Is Van Eaton Romero still hiring?
I’m glad you are optimistic about the economy but unless deepwater ramps up I don’t think we will feel a major impact from increased drilling on land. There will be some as south Louisiana has oilfield ties worldwide but deepwater is the big money pipeline. With the advances in drilling and producing unconventional plays, deepwater will have a hard time coming back full steam. Jmo
Deep water drilling won’t come back until we see $70 oil, and that’s in today’s dollars.
I have said about every coach we hire here, I hope they leave in a few years for what is now called a P5 type job. That would mean we are winning big and this place would be more of a desirable job. That has never happened yet. Maybe the new administration finds that guy and we lose the stigma of coaching graveyard. We shall see.
I hope so, but getting back to your previous comments. The University has given him every tool to be able to succeed,
1st-we gave him a million a year.
2nd-we built him a IPF.
3rd-we built APC.
4th-we let him stay after one of the coaches we’re bubbling answers to ACT test.
5th- we gave him the benefit of the doubt
etc
He has had more tools to work with then any previous coach that ever came to UL. He doesn’t take responsibility for his actions, it’s not him it’s the players fault, it’s the fans fault. The blame is never on Hudsbeth but he is inconsistent as a coach ! A lot of things I question during games.
Why would you even start Lewis when it was Davis that got you the win?? I don’t understand a lot of stuff he does. It just blows my mind. Now he has lost the Fan Base.
Point taken, and I think you're pretty accurate there. Here's the thing: the oilfied has seen an incredible turnover the last 3 years. A lot of older guys retiring and a lot of younger guys filling the voids. The younger generation is more mobile. I've seen many crossover from deepwater to land just since 2014. I know historically Lafayette has relied on deepwater, but I see some things happening, and one of them is the evolution of data mining within the oilfield. Lafayette is a hub for this exact thing. You know what technology has done to drilling over the last decade. It's almost too efficient. That said, Lafayette O & G has done a great job (while the oilfield was down) reinvesting dollars in these newer techs. I come across R&D almost weekly.
Also LNG is strong, and is expected to only get stronger. It's so cheap for the whole operation, it's almost impossible for exploration not to move upward. I think those two industries will end up being the backbone of Lafayette, and maybe even the future of the oilfield in general.
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