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News Nuggets, 03.31.04
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NOTES FROM ECU AND BEYOND...
Previous Day Nuggets...
Next Day Nuggets...
Compiled from staff reports
and electronic dispatches
Big Easy bowl hooks up with
title sponsor
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PREVIOUS NUGGETS |
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03.30.04: Autumn
in Greenville means football and engineering... .. Holtz a
casualty in Gamecocks' scrimmage... .. College baseball
polls... .. Big Dance still fueling CBS ratings bonanza...
.. Saint Joe's coach honored with Naismith Award... ..
More... |
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03.29.04: C-USA
baseball standings... .. Spring dawns on new era of Army
football... .. 49ers' Withers named 3rd-team All-America...
.. Dukies bump off Cinderella to round out Final Four
field... .. Maryland to crack down on boorish fans... ..
More... |
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03.28.04: Xavier
not figuring on being Duke's cupcake... .. Memphis phenom
named to National All-Freshman Team... .. Tulane, LSU aim to
reclaim attendance mark... .. Horned Frogs placekicker nails
postgrad grant... ..
More... |
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03.27.04: Tubbs
succeeds fired ECU alum Dement at SMU... .. Jayhawks put out
fire in UAB's '40 Minutes of Hell' ... .. Viewers flock to
CBS tournament coverage... ..
More... |
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03.26.04: Humble
Eustachy seizes new chance at USM... .. NCAA seeks
protection for whistleblowers... .. Cincy catcher named to
Bench watch list... ..
More... |
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03.25.04: Eustachy
resurfacing at Southern Miss... .. Towe gains security at
New Orleans... .. Calipari cops regional coaching award...
.. Glantz-Culver lines for NCAA & NIT games... USC, LSU
cross paths at last at the White House... ..
More... |
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03.24.04: Marquette
breaks Broncos to advance in NIT... .. UAB coach brushes off
Auburn speculation... .. Penders envisions return to glory
for Houston... .. Women parallel men in TV ratings surge...
AP All-America Team... ..
More... |
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03.23.04: NCAA
to take over policing of grad rates... .. Tournament TV
ratings skyrocket... .. Irish reduce C-USA to one NIT
survivor... .. Pirates still anchored in baseball polls... ..
More... |
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03.22.04: 'Forty
minutes of hell' takes UAB to Sweet 16 ... .. All-talk,
no-walk Bearcats sent packing by Illini... .. Cowboys lasso
Tigers early and cruise to Regionals... .. Late Vandy flurry
extends State's round-of-16 drought... ..
More... |
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03.21.04: The
one that got away could haunt Huggins ... .. Former
Razorback Richardson backs Blazers... .. Calhoun-disciple
Leitao comes up short against mentor... .. Injury-plagued
Houston tight end gains 6th year of eligibility... ..
More... |
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The three-year-old New Orleans Bowl, a
postseason destination each December for one of Conference USA's
football teams, has landed a title sponsor.
Dr. Myron Moorehead, chairman of the bowl, announced
recently that Wyndham International, one of the world's premier branded
hotel-operating companies, would lend its name to the game starting next
season.
The 2004 Wyndham New Orleans Bowl, managed by the
Greater New Orleans Sports Foundation, will be staged December 14th in the
Louisiana Superdome.
The two-year agreement between the New Orleans Bowl
and Wyndham International serves the "Diversity Mission" Wyndham chairman
and CEO Fred Kleisner has set forth for the company.
"I want diversity to be more than a corporate
initiative at Wyndham International," Kleisner said. "I want it to be a
living part of our culture, a belief system and service philosophy that
comes from each of our associates."
Local involvement is a key factor in Kleisner's
system and philosophy, according to a press release from the bowl and its
new benefactor, and Wyndham executives apparently concluded that identifying
their company with the bowl and collaborating in its activities would
further Wyndham's diversity pursuits in the New Orleans community.
Aside from naming rights to the 2004 and 2005
Wyndham New Orleans Bowl, Wyndham properties in the New Orleans area will be
recognized as official hotels of the event.
The New Orleans Bowl was created in 2001, and matches the Sun Belt
Conference Champion against a C-USA opponent.
Crackdown on sleazy
recruiting looms
INDIANAPOLIS College recruits could face curfews,
limits on off-campus activities and fewer paid visits next fall, if
recruiting changes are approved by the NCAA next month.
An NCAA task force on recruiting debated all three
changes this week in its first face-to-face meeting in Indianapolis. A
formal proposal is expected to be submitted to the NCAA's management council
by April 20.
"We discussed all those kinds of things," said task
force chairman David Berst, an NCAA vice president and former head of
enforcement. "We're trying to come up with a principle-based approach."
Berst declined to discuss which specific changes may
be in the task force's draft proposal, which he expects to complete within
10 days, but he said there was unanimity among the task force's 18 members
that changes were needed in the wake of several highly publicized recruiting
scandals.
In the most prominent case, three women are suing
Colorado University after claiming they were raped during or just after a
December 2001 off-campus party for football players and recruits.
At Miami, Willie Williams, the team's top recruit
this year, has been arrested 11 times since 1999 a record school officials
said they were unaware of when he signed a national letter of intent.
Hurricanes coach Larry Coker said this month he was
partly aware of Williams' criminal past. The school has suspended the
processing of Williams' admissions application leaving his future with the
Hurricanes clouded.
Those cases prompted NCAA President Myles Brand to
form the task force in February, hoping new recruiting rules could be in
place before next fall.
Berst acknowledged that the group's wide-ranging
discussion included the possibility of eliminating paid visits entirely
although it was unclear if that would be among the proposed changes.
If paid visits were eliminated, Berst said, there
was concern it could hurt opportunities for athletes with families who could
not afford to pay for trips. "That's something that has been said by those
thinking it's not a good idea," he said.
Among other possible changes are shortening campus
visits from 48 hours to 24 hours, reducing from five to three or four the
number of visits a student can take and capping university spending on
travel, meals and lodging.
Typically, NCAA rules changes can take months or
years, but Brand has asked that the recruiting proposal be put on the fast
track.
TV viewership up for women's postseason action
BRISTOL Ratings for the NCAA women's basketball
tournament on ESPN are up from last year and are the network's highest since
1999.
Ratings on ESPN through the regional semifinals rose
from a 0.6 last year to 0.8. ESPN2 is averaging a 0.5 rating, up from last
year's 0.3.
The men's tournament on CBS is averaging a 5.8
national rating, up from 4.5 last year.
The rating is the percentage of all homes with TVs,
whether or not they are in use.
Big Dance still
fueling CBS ratings bonanza
NEW YORK CBS Sports' telecasts of the first eight
days of the NCAA tournament are up 29 percent from last year.
The national average is a 5.8 rating and a 13 share, up from 4.5 and 9 in
2003.
The second broadcast window during the network's coverage Sunday of the
regional finals earned the highest ratings in that time slot since 1999. The
window (5:10-7:29 p.m. EST), highlighted by Duke defeating Xavier, earned an
8.6 and an 18. That represents a 28 percent increase from the 6.7 and 13 of
a year ago.
The rating is the percentage of all homes with TVs, whether or not they are
in use. The share is the percentage of in-use televisions tuned to a given
program.
Saint Joe's coach honored with Naismith Award
ATLANTA Saint Joseph's Phil Martelli and
Tennessee's Pat Summitt were honored Monday as the Naismith College
Basketball Coaches of the Year by the Atlanta Tipoff Club.
The awards are named in honor of the inventor of basketball, Dr. James
Naismith.
Last week, Saint Joseph's point guard Jameer Nelson was selected the
Naismith College Player of the Year, along with Diana Taurasi of
Connecticut, who won for the second year in a row.
News Nuggets are
compiled periodically from staff, ECU, Conference USA and its member
schools, and from Associated Press and
other reports. Copyright 2004
Bonesville.net and other publishers. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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