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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Kal:
I'm from Lafayette. My wife is a native Iotian, Gott's Cove to be exact.
Rhineaux:
I'm part of that new guest editorial staff for the Daily Advertiser. It's a rotation where my op/eds appear once every three weeks, and I wasn't scheduled to appear until next Thursday. However, I begged the lady who was scheduled for today to switch with me so I could have this one in print for Homecoming. She was happy to, but be warned. The reason she wanted to switch is because her upcoming editorial is about the need for UL (to not) play LSU!!
The rest of my stuff, with the exception of a New Orleans Bowl op/ed if we make it, will be on Louisiana politicis.
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajunrunner
Kal:
I'm from Lafayette. My wife is a native Iotian, Gott's Cove to be exact.
Rhineaux:
I'm part of that new guest editorial staff for the Daily Advertiser. It's a rotation where my op/eds appear once every three weeks, and I wasn't scheduled to appear until next Thursday. However, I begged the lady who was scheduled for today to switch with me so I could have this one in print for Homecoming. She was happy to, but be warned. The reason she wanted to switch is because her upcoming editorial is about the need for UL (to not) play LSU!!
The rest of my stuff, with the exception of a New Orleans Bowl op/ed if we make it, will be on Louisiana politicis.
She'll have to be real savvy to go down that trail and not step in her own poop.
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajunrunner
That was a great piece, Nick! Very enjoyable. Keep up the good work. Hopefully, you can take a break from the political stuff to address the Cajuns' achievements again in the near future...maybe something they're doing say... in New Orleans? ..O..
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajunrunner
Nice job Nick. Keep pushing our Cajuns.
We've missed you the last couple of years in our Erath 4th of July Run. Try to make it back next year.
Your race director and fellow alum.
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajunrunner
Very nice article. Thank you for taking (making) the opportunity to reach out thru the Advertiser to gain added support for UL athletics, and in particular this weeks homecoming football contest.
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajunrunner
Did ya'll read/enjoy my op/ed in today's Advertiser?
Fan-tastic
More, more, more . . .
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Re: How Was My Editorial?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Beau Cajun
Nice job Nick. Keep pushing our Cajuns.
We've missed you the last couple of years in our Erath 4th of July Run. Try to make it back next year.
Your race director and fellow alum.
Skeeter, is that you?
I don't like racing unless I'm in shape, something I haven't been for about 2 years now. Now my wife is due in April, so getting into shape for July could be tough, but hey, maybe I'll give it a shot.
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UL track coaching legends need to be honored
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Two names symbolize UL's track and field program: Bob Cole, for those who have been around the program for a long time, and Charles Lancon, for those whose Ragin' Cajun experiences are more recent.
Now both of them are gone, and it's time to put their names where they belong ... over the entrance to the Cajuns' track facility just off Bertrand Drive.
Lancon left us in 2002, in the middle of his 13th year as UL's track coach following an already-legendary three-decade career in the local prep ranks.
Cole retired in 1984 after two decades of running the Cajun program, and spent most of his time since then fishing Toledo Bend and tending his gardens until his health deteriorated over the last few weeks.
<center><p><a href="http://www.theadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070114/SPORTS/701140375/1006" target="_blank">The rest of the story</a>
Dan McDonald
Advertiser
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Cole died of cancer complications Friday morning, and a legion of former Cajun tracksters will be at Fountain Memorial today for visitation (2-8 p.m.) and Monday for funeral services (1 p.m. following visitation from 8 a.m.-1 p.m.).
Hopefully, that group can band together and start a groundswell of support, coming up with a way to honor the two men who spent their lives in a sport that receives precious little recognition.
Cole basically built a program from scratch when he arrived in 1964 and ended up winning eight outdoor titles and even more indoor and cross-country crowns. His program numbered 37 All-Americans by the time long jumper Elton Slater finished that run in 1984.
Lancon took over five years later, and won 14 conference "Coach of the Year" honors in a nine-year period. During a career cut short by a fatal heart attack, his teams won 17 conference titles in indoor and outdoor track and cross country.
Those numbers will likely never be matched locally, since a sport perennially under-funded even during the Cole and Lancon tenures gets even less support dollar-wise and fan-wise now. It's been a long time since the Southwestern Relays used to draw standing-room only crowds.
It's only the die-hard fans that head out to Cajun Track these days.
The ones that do see a very different sport. The emphasis on team accomplishment - building up points and winning meet titles - is all but gone on the collegiate level. Most college meets don't even tally team scores any more until conference-meet time.
That's a shame, because team meant everything to Bob Cole and Charles Lancon. Sure, both had their share of outstanding individual performers, but both were just as proud of the less-talent-blessed athletes that gutted out fourth-place finishes in the 5,000 or placed in the discus. It's those points that helped their teams win all those league titles.
Ironically, one of the few places that team results remain important is at the University of Arkansas, where John McDonnell has won 42 national team titles in indoor and outdoor track and cross country. McDonnell was a standout Cajun distance runner in the late '60s and later became Cole's assistant before his now-legendary run with the Razorbacks.
Arkansas' track stadium in Fayetteville is John McDon-nell Field, and the blessing is that he's still alive and well and doing what he loves in a facility that bears his name.
It's too late for such a living honor here, but it's not too late to honor their memories.
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UL Indoor Track Season Underway
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BATON ROUGE – The 2007 indoor track and field season began for Louisiana’s Ragin’ Cajuns as the men’s and women’s teams participated in the Purple Tiger Indoor Track and Field Classic Saturday, Jan. 13 at Carl Maddox Fieldhouse.
The Ragin’ Cajuns took abbreviated squads to the meet as only 12 women and 13 men competed in the season opener.
Freshman Constance Robinson had a spectacular debut. The Desoto, Texas, native claimed the championship in the women’s 400-meter dash stopping the clock in 1:01.18, edging out Southern Miss’ Jamaka Wall (1:01.56).
Chiara Obey and India Bell both qualified for the women’s 60-meter hurdles finals. Obey came in 13th (9.78) while Bell was 17th (9.88).
Sophomore Toni Lee gave a great effort for UL in the women’s long jump. Lee came in a close second with a leap of 18-3 1/4. She was right behind Southern Miss’ Ashley May who jumped 18-8 1/2.
On the men’s side Stacey Fuller gave UL another stellar freshman debut. The Dallas product finished in second place in the 400-meter run completing the trek in 50.01 seconds. He was barely bested by Sam Houston’s Michael Courtney who ran in 49.83 seconds.
The Ragin’ Cajuns had Chreston Anderson qualify in the men’s 60-meter dash. Anderson clocked in at 7.03 in the prelims and ran an even 7.00 in the finals, finishing 11th overall.
The Cajuns other Top 10 finish on the men’s side came from sophomore Quenton Jones in the 400-meter dash. Jones was ninth with a time of 52.85.
Luke Moody gave the men’s team a qualifier in the 60-meter hurdles. Moody crossed the finish line in 8.75 seconds during prelims and came back with a time of 8.81 seconds to place 15th in the finals.
The Cajuns had three participants in both the men’s and women’s 3,000-meter run.
Brandon Orso, D.J. Hebert and Phillip Guidry were the men’s representatives with Orso and Hebert each in the Top 20.
The women’s trio included Casey Brown, Callie Picou and Stephanie Harris. Brown posted the best time of any Cajuns runner in the event (men or women) as she finished 11th ending the run in 11:35.54.
The Ragin’ Cajuns will continue their 2007 indoor season Thursday-Friday, Jan. 25-26 as they return to Baton Rouge for the LSU Combined Events (Jan. 25-26) and the Bayou Bengal (Jan. 26).
<center><span title=" SID Matt Hebert "><b>LOUISIANA SI</span>
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Lady Cajuns Track Competes at LSU Twilight
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BATON ROUGE, La.-Louisiana’s Lady Cajuns track and field team competed in the LSU Twilight on Friday.
The women faired well in the field events, with Latoya Celestine finishing second in flight 1 of the long jump with a distance of 5.78 meters.
Constance Robinson placed first in section 4 of the women’s 400-meter dash with a time of 1:00.15, while Lina Futi placed second.
Quantisha Rambo placed sixth in section 1 of the women’s 60-meter hurdles with a time of 9.29 seconds. Chiara Obey finished 2 in section 2 with a time of 9. 46 seconds while India Bell finished third.
Callie Picou placed sixth in section 1 of the 3000-meter run with a time of 11:21.08, and Alix Stelly followed with a close seventh.
The Cajuns men’s and women’s track and field team will compete at the Sun Belt Conference Indoor Meet Saturday, Feb. 24 through Sunday, Feb. 25 In Jonesboro, Ark.
<center><span title=" Heather L Warren "><b>LOUISIANA SI</span>
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Ragin' Cajuns Track at LSU Twilight
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BATON ROUGE, La. - Louisiana’s Ragin’ Cajuns track and field team competed in the LSU Twilight on Friday.
The men’s field events produced the biggest wins for the Cajuns with Justin Arceneaux finishing second in flight 1 of the long jump with a distance of 6.86 meters. Joseph Dickens finished third in flight 1 of the triple jump with a distance of 14.32 meters.
Arceneaux also competed in section 1 of the 60-meter dash and placed third with a time of 6.90 seconds.
Roderick Houston finished first in section 4 of the 200-meter dash with a time of 23. 46 seconds while Quenton Jones finished third with a time of 23.53 seconds.
Luke Moody posted a time of 8.68 seconds in section 2 of the 60-meter hurdles to finish in fifth place.
DJ Hebert finished sixth in section 2 of the 3000-meter run with a time of 2:08.99.
The Cajuns men’s and women’s track and field team will compete at the Sun Belt Conference Indoor Meet Saturday, Feb. 24 through Sunday, Feb. 25 In Jonesboro, Ark.
<center><span title=" Heather L Warren "><b>LOUISIANA SI</span>
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Cajuns Track Completes Day 1 of Indoor Conference Meet
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JONESBORO, Ark.- Louisiana’s Ragin’ Cajuns men’s and women’s track and field teams completed day one of the 2007 Sun Belt Conference Indoor Championships on Saturday.
The Cajuns were well represented in the women’s 3000-meter run, with three Cajuns finishing in the top four. Callie Picou led the way with a second place finish with a time of 11:14.17. Suzane Boudreaux finished third while Stephanie Harris finished fourth. Ashley Faulk finished sixth.
Quantisha Rambo finished 10th in the women’s 55-meter hurdles.
Justin Arceneaux was one of the top men’s finishers of the day after placing first in heat 1 of the men’s 55-meter prelims recording a time of 6.40 seconds.
Arceneaux also finished first in section 2 of the men’s long jump with a distance of 6.99 meters. Patrick Reid also competed in the event recording a jump of 5.70 meters.
Joby Gisclair finished fifth in the men’s 3000-meter run with a time of 9:25.19. Freshman Brent Almand earned a sixth place finish with a time of 9:52.67.
Alexander Wiltz finished sixth in the men’s shot put with a throw of 11.52 meters.
Chance Perkins represented the Cajuns in the men’s heptathlon finishing seventh with 2450 points.
Junior Kyle Ward finished second in heat 1 of the men’s 55-meter hurdles preliminaries with a time of 7.56 seconds.
Toni Lee and Chiara Obey finished fourth and fifth respectively in heat one of the women’s 55-meter prelims. Lee posted a time of 7.45 seconds while Obey finished with a time of 7. 92 seconds.
Jamie Blue finished fifth in heat one of the women’s 400-meter preliminaries after posting a time of 1:01.91.
Jazmin Greer, Rambo and Blue competed in the 200-meter dash preliminaries. Greer had the best finish with a time of 26.04 seconds.
Andree Bonvillain finished sixth in the pole vault with a height of 3.35 meters while Kelli Hebert finished 10th.
Readeaux finished fourth in heat 2 of the women’s long jump with a jump of 5.43 meters.
Freshman Stacey Fuller finished fourth in heat 1 of the men’s 400-meter prelims, posting a time of 50.51 seconds. Quenton Jones followed with a fifth place finish with a time of 51.43 seconds.
Nathan Cormier finished sixth in heat 3 of the men’s 800-meter preliminaries with a time of 2:05.44.
The Sun Belt Conference Championships will conclude Sunday, Feb. 25.
<center><span title=" Heather L Warren "><b>LOUISIANA SI</span>
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Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
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JONESBORO, Ark. -<font size="5"> Lafayette's </font size="5"> Justin Arceneaux came within an eyelash of winning the title of fastest man in the Sun Belt Conference Sunday.
Instead, he had to settle for the best individual performance by a UL athlete in the first conference meet of his career, the league's Indoor Track and Field Championships that concluded Sunday at Arkansas State.
Arceneaux, a product of Northside High, was the runner-up in the 55-meter dash with a 6.36 time. Middle Tennessee's Orlando Reid was also timed at 6.36, but Reid was declared the winner by a photo-determined finish.
Arceneaux, who had the fastest time in Saturday's 55-meter preliminaries with a 6.40, added that effort to his fourth-place finish in Saturday's long jump finals with a 22-11 1/4 leap. Those outings gave him 13 points, almost half of the Cajuns' 27-point total in the men's competition.
<center><p><a href="http://www.theadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070226/SPORTS/702260336/1006" target="_blank">The rest of the story</a>
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Casey Brown turned in the best Cajun performance in the women's meet, providing more than half of her team's seven-point total with her fourth-place finish in the 5,000-meter run in 18:54.58. Brown also ran the anchor leg on the distance medley relay team of Stacey Enright, Lina Futi and Jasmine Collins that was eighth in 12:46.70.
UL's other women's points came from a seventh-place finish by Kioloni Readeaux in the triple jump in 38-4.
The UL men finished ninth of nine teams with those 27 points, while the women finished 11th in an 11-team field with the seven points.
The bulk of UL's other men's points came from Kyle Ward with a fourth-place finish in the 55-meter hurdles in 7.53. Joseph Dickens was sixth in the triple jump (46-2 3/4), Ben Leonards was eighth in the shot put (45-10 3/4) and Chance Perkins was eighth in the heptathlon (4,125 points) as the other individual finishers.
UL's Stacey Fuller, Tramaine Casey, Joey Wynn and Quenton Jones finished sixth in the 4x400-meter relay (3:22.03) and D. J. Hebert, Wynn, Fuller and Philip Guidry finished eighth in the distance medley (10:45.09).
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
UL's current Tack and Field program is an embarrassment!
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Quote:
Originally Posted by CajunRed
UL's current Tack and Field program is an embarrassment!
Well considering it is not funded by the University and can not even pay 3 full time coaches what do you expect. i would like to see you try and give the individual attention each track athlete needs to excell at this level when you only have one full time assistant and a part time distance coach. It can not get done.
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Why is the track program not funded by the university?
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Quote:
Originally Posted by cjr3888
Why is the track program not funded by the university?
$$$
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Quote:
Originally Posted by cajun nation
Well considering it is not funded by the University and can not even pay 3 full time coaches what do you expect. i would like to see you try and give the individual attention each track athlete needs to excell at this level when you only have one full time assistant and a part time distance coach. It can not get done.
I was done when Lancon and Badon were here in the early 90's!!!
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The state of UL Track
A quick review:
-In 2004 UL's track team was the Sun Belt Conference Indoor Runner-up on the men’s side (Veazey was first year head coach riding on the coat tails of Charlie Lancon's runners)
-In 2006 (2 years after Veazey took over) UL's track team dropped from being 2nd overall (2004) to second from last (9th place out of 10 teams) in indoor track on the men’s side, the women finished LAST. In outdoor track, both the men’s AND the women’s teams finished LAST!
-Now, 2007 indoor track, the men’s AND women’s teams finished DEAD LAST!
The upcoming outdoor track season looks promising......to finish LAST on both the men’s and women’s side again!
Every year the team has gotten worse since Veazey took over the program. The program has become a joke; they are the laughing stock of the Sun Belt Conference. This is a team that used to be highly respected and did well year after year. It is now a big joke.
So, who's to blame here? Of course the athletes have to hold themselves responsible. But at what point in time do we hold the coaches responsible? In my opinion, when you have 99% of your athletes running slower than they did in high school after 1-3 years in the college system, there is something TERRIBLY wrong with the coaching staff. I have taken a few of the current UL track and field athletes, and found their best times/jumps/throws from high school and compared them to how they are currently doing while competing for UL. (I took these names at random from the current roster).
Name/ High School/ HS best time & Event/ Current time at SB Conference Meet
Stephanie Harris/St. Michaels/ 10:46 3k/ 11:31 3k
Stacey Fuller/ Dallas Skyline/ 49.12 400m/ 50.51 400m
Constance Robinson/ DeSoto/ 57.54 400m/ 59.52 400m
Brent Almand/ The Woodlands/ 15:36 5k/ 17:18 5k
Brandon Orso/ Denham Springs/ 16:14 5k (cross country) / 16:21 5k (track)
Jazmin Greer/ Dallas Skyline/ 24.68 200m/ 26:04 200m
Callie Picou/ Walker/ 18:44 5k/ 19:50 5k
This is just a few of the UL runners that are currently performing MUCH WORSE than they did in high school. I can list many more as I have them written down.
Not only are UL track and field athletes not running faster than they did in high school, they are less competitive. For example....
Jamie Blue finished 25th out of 27 runners in the 400m run and finished 34th out of 36 runners in the 200m run.
Stacey Enright finished 14th out of 17 runners in the 1 mile run.
Tiffany Saltzman finished 26th out of 26 runners in the 800m run.
Ashley Faulk finished 19th out of 21 runners in the 3k run and 23rd out of 27 runners in the 5k run, just ahead of teammates Suzanne Boudreaux and Stephanie Harris which finished 24th and 26th out of the 27 runners in the 5k.
India Bell and Chiara Obey finished 27th and 28th in the 55m dash out of the 28 runners.
On the men's side...
Joey Wynn, Quenton Jones, and Tramaine Cosey finished 19th, 20th, and 21st in the 400m dash out of 24 runners.
The men's 4x400m relay team finished 6th out of the 7 teams that finished the race.
Obviously SOMETHING NEEDS TO BE DONE!!!!! There was a similar thread like this last year, saying that something needed to be done. Nothing was done and the team finished worse this year. The program is a complete embarrassment to this university. I do not understand why there is not a coaching change! From what I have heard, Lance Veazey spends the majority of his day surfing myspace and facebook while he should be recruiting new athletes and coaching his current athletes.
Lance Veazey (along with the part time distance coach who works at a local elementary school) needs to be FIRED RIGHT AWAY!!!!!!!!
I HOPE that Lance Veazey and Tim Lemaire read this. I hope that the UL athletic department reads this. I hope that the UL track athletes read this. I hope for these things because obviously most of these people are blind to the fact that our track program is A PIECE OF CRAP! Something needs to be done.....NOW! Fire Lance Veazey and his staff, hire a coach who knows ANYTHING about track and field, that will instill discipline (which seems to be a major missing component) and I'm certain the program will be back to where it SHOULD BE and WAS before Lance took over. If the appropriate measures are taken, the UL track team can turn itself around and re-establish itself as a Sun Belt powerhouse.
Dead last should NOT be an option. Lance and his staff seem to care less that they finished last....AGAIN!!!!! The sad thing is, it seems that they have corrupted their athletes into thinking that last place is an acceptable option!
Veazey, you should be FIRED!
-E.M.
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Re: UL Track- It's SO sad!
What ever happened to Carl Lawson?
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Re: UL Track- It's SO sad!
Those were the days my friend I thought they'd never end!!!! Obviously they have!!!!
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Re: UL Track- It's SO sad!
Quote:
Originally Posted by No_Namer
. . . I hope that the UL athletic department reads this.
Well I am glad to see that you got that off of your chest. But this university is not embaressed by the results of the meet and if you think they are your mistaken. Nothing will change in the near future either. if you are so passionate about that particular program then why dont you go out and raise 10 million for an endowment specificaly for track. So they would have a budget that would allow them to recruit and pay other coaches because we do have the lowest paid and lowest staffed coaching crew of any team in the sunbelt. A State has 9 fulltime coaches while we have 2. the sad part of that is about 6 of those makes more than Lance. So before you go out and start calling for peoples heads you need to take a closer look into the whole situation. I am not deffending the coaches here but they could both leave and make more monoey teaching and coaching in high school than they can at UL.
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Quote:
Originally Posted by cajun4ever
I was done when Lancon and Badon were here in the early 90's!!!
Lancon and Badon were both field event coaches. We do not have 9 javelin throwers on the roster, or do we have 9 shot putters, or discus guys. We do not have 9 hurdlers nor do we have any really good jumpers. that is how they won. They did not win with speed on the track, never. They took a huge lead coming out of the field and just held on. Badon coached the jumps and Lancon coached the throws. that is how it was done.
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Re: Arceneaux a bright spot in poor Cajun outing
Quote:
Originally Posted by cajun nation
Lancon and Badon were both field event coaches. We do not have 9 javelin throwers on the roster, or do we have 9 shot putters, or discus guys. We do not have 9 hurdlers nor do we have any really good jumpers. that is how they won. They did not win with speed on the track, never. They took a huge lead coming out of the field and just held on. Badon coached the jumps and Lancon coached the throws. that is how it was done.
They did not win with speed on the track, never.
Wrong. Badon coached some jumps but also sprints. Boo coached jumps in the mid 90's. And we did win with speed and field events. You have to have speed to win the 4X100 4X200 and the 4X400 at the Drake Relays. Two hurdlers in the top three of most meets. Two 200 meter men qualified to the NCAA championships. It was a team effort. No team was even close because of the points scored in the field. Which half were football guys. The sprints finished it off and no one else had a chance. It was done and can be again, but not with this staff.
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Re: UL Track- It's SO sad!
Quote:
Originally Posted by cajun nation
this university is not embaressed by the results of the meet and if you think they are your mistaken. if you are so passionate about that particular program then why dont you go out and raise 10 million for an endowment specificaly for track. So they would have a budget that would allow them to recruit and pay other coaches because we do have the lowest paid and lowest staffed coaching crew of any team in the sunbelt.
If this university is not embarrassed by the results of the past few conference track meets then there is something SERIOUSLY wrong with this university! I feel like "Cajun Nation" is Lance Veazey himself, you sure do share some common personality traits! Both of you accept last place not only as ok, but it's like you think it's good or something?!?!?!?!
And I didn't mention anything about there not being enough money. Past coaches recruited athletes with the SAME crappy budget! Why can't Veazey? I'll tell you why....because he is a lazy BUM! So don't give me that crap!
And about fund raising. I happen to know that there have been MANY different people go to Veazey with fund raising ideas and he has shot the idea down. One person even offered to donate money to the program and Veazey told them "it's no big deal" and turned down the money.....WHY????
Even if Lance had a budget of $6 million he STILL WOULD NOT RECRUIT. He'd still be in his office surfing myspace and facebook looking a pictures of young college girls when he should be out calling kids or out coaching his current athletes.
Like someone said on the thread about Justin Arceneaux (the only person that got a medal at the indoor conference meet), NOTHING will change until Veazey is GONE!
The University of Louisiana Lafayette should be embarrassed of itself for allowing Lance Veazey to continue his role as head coach. Maybe it's because he's buddy buddy with the acting AD. Either way, it's pretty sad that 99% of his current athletes would like for him to be fired! That's just down right SAD!
E.M.