No one said the firing caused the ncaa stuff.
Everything else you said is dead wrong. I know the situation. You don’t.
No one will agree with you that the program was hurt more the scholarship losses than the firing of Pflu.
I knew Delaney and Stitt fairly well at the time and talked to them frequently. You don’t and didn’t.
Explain why the President of SS didn’t allow Sears to bring Pflu with him.
You are an idiot and completely dead wrong. You obviously don’t talk to anyone who was involved with the program dealing with the aftermath of the Pflu brought upon sanctions. Not following Sears has already been covered the Weber offense averaged 15 points a game which is unacceptable in the Big Sky to everyone except you apparently. Pflu got to showcase his offense against Sac State in 2013 and lost 31-3 SS president and everyone with a brain, apparently not you, was not impressed. How exactly did firing Pflu set the program back?
““The Art of Offensive Futility: Weber State’s Masterclass in Going Nowhere”
If there’s such a thing as performance art in college football, Weber State’s offense put on an avant-garde masterpiece against Sacramento State. The Wildcats didn’t just stall out — they rewrote the manual on how not to move the football.
The opening 28 minutes looked like two teams trapped in a staring contest — but when Sac State finally blinked, it was to score a touchdown. Weber’s offense? Still sitting there wondering which end of the ball was supposed to move forward. Garrett Safron and DeAndre Carter hooked up for a 15-yard TD to make it 7–0, and that was basically all the Hornets needed.
But Weber wasn’t done embarrassing itself yet. After a “three-and-out” that would make even a Pop Warner coach blush, punter Tony Epperson rolled right, got caught mid-punt, and somehow kicked the ball short of the line of scrimmage. If you ever wanted to see a punt that turned into a gift-wrapped touchdown, this was it. One play later, Sac State was back in the end zone, and Weber’s defense looked like they were already in the locker room eating orange slices.
Halftime score: 14–0 Hornets, and the Wildcats had all the offensive spark of a damp matchstick.
The second half began just as inspiringly — with Sacramento State’s quarterback going a perfect 5-for-5 to start the drive and hitting a tight end for another touchdown. Weber finally responded midway through the third quarter… with a field goal. Freshman Carson Facrell trotted out and, bless his heart, nailed a 42-yarder. That was it. That was the highlight of the day. Weber fans finally got to clap for something other than a good punt snap.
Meanwhile, Sacramento State kept pouring it on, including a 51-yard bomb to Carter, who was probably wide open because half the defense was still trying to figure out who was supposed to cover him the first time. When the dust settled, it was 31–3, and the Hornets had piled up 288 passing yards to Weber’s 234 total — yes, total — yards of offense.
Let’s not forget: Sacramento State’s defense recovered four fumbles, had a guy with 16 tackles, another with 10 tackles and 4.5 TFLs, and probably could’ve borrowed Weber’s playbook midgame and still shut them down.
Weber’s Big Sky opener was supposed to be a new start. Instead, it looked like they left the keys to their offense in the pregame locker room. When your best play of the night is the other team recovering your fumbles, you know it’s going to be a long season.”
You are the only idiot who thinks this game was not reason enough for him to not continue to SS.