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Hauck and the media

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Westcoastfan said:
It is so sad and embarrassing to see Bobby interact with the media! All the reporters are so intimidated by him and he is such a classless prick. Comparing him to Vegan is not close. I wanted to share an article from 2009 and you have to ask yourself has Bobby changed?

Opinion: The legacy of Bobby Hauck
Story by Tyson Alger | December 26, 2009
Montana Kaimin

After seven seasons, seven straight Big Sky Conference titles, an 80-17 record, and three championship appearances with no hardware to show for it, Bobby Hauck’s search for greener pastures is finally over.

Hauck’s run as the head coach of the Montana Grizzlies ended Wednesday when he exchanged his maroon and silver for the red-and-gray striped tie he donned as he was introduced as the next head coach for the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.

It was eerie to see Hauck speak about hard work and dedication toward reshaping the Rebel program only a week removed from phrasing similar quotes about the opportunity to win a national title as a proud Grizzly.

But within hours of Montana’s devastating loss to Villanova — the second year in a row Hauck’s team has fallen in the title game — rumors started to swirl that Hauck would interview for the UNLV job. Five days later, Hauck’s dream of becoming a head coach at the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision level became a reality, leaving Montana without a coach and a city without a championship.

“I just can’t tell you how excited we are to be here,” Hauck said to the Las Vegas media Wednesday. “I’m appreciative of this opportunity. I’m humbled by the number of people here to hear these remarks, and I’m excited to be the head coach of UNLV. We’re going to make things happen here.”

Hauck’s press conference was short, sweet, and to the point. Similar to a press conference he had almost seven years to the day, when he was first announced as the coach of Montana.

“It’s great to be a Montana Grizzly,” Hauck said Dec. 20, 2002, when the Big Timber native returned to his alma mater to take the reins from Joe Glenn, who — like Hauck — left Missoula after his success at UM for a more luxurious job in the FBS. “I’m hoping this is a long and prosperous run for the University of Montana during my tenure.”

And it was.

Some said all Hauck had to do was keep from crashing the Cadillac he’d just received the keys to. The Joe Glenn era saw Montana go 39-6 in his three seasons, including one national title, another title game appearance, and a quarterfinal appearance. When Hauck took the keys from Glenn, he inherited a program that had history, recent success, and a limitless amount of community support.

During Hauck’s first couple of seasons, he gave a glimpse of what was to come.

His first season, he lead the Griz to an up-and-down 9-4 record, but went 5-2 in conference and secured a playoff appearance — which he would do in every season he was with the Grizzlies.

Then in 2004, Hauck went 12-3 and made his first national title game appearance, a 21-31 loss at the hands of James Madison.

Hauck and the Grizzlies continued to have success over the years, making title game appearances in 2008 and 2009.

Regular season success was never a problem for the Griz during Hauck’s tenure, but a national championship always eluded them. Meanwhile, off-the-field incidents and Hauck’s demeanor with the media started to become as notable as the wins.

The first bout of negative press Hauck received in Missoula came during the 2004 season, when he fired the team chaplain, Father Hogan, after Hogan refused to do team Mass. The Missoulian wrote about the firing and Hauck expressed his distaste for the story.

And that was the start of Hauck’s long and tedious relationship with the media.

Over the years, Hauck would oftentimes be abrasive to reporters who questioned him about players’ injuries or about incidents like those in 2007, when one player was arrested and charged with murder (he was later acquitted) and four players were arrested in connection to a home invasion.

Three of Hauck’s players appeared in the blotter in 2008, when they were charged with beating a student outside a dorm. This year, a story that ran in September about an alleged assault that took place in March resulted in a flap between Hauck and the Kaimin.

That’s not to say that these incidents have anything to do with Hauck, what he believes in, or the players he goes out to recruit. But the way in which he dealt with the media during these moments — generally hiding behind various forms of “No comment” — is part of his legacy.

I got to sit front row to a vast array of snide remarks from Hauck based on questions he didn’t want to answer.

From the start of the season — pre-Hauck-vs.-Kaimin — I had trouble getting a straight answer from the man. I had heard from past Kaimin reporters that dealing with Hauck was a challenge; that he didn’t care much for our student-run paper. But at the time, I, being a bright-eyed, glass-half-full type of fellow, approached my beat as a fresh opportunity and a chance to develop a relationship with the coach.

I met Hauck for the first time walking into the first Tuesday press conference of the season. I introduced myself, he put his hand on my shoulder, said it was nice to meet me.

It was lovely. It was fake. He was grinning.

I made my first mistake a week later when I asked about an injury to Marc Mariani in the game against Western State. Mariani had pulled up lame in the second quarter and didn’t touch the ball the rest of the game.

When I asked during the post-game press conference why Mariani was favoring his right leg and didn’t get any touches in the second half, Hauck tried his best to abuse my question.

“The quarterbacks threw it to other guys. Maybe it was sore,” Hauck responded to the amusement of the other members of the Missoula media, while wearing the same grin — to the tune of saying, “I know something but I’m not telling.”

The next day at practice, Mariani was wearing a red non-contact jersey, the telltale sign that a player is injured.

It went downhill from there, especially after I first asked questions about Trumaine Johnson and Andrew Swink. I approached Hauck three times about the situation — each time with different information for him to comment on — before his eventual outburst directed at me after I told him we knew about the fight and asked him to comment.

The next three months — the boycott, that national media attention, and his eventual return to Kaimin communication — were a blur to me. But two things held steady throughout all of it: the grin and the wins.

And those wins are what earned Hauck his ticket out of Missoula.

Hauck will have his work cut out for him in Vegas. He takes the head position of a program that hasn’t had a winning season since 2000, in a place where oftentimes football is an afterthought amidst the other activities the city has to offer. Hauck won’t have the benefit of coaching for his home state, his alma mater, and a program with expansive history and undying support.

In 2008, the Rebels, who compete in the Mountain West Conference of the FBS, averaged a meager 20,849 fans a game. That year, Montana averaged 23,923 a game in the less-touted Football Championship Subdivision.

Hauck will have to prove that he can take a program that went 16-43 under prior UNLV coach Mike Sanford and shape it into a contender.

Can he do it? That’s to be determined. We’ve never had the opportunity to see what Hauck can do under less-than-pristine circumstances.

But what UNLV gets in Hauck is a coach that has proven that he can win. No matter how you look at it, 80 wins over seven years is nothing short of remarkable. The Rebels will get a coach who works hard, cares about his job, and won’t stop until he finds success.

But for all of those victories, the conference titles, the wins over the Bobcats and the magical runs to three championship games, one number will stand out in the hearts of Griz fans who are still reeling from last week’s loss to Villanova.

Zero.

That’s the number of championships Hauck brought to Montana. And for all of the accolades and praise Hauck receives about his coaching — while deserved — the fact remains that he jumped ship on this program before he ever took it to its highest peak.

And that will be the legacy of Bobby Hauck.

[email protected]

I like how Hauck does interviews. Hauck never was like Alger said. Alger is a dick. A bigger dick than Hauck ever was, in my view.

The UNLV student sportswriters liked Hauck. The unlvfreepress wrote and article on how the sportswriters like Hauck. All positive. "Bobby Hauck was a class act with student reporters". My assumption is that the UNLV sports reporters were also class acts, unlike some of the Kaimin reporters. The old link to the article is no longer good. I got the above 2 sentences from I post I made back in the day.
 
umwsufan said:
I know I am going to catch a lot of flack for what I'm about to say:

I'm a Griz alum and huge fan of Griz athletics; however, I, too, am somewhat disgusted with Bobby's childish demeanor toward the Press. Much to the chagrin of the University's president and athletic director, our football coach is the face of the University and Griz Nation. Consequently, his behavior directly reflects the University as a whole. His surly and condescending persona during press conferences is not the image the University needs right now! UM is struggling to right its financial ship, and I, for one, see all our coaches playing a key role in helping market the University in a positive light. Win, lose, or draw, Coach Hauck needs to role model professionalism to the Nth degree because his position is much more impactful to/for the University than ever before!

Have you ever seen or attended a Hauck interview. Most are very good or great. You come across very suspicious.
 
Westcoastfan said:
For one he is unable to say “Montana State” which is pretty comical. Never heard of Bellichek or Saban unable to say the opponents name.

I love how Bobby won't say Montana State, or stay in Bozeman. I love how he irritates Bobcats.
 
Bobby is cocky. That's often confused with being an arrogant ass, which Hauck isn't. The man has always been terrific to me. As has his wife. Someday, I'll have a few brews with Bobby and Tim and hear all the stories. I'm sure, he can bs with the best.
 
Cowboys84 said:
Da Boyz Mom said:
Bobcat fans' fascination with Bobby is pretty hilarious. Who gives a flying flip how he talks to the media? Listening to Vigan is about as exciting as watching paint dry but we don't go on Bobcat nation and trash him over it.

That's because most of the Montana grizzlies fan base is still crying and moaning on ESPN college gameday Twitter page about being passed over for gameday... if you don't believe me go over to their site

I know it sounds impossible to some of you over here that ESPN would decide a college football gameday atmosphere between #4 ranked Ohio State against #6 Michigan, two teams in the latest playoff rankings might draw a bigger audience than a fcs "brawl of the wild" matchup that hardly anybody outside the state of Montana actually knew existed

MONTANA TOUGH.....😂😂😂

ESPN knew the Griz/Cat game would be a blow out. Better to have a Big 10 blowout.
 
CDAGRIZ said:
EverettGriz said:
His mother disowned him.

And not that I literally give two shits, but I wonder what Sixx said in his press conference after giving up 10 — TEN!!!! — tuddies Saturday

Probably a little of Column A (culture); little of Column B (trajectory). Sixx’s handlers aren’t dummies. They know the script. Those words are catnip to the Cat faithful.

Right. What was I thinking? Of course he’s read “The Art of Coaching .500 Ball

That’s covered in chapter six if I’m not mistaken, which is quite the irony when you think about it.
 
EverettGriz said:
CDAGRIZ said:
Probably a little of Column A (culture); little of Column B (trajectory). Sixx’s handlers aren’t dummies. They know the script. Those words are catnip to the Cat faithful.

Right. What was I thinking? Of course he’s read “The Art of Coaching .500 Ball

That’s covered in chapter six if I’m not mistaken, which is quite the irony when you think about it.


Ah, a literature man. You would be punctilious in assuming that.
 
CDAGRIZ said:
EverettGriz said:
Right. What was I thinking? Of course he’s read “The Art of Coaching .500 Ball

That’s covered in chapter six if I’m not mistaken, which is quite the irony when you think about it.


Ah, a literature man. You would be punctilious in assuming that.

:lol:

One of my favorite words. Which may be why I have no friends….
 
Westcoastfan said:
15-48, that’s not 500 ball. 😂

I don’t even know what this means.

But I do know that not even the book written by the great Ron Ash has any recommendations for how to handle giving up ten tudders on 11 drives (with the 11th being a missed FG).
 
EverettGriz said:
Westcoastfan said:
15-48, that’s not 500 ball. 😂

I don’t even know what this means.

But I do know that not even the book written by the great Ron Ash has any recommendations for how to handle giving up ten tudders on 11 drives (with the 11th being a missed FG).

Not sure what it means, either. Could be Merlot’s projected comp/att for the conference season?
 
Maybe it's the cat's Brawl record over the next 63 or 64 games. I'd say even that's a little optimistic! :lol:
 
Westcoastfan said:
Sorry meant 15-49.

That’s more in line with the completion percentage in the old kids’ game “500”, which Merlot plays when he drops back. Maybe it is “500” ball, after all.
 
To know Hauck is to love him. You don't know him, you can either take him or leave him or hate him as a Troll.
To the media he just hates stupid questions that has been asked several times.
I think it was the first game as it was hot and he was asked by a reporter "why did you rotate out the first string lines and put in the second and third string players" to which he answers, it was hot. :lol:
Got to love the guy!!
 
grizare#1 said:
To know Hauck is to love him. You don't know him, you can either take him or leave him or hate him as a Troll.
To the media he just hates stupid questions that has been asked several times.
I think it was the first game as it was hot and he was asked by a reporter "why did you rotate out the first string lines and put in the second and third string players" to which he answers, it was hot. :lol:
Got to love the guy!!

I’m with you on this. I know there are great sports reporters out there who have good rapport with coaches. Those guys do fine work, and we’re glad we have them. But, every once in awhile, there are douchey questions. The media controls the narrative, so sometimes a coach’s answers get painted in a way that isn’t awesome because a reporter feels slighted (genuinely, or intentionally for a story).

I have no journalistic experience at all, but I think most journalists would do well to recognize that they aren’t on the team, they aren’t on the staff, and they are entitled only to what the coaches want to share. The good ones do. That’s all.
 
These things are painful to watch. I would only hope he’d approach them like they were communications to not only the media & the fans who actually care about these things,, but to prospective players, & their parents, who might consider coming to Montana but might be put off by grumpy pants thinking he’s owning the media.
 
Being a condescending disrespectful D bag too people does not generally help in recruiting. If I’m a mom of an prospective player, Bobby is the last guy I would want my son to play for.
 
41>37 said:
Being a condescending disrespectful D bag too people does not generally help in recruiting. If I’m a mom of an prospective player, Bobby is the last guy I would want my son to play for.

I’d say he handles the media about as well as a Nick Sabin or a Bill Belichick. Would you let let kids play for either of them or no?
 
41>37 said:
Being a condescending disrespectful D bag too people does not generally help in recruiting. If I’m a mom of an prospective player, Bobby is the last guy I would want my son to play for.

What if your son was a QB? You’d seriously rather send him to Bozeman where he wouldn’t be developed at all and face certain injury playing for a guy who thinks CFA sauce is “too spicy”?
 
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