NA programs at UND. Also, most of the NA programs were built by a small group of individuals that went after and got federal dollars. The programs didn't cost UND a lot of money. Yet they brought students that were paying tuition. The Fighting Sioux nickname (actually just Sioux when most of the programs were originally developed) may have been an contributing reason that some administrators supported the programs, but the people that thought of and built the programs were not doing it to support the nickname. Losing the nickname should have no effect on the programs.

  8. I called for serious responses, and I got a respectful, serious response I appreciate. I do not agree that we have to move forward with a new nickname, however.

    You mentioned the women's D3 team without a nickname -- that would make us the only division 1 school. 1/347 just like our old nickname, we were one-of-a-kind. We still are.

    I am of the opinion that if we picked a logo, something unique, but no name, we would restore sales, albeit slowly. Obviously, not much of an effort has been made to rebrand our University in the last four years as everyone waited with uncertainty. I don't think merchandise would be an issue, I don't think branding would be an issue. Your last three paragraphs (apart from the conclusion), all are answered by a marketing/merchandise rebranding of our North Dakota image. I've heard from current student athletes that they think its a joke that each of our teams uses different gear, because there is no unity. Each team does its own thing because of all the uncertainty. It would be very simple to unite them behind a campus wide rebranding. 

    Why don't we spend $300K to come up with an image? North Dakota is already unifying and rallying (see petition, herald polls).

    I think the chant point is moot because the fans will cheer what they want. I am afraid those chanting sioux right now would either continue to cheer sioux as opposed to sundogs, or wouldn't cheer at all for a new name (this is NOT a cue to go on a diatribe about how those fans aren't real fans, stick to the topic).

     

    If we're to move forward with a nickname, it needs to be organically, as in your third paragraph. Great names don't appear at the drop of a hat. The bald eagle has grown into its meaning as a symbol for the USA -- at the first bald eagle siting no one shouted "OH LOOK THERE GOES AMERICA!! OH SAY CAN YOU SEE.." etc.

     

    I'd like to remind everyone that, in a discussion that gets heated, the first to sling mud is the first to show his incompetence. That is especially true in online forums.

    History shows us that UND will not remain without a nickname for any length of time. I don't believe that a private Division III women's college of 800 students is a good role model for a school like UND. A nickname will be created. The vacuum will be filled in some way. One way is organically, as you mentioned. But that doesn't guarantee a quality name. Some organic names are good, some are very weak. And as I said, you lose all control by playing roulette with the choosing of a nickname. You can end up with a very weak image just as easily as a good one. You could end up using Banana Slugs, a name first chosen by 3 students for a club team at the University of California-Santa Cruz, or Billikens, first used by a sportwriter because a coach looked like a charm doll. Based on reactions to this process it is pretty obvious that people would not be fond of a similar name being used at UND.

     

    As far as being unique by going as just North Dakota, I disagree. Every school uses their school name or a shortened form of their school name. That is all UND would be doing by going as North Dakota. And that doesn't make UND unique. The nickname is the additional piece that makes each school unique. Going without a nickname isn't going to help UND build a brand or image. A really good logo may help, but logos are temporary. Even the best logos are altered or changed periodically. The nickname is a very important piece of the puzzle.

     

    As far as your point about the different teams using different gear, that has always been true at UND. The hockey program made very liberal use of the Fighting Sioux nickname and logo in recent years (until it was dropped). The football team didn't use either very extensively. The football team has used the interlocking ND on its helmets for years. They also have used North Dakota on their jerseys for years. Over the years, other teams have used school name, nickname, neither, and going back even further, Nodaks on uniforms. Use of just North Dakota and the interlocking ND has been much more standard for the teams during the past 3 seasons than in any other period in UND history. Most of the students wouldn't know that because most of them didn't pay much attention to what UND sports uniforms looked like going back through history. The contract being discussed with Adidas may help give a little more uniform look to the program, but that isn't even guaranteed.

     

    And as far as your belief that going as just North Dakota is somehow a unifying point, I disagree completely with your premise. Disagreement has been just as vocal lately as when the school was discussing dropping the Fighting Sioux nickname. It hasn't unified the groups, it has created a bigger wedge. Online polls like the one done by the Herald are not credible in any way. And getting signatures for an online petition isn't exactly a scientific tool. All it proves is that there is a group of people that are willing to go to that web site. They may or may not be knowledgeable about the subject. They may or may not have the best interests of the University at heart. A large portion of that group might be NDSU fans just trying to cause more trouble for UND, a lot of NDSU fans would love that. They could be people from anywhere on the planet. Plus it doesn't tell you what anyone else thinks about the idea, including the other 700,000 people that live in the state of North Dakota. Is there another meaningless petition for people that want a new nickname?

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  9. You assume all exposure for not having a nickname will be positive. Here in Colorado, plenty of people have asked why a bunch of hicks from North Dakota don't have a name.

    Very little of the exposure I have seen about UND not having a nickname would be what I consider positive.

  10. We've heard it all!  UND needs a new nickname so its sports information director doesn't have to spend a handful of minutes talking about it with broadcasters.

     

    God forbid the media give UND press by talking about the school's nickname.  If that's what this hoopla is about, I am more than fine sticking with North Dakota.

     

     

    UND needs a new nickname so its sports information director doesn't have to spend a handful of minutes discussing the nickname with broadcasters.  I've now heard it all.

     

    God forbid the media give press to UND by talking about its nickname during a sporting event.

    Wow, you had to reply to the same quote twice.

     

    Jayson has plenty of real work to do that can be positive for UND. Constantly having to explain why UND doesn't have a nickname is a waste of his time. Even 5 or 10 minutes per week adds up to quite a few hours during a year. Broadcasters talking about UND not having a nickname is not good press for the school. UND isn't some how going to punish the NCAA by not having a nickname. I would rather that Jayson spend his time doing things that bring good press to UND when possible, not waste time discussing such a petty issue. Yet he can't ignore it when broadcasters bring it up. If UND is playing in the game the broadcasters are going to be talking about UND, feed them information on all of the good things the students are doing rather than having them talk about how UND is the only school that hasn't managed to get a nickname for the team. This is just a small example of the many reasons why going without a nickname is a bad idea.

  11. 1 out of 4 student representatives had that opinion.  The minority.  The two actual student-athletes on the committee who were picked to represent the other student-athletes voted to remove "no nickname" and other than some hockey players, I haven't seen any student-athletes publicly disagree with that decision.

    To add to this, the 2 student-athletes play for the football and volleyball teams. They belong to 2 of the higher profile teams on campus not playing on ice. One of those is the largest single team on campus.

  12. Yeah no chance they would ever keep asking about how they became the UND Sundogs...........

    How often do people talk about how the University of Minnesota became the Gophers? Or how Saint Louis University became the Billikens? Or how Miami of Ohio became the Redhawks (unless the subject is schools changing nicknames)? The origin of nicknames is rarely discussed on the air. But UND going without a nickname is mentioned during just about every broadcast not done by Midcontinent or the UND network.

  13. There is a Minn-Dak Farmer's Cooperative. Does that mean Minnesotans should be called Minns? I'm guessing most (not all, of course) of the people that grew up in North Dakota are not found of NoDak--while those UND students that are from elsewhere think it's a perfectly acceptable term to describe North Dakotans (not all, of course). I'd be interested to know where the people who support NoDaks are from originally? My experience having been raised in North Dakota but living in Minnesota is that very few North Dakotans refer to themselves as NoDaks. (I never heard the term growing up.) When I got to Minnesota, I heard it more often. Usually it was a "Minnesota Nice" passive-aggressive insult (e.g. "You're a Nodak, huh? Do you cry when a tree is cut down?")

    I grew up in North Dakota, not far from Grand Forks. I graduated from UND in 1982. I lived in the Twin Cities for several years. I returned to live in Grand Forks quite a few years ago. I've heard NoDaks for pretty much all of my life. I rarely heard it used in a bad way. The only ones that used it in a bad way would have used any term to describe North Dakota residents in a bad way. I think it is a very boring sports nickname, but it is in no way offensive.

  14. I guess he would need to adapt then, I do realize though that everyone has their own personal agenda behind their vote.

    So you think that it is a good use of his time talking about the lack of a nickname instead of talking about the athletes and teams.

  15. This is so trivial, are we really nitpicking the 5 seconds an announcer might talk about this once a year as a reason to be Hawks, Sundogs etc....It would go away just the same once everyone realized North Dakota was here to stay.

    UND would be the only school in Division I without a nickname. Everyone is used to seeing schools with nicknames. Do you really believe that they wouldn't talk about it, especially broadcasters that only do 1 or 2 UND games in a year?

  16. Hajdu keeps complaining about this also but I really dont remember it being brought up much if at all.....

    You also aren't with him during the prep time for the broadcasts. That is the time when Jayson talks to the broadcasters and production staff to educate them about the players, teams, and school. That is the time when the broadcast team learns all of the tidbits that they later talk about on air. How much of that valuable prep time is taken up by questions about the nickname when that time could be used to educate the broadcasters about the athletes and the teams? It might only be 20 seconds or a minute on the air, but it could be 10 minutes, or 30 minutes or more during the prep time.

  17. If UND's sports information director can't ensure that its student athletes' names are pronounced correctly on national television, I am not going to worry about the spelling of his name on an internet message board.

     

    Also, I never said it was "one of the student-athletes."  I did, however, refer to a "student representative", who recently stated that: "I have several friends who are athletes, and not a single one plays hockey.  They just want to stay UND, not to bring back Fighting Sioux."  http://www.grandforksherald.com/news/education/3801860-undnorth-dakota-out-committee-forwards-5-nicknames-public-vote

     

    You do remember the student athletes, don't you, Jason?

    And yet there are 2 student-athletes on the committee who are supposed to be representing the student-athletes who voted to get rid of the no nickname option. Sounds like the student-athlete representatives on the committee agree with Jayson.

     

    You are totally clueless if you actually believe that anyone can "ensure" what comes out of another person's mouth. Jayson can, and does, provide the media with proper pronunciations. He can't force them to say the names in a specific way, even if he was sitting beside them and talking in their ear.

  18. Save the hyperbole.  Didn't the student representative on the nickname task force committee argue that the student-athletes just want to stay "North Dakota".  You do remember the student-athlete's, don't you, Jason?

     

    Going forward, maybe Jason can focus more on his job as UNDSID and ensure that Barry Melrose finally understands how to pronounce "Caggiula" next April.

    One student voted to keep North Dakota as an option. It wasn't one of the student-athletes. There are 4 students on the committee, 2 of them are actually student-athletes. It appears that 3 out of 4 students on the committee, including both student-athletes, voted to not include North Dakota. You suggested that they should listen to the student-athletes on the committee?

     

    Part of Jayson's message is related to his job. He is saying that not having a nickname is taking attention away from the student-athletes and the athletic programs because the media takes time to discuss not having a nickname rather than talking about the athletes and teams. And maybe you should learn how to spell Jayson before telling him how to do his job.

  19. Speaking of Vegas, they threw down quite the fine on Mr. Engelstad. So are you going to continue to pretend there was nothing weird/disturbing about what he was doing?

    Vegas is all about "image". Controversy hurts the image they were trying to portray. It doesn't matter whether he did anything wrong or not to Vegas, he had some controversy attached to him so they did the only thing they could, they gave him a fine.

  20. John, John, John, the FBI has no burden of proof like a court or jury. The FBI could've spread whatever innuendo they wanted. The FBI said they found nothing. 

    Don't you understand, Little Johnny went to NDSU so he obviously knows more than everyone else. Especially people from places like Washington, DC and Las Vegas, people that were trained to investigate. Especially about things that happened around the time he was born. After all, he learned them from BSville. BSville innuendo is the most powerful proof of all in his mind.

  21. I'll play... much less.

     

    If they had just announced "It's time to choose a nickname", I don't think it would have generated this backlash, as everyone kind of knew the day was coming that they'd choose a nickname. Instead they announced "Time to decide whether to choose a nickname or just stay North Dakota", but then dropped North Dakota despite it being a clear fan favorite. That made people feel deceived, and gave a pretty well-organized process the appearance of being a bit of a sham. I think people are really as upset about feeling deceived as about ND being off the table. Poor execution.

    I disagree, I think it would have been a similar level. Maybe even more since school was in session and a group of students would have been in place to make a fuss. Many of the people that are complaining so loudly haven't actually been paying attention during the process. All they heard was that continuing to go without a nickname is off the table. They were going to get upset whenever it was announced. You can tell that a lot of people haven't been paying attention because so many seem to still feel that Fighting Sioux will somehow make a come back.

  22. Way too soon?  :huh:

     

    The statewide vote was June of 2012. We were under a legislated "cooling off period" until January 2015. 

     

    Three years is not enough? 

    No one who supports going without a nickname as a "cooling off period" has ever defined how long would be enough. Would 5 years be enough? 10 years? 25 years? For many, never isn't long enough.

  23. IMO one of the bigger issues I had with the committee throughout the entire thing was zero discussion of any logos.  When they got down to the final 15 or even the final 7, they should have contacted someone to get some logo that could be associated with each name and put them out to the public (not those god awful ones that the Herald put out).  A good, clean logo will make an average name look good.  But instead, we now have 5 names where:

     

    2 of them we have no idea what would symbolize it (Sundogs, Nodaks)

    2 that claim to have trademark issues but people know what it is (Roughriders, North Star)

    1 that people know what it is, but lacks originality (Fighting Hawks)

     

    We don't even know how the logo is going to look? Are they hiring a committee again, hire me as the consultant, I'll do it for 50K.  Lowest bidder :D

    Logos change all of the time.  Whatever logo is chosen now will probably be changed within the next 10-20 years, no matter how popular it is. If it isn't popular it will probably be changed before that. At least 5 different logos were used with the Sioux/Fighting Sioux nickname during my lifetime.

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