The Pac-12’s unprecedented response to Caleb Williams’ transfer should spark a new era of football messaging
Never before has the conference promoted a specific transfer
Jon Wilner (OC Register) — Quarterback Caleb Williams’ decision last week to transfer to USC wasn’t the least bit surprising given his ties to new coach Lincoln Riley.
But the reaction to Williams’ decision at Pac-12 headquarters, which acknowledged the news on multiple media platforms, was completely unprecedented and entirely appropriate.
It left us flabbergasted, frankly, but in a good way for the future of Pac-12 football messaging. The conference office should take a more active role in spreading the word when teams score major victories in the talent acquisition game.
Welcome to a discussion about a commissioner with a knack for social media, an evolving strategy in San Francisco and the fair but unequal treatment of the 12 football programs.
Let’s start with the timeline of events:
— On Feb. 1, Williams announced his decision to join the Trojans via his Twitter account at 9:03 a.m.
— Approximately two hours later, Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff retweeted a video clip from ESPN’s SportsCenter and quoted a line from the show about the Williams news: “Axis shift in college football.”
— By mid-afternoon, the Pac-12’s main Twitter account had blasted out a link to an article published on the conference website: “Check out what people are saying about @USC_FB adding transfer QB @CALEBcsw”
— The article itself featured a dash of background information on Williams and displayed a series of glowing tweets from former Trojans and reactions to the new by media outlets.
Granted, it was huge news. National news. Here was the No. 1 quarterback in the transfer portal, a potential Heisman Trophy candidate, joining forces with his high-profile former coach in the nation’s largest media market at one of the sport’s blue-blood programs.
It immediately dominated the news cycle, as we’d expect.
But the reaction on official Pac-12 platforms was wholly unexpected.
To the best of our knowledge, the conference’s social media accounts had never trumpeted news about the arrival of a specific recruit or transfer. They are all about the teams, the current athletes and (occasionally) the alumni.
In the past, HQ might have worried about accusations of preferential treatment or been leery of setting a precedent. But this is a new era.
That became clear last summer, when Kliavkoff spoke publicly about the difference between fair and equal treatment when it comes to strategic issues like football scheduling.
Kliavkoff’s presence on social media isn’t new. He’s active and engaged but careful not to get sucked into the weeds. He generally tweets about conference initiatives and collective successes — a stark contrast to his predecessor, Larry Scott, who didn’t have a Twitter account (at least an official one).
When Kliavkoff retweeted the SportsCenter clip about Williams, we noticed. And when the conference’s social media team followed up a few hours later, we definitely noticed.
An entire article on Williams seven months before he’ll set foot on the Coliseum field?
We don’t recall a similar reaction from San Francisco three years ago when mega-recruit Kayvon Thibodeaux signed with Oregon.
Or when USC’s basketball team signed Evan Mobley, the No. 1 big man in the country, two years ago.
Or even last winter, when five-star quarterback Sam Huard signed with Washington.
But Williams was national news, because of his success last season at Oklahoma, in a way those players weren’t.
And Kliavkoff understands the value of social media messaging. (His tweet about Williams gave the social media team the cover it needed to publish the article.)
And, crucially, the schools recognize that times have changed, that fair doesn’t mean equal. (We aren’t aware of any grumbling about the publication of content on Williams from any of the other 11 campuses.)
So what’s next? How will Kliavkoff and the conference office determine when a transfer or recruit is worthy of a tweet or an entire article or — dare we say it — a TikTok video?
Clearly, HQ cannot promote intra-conference transfers; it must focus on players entering the league. And it can’t become entangled in bar-setting or line-drawing. The messaging has to be organic … what feels right under the circumstances.
But make no mistake: It should use the Williams situation as propellant.
Why not create a social media team in San Francisco that’s entirely devoted to football recruiting, a team that’s in daily contact with the player personnel staffs at each program, a team that’s designed to complement and augment what the schools are doing.
The content could be directed at specific recruits, either subtly or overtly, depending on the situation and the limits of NCAA rules.
It could be designed to promote specific campuses, academic disciplines or the conference writ large — all of it geared toward brand enhancement.
And it could include members of the recently-created Football Alumni Council, which includes former players or coaches from every school and is designed “to leverage the knowledge and promotional power of prominent Pac-12 football alumni in support of the Pac-12’s football goals, which include elevating the football brands of all schools and the Pac-12, supporting recruiting efforts.”
The conference had the good sense to create the Council. Why not provide the social media support to make the most of it?
College football is undergoing immense change with the transfer portal, the era of name, image and likeness and the NCAA’s refusal to provide oversight on either.
Meanwhile, the Pac-12 has reached a tipping point as the sagging on-field performance collides with a likely delay in playoff expansion and the upcoming, momentous media rights negotiations.
Kliavkoff and his executives are willing to consider everything.
The athletic directors and head coaches are open to anything.
There’s no better time than now to reinvent the approach to football messaging at HQ.
ocregister.com
_________
In case you wondered, Mark Sanchez also tripped to OHIO ST (forget the snow! “That was a dealbreaker”), ND, TEXAS, and UCLA. But USC was the “quarterback factory” at the time and easily won the battle for local boy Sanchez’s signature, even though Lane Kiffin was a “total jerk and an a**hole to me until I got to be a starter…” Caleb Williams might just win the Heisman at USC (the final USC faceplant on OU). Wouldn’t that be fantastic! The young QB handles himself very well in the media. He’s already gained USC so much amazing notoriety, both through… Read more »
Playing without leading scorer Isaiah Mobley, the 21st-ranked Trojans have to rally from a 13-point second-half deficit to dispatch the Tigers, 74-68 Adam Grosbard (OC Register) — “An Alphonso Anderson 3-pointer got Pacific back within three with 37 seconds to play. Only a pair of Max Agbonkpolo free throws iced the come-from-behind win for USC. But the bigger takeaway from this game for the Trojans is that their issues from the past six weeks – slow starts, inconsistent offense, playing smaller than their roster size – were not limited to Pac-12 competition, but reared up against the Tigers (7-16). “USC’s… Read more »
Allen, I am still not sold on Enfield. His MO has been for his teams to fade badly in February. They did not last year with both Mobleys or the year before with just Isaiah Mobley. This year they are fading again. Let’s see how they do against the Bruins.
Enfield has not won the Pac-12 one single year since 2014. His Pac-12 record is 80-80 and he has tended to feast on out-of-conference lesser competition. The Mobley’s have saved him lately. He’s made USC a good program but he doesn’t seem to win against good comp much. Sometimes I wonder if USC’s rep as a football school has anything to do with the mediocre-to-good-only USC hoops program, which always has kind of a low ceiling, despite sending many to the NBA, especially lately under Enfield. But Enfield has beaten UCLA four straight, often with total miracle three-point finishes. Yes,… Read more »
USC sneaks by Pacific 74-68.
One thing I haven’t heard much about is the Television network. I wonder if there are plans to make the PAC12 network more relevant and perhaps stop the stupidity that’s keeping them off many providers. Honestly I only watch football games so I pay for a year to see two or three games. Maybe put an end to odd night games?
The Pac-12 Network? Oh, you mean the Re-run Network. I get it, like you, just to fill in gaps for football games. It could have been so much more.
The PAC-12 Football Conference or as this article identifies it as HQ San Francisco, is exploring ways to lift up a faltering product by hyping itself. Social Media-Twitter or not, words retain little value when they are not backed up by what is commonly accepted as the true measuring stick: success on the field. So if Commissioner George Kliavkoff wants his efforts & his words respected, he needs to get at least half the University Football Programs in his conference to up their game and win against other Power 5 conference teams. And losing to non-Power 5-conference teams doesn’t help… Read more »
I think Kliavkoff has been awesome so far. He has garnered huge respect from many observers based on his experience, savvy, communication skills, and intelligence. Turning around the Pac-12 is like steering the underbuilt Titanic. He’s only been on the job for seven months and he had a massive Larry Scott dumpster/equality fire to put out. He’s given USC football more credit, push and focus in those seven months by far than one-time WTA CEO flake Scott ever did in 12 years. Give the guy some time. Kliavkoff — “We had our worst non-conference performance, by winning percentage, since 1983,… Read more »
To turn the college leadership around from what they supported for 12 years to building a dynamic conference is no small task. These are mostly all liberal academics not to invested in athletics. If GK can turn them the Pac will blossom and bloom hugely, not just in football but other sports too. I see a need for the California high schools to develop good linemen, that is where it all starts for that problem.
I am appreciative of your reply above Allen. All I can say is good luck Mr. Commissioner, it will take a miracle to get some of these Universities to spend one extra dollar on their football program.
I think USC’s returning to power on both a national and local scale will put real pressure on some Pac-12 schools to finally get with the program. They really don’t want a return to USC and the 11 Dwarves. Anyway, that’s an angle that I think could motivate some people. ✌
I hope you are right, Allen, but I will believe it when I see it.
Admit it. Good things are happening for USC these days. Like all of us, you never thought USC would rob OU of their cherished HC LR. Boom. I think OU football may not recover from this for a long time, slightly like when USC got derailed by the surprise Bush/NCAA takedown. Without the right head coach, it doesn’t really matter who the brand is. Venables hasn’t proven zilch so far, except that under him, OU is suddenly no longer even considered a top 25 team anymore. So if that USC/LR miracle can happen, Kliavkoff can help accomplish a lot for… Read more »
Well, El Gato PTSD is not easily cured and I have it. I am sure that is why I imagine that all of our hopes and dreams for SC will come crashing down any day now. But I believe in the LR Phenomenon. It will take some football performances that look first class by LR’s Trojans before the PTSD from El Gato’s mismanagement of the Program subsides from my brain. Does anyone know of a support group for El Gato PTSD? 😂
Allen, I think you are right on this. TN has never gotten over Lane Kiffin. OK is now about to leave the Big 12 for the SEC. Venables has a massive task on his hands. Sark has come alive at TX (which has significantly greater financial resources committed to football than OU does). Jimbo Fisher is killing it at A&M (also with massive resources, far greater than OU has). That is his competition and if he cannot recruit in TX, OU is cooked.
The only thing I hear about OU these days (literally) is that they have permanently pronounced LR to be the Devil, with a capital D. That’s it.
We own them for good now, not just for a while like after the 55-19 beat down on Jan. 4, 2005.
The poor Sooners. USC stole everything they had, and everything they were ever gonna have too (tip of the hat to Eastwood’s wonderful Unforgiven.)
The only teams with the resources to compete with SC are OU, Stanford and UW. I doubt UW will commit due to the area’s politics. I doubt Stanford will commit (although they clearly have the resources). That leave OU and maybe UCLA, but as I posted below, I doubt the Bruins will commit either. I think Utah will commit what it can, but it does not the glamor, the legacy, the national footprint or the resources of SC.
USC is on board. He needs Washington, Oregon and Stanford to up their game. They can do it with the right HCs, the Portal and NIL. The UCs are stuck in woke bureaucracy, the rest are small market and don’t have resources.
LR is the Bruins’ worst nightmare. And they know it. I’ve never seen Bruin fans so quiet. When I run into UCLA friends now and then around town, they never bring up football, even though they just scored 62 on us in a humiliating, unforgettable fashion. They hate that USC went and stole LR, who is still only 38 years old. Imagine how we’d all feel if UCLA had somehow reeled him in, and shoved Choc Chip Kelly to the curb? Now that would be a reason for depression. What do they have to cheer for? Many didn’t want the… Read more »
2021 was UCLA’s year. I think the 2022 team will not be as good as the 2021 version(despite DTR and Charbonnet returning) and 2023 will not be as good as 2022. Does Chip even have a DC yet? I mean hiring Drevno as your OL coach is death. Best news would be for Clancy to get the DC gig at UCLA. I think UCLA is about to move to the same level as UC Berkeley in football, unless the AD can get a substantial cash infusion (like in the $50 Million range). I doubt the UCLA administration will commit even… Read more »
Music to my ears.
“The UCs are stuck in woke bureaucracy…”
Ain’t that the truth. Little Mao would be so happy at Berkeley or Westwood!😁
So adding to my post yesterday of “Who would we rather have Riley or Fickell?”, hands down the consensus is Riley. My question today is “Who do we love the most, David Shaw for getting Helton fired, or Amy Fickell for keeping Luke in Ohio”?
We owe Amy Fickell the most IMO. The Cat was always a dead man walking in 2021. Bohn/Caruso/Folt were obviously finally ready to pounce.
Shaw just put The Cat in his coffin before another complete USC football bend-over. Shaw stopped the bleeding.
But LR is the gift that will keep on giving. LR gave glorious new life to USC football in a way that Luke Fickell never could have come close to doing IMO.
I vote with Allen. Amy Fickell did SC a huge favor. Luke Fickell was not, nor was he ever going to be “Hollywood”. LR was born for the role.
Feb. 10, just two days away… The Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2022 will be inducted during NFL Honors, which airs live Thursday, Feb. 10 at 6 p.m. PT on ABC. The 2022 modern-era player finalists with their positions, years and teams, as announced on NFL Network. There is no set number of new enshrinees, but the Committee’s current ground rules do stipulate that between four and eight new members will be selected each year: Jared Allen, DE – 2004-2007 Kansas City Chiefs, 2008-2013 Minnesota Vikings, 2014-2015 Chicago Bears, 2015 Carolina Panthers Willie Anderson, OT — 1996-2007 Cincinnati Bengals, 2008 Baltimore Ravens… Read more »
I watched 5 minutes of the Pro Bowl, what a waste. Just put flags on them and play flag football. That would be more fun than this non tackling joke. If they don’t want to get injured then do something else. A skills contests, 7 on 7 something. The Pro Bowl “Game” needs to go away.
I literally watched one play against my better judgment. Then I realized they were only playing “tag” and switched to Nightmare Alley instead (yes, I’m one of those who really liked it, even at 2.5 hours in length.)
I can’t believe the NFL would support the totally lame, silly Pro Bowl as it is being run. I guess we all have a blind spot, or two.
Is USC’s NCAA Tournament status in danger? Not yet, but worth monitoring. UCLA looms this weekend…
Matt Zemek (Trojans Wire) — The USC Trojans have lost four games in the past three and a half weeks, since January 11. Their record is 19-4, but everyone can see that they haven’t posted a true high-end win this season.
trojanswire.com
LR’s spin on taking three of his former employer’s best players (The Herd): “The transfer portal kind of handles that. We didn’t take players from Oklahoma. We took players from the transfer portal. Those players and their families had to make a decision to either stay at that university, just like any other player has to make … or to enter the portal where then they could be recruited by anybody in the country. And that’s up to those players and their families. And we have nothing to do with that. But once a player gets into the portal where… Read more »
LR on USC recruiting and his use of Emojis to signal player additions: “There’s a lot more coming. Fight On!”
More Trojan football infrastructure:
Pete Thamel @PeteThamel
Sources: USC is expected to hire Ohio State’s Weston Zernechel as the school’s new assistant director of player personnel. He worked as assistant director of player personnel at Ohio State.
LR will be on The Herd in about an hour. Cowherd is beside himself with enthusiasm and happiness over USC football these days.
Have not posted in a while, because I wanted to absorb the fresh air of Trojan Football. I cannot remember the date when Rock posted his (absolutely correct IMO) “Trojan Football is dead” memo. But, when he posted it, he was absolutely correct. The retention of Clay Helton for six years combined with Carol Folt’s disbanding of the local alumni clubs had effectively killed the program. We saw the results last year in probably the least talented and worst coached SC team in the last 75 years. The Pac 12 was also dead. The Presidents had allowed an incompetent to… Read more »
I really have no idea if Fickell will hit it big somewhere after he leaves CIN for stiffer competition. He seems so unqualified compared to a guy like LR. 😎 😎
This new commissioner is like a breath of fresh air. Along with knowing what he is doing, he has placed himself in a position that he has to listen to those around him. Using technology, forethought, and plain old hard work he is bringing the Pac12 out of the shadows. His hardest task is to get and keep all the dormant college presidents on board, to wake them up to see the results that an athletically successful conference can bring.
Steveg, I think the Presidents are already there. We will never know for certain what caused it, but my personal speculation is the source was outside group of media consultants the President’s put together (one of the members is an old SC Law classmate who is extremely successful in the media business). My guess is that committee was brutally honest with the Presidents about what Scott’s mismanagement had cost them and (far more importantly) was about to cost them. The Presidents are political animals and might love being “woke”, but when told by a credible group of consultants that they… Read more »