Sunday, June 27, 2010

U of U joins the Pac-12: “A trail to Mediocrity?”

When the decision was made, I was in Kansas City, sitting in a hotel. I had no access to KSL radio, BYU internet, or anything of that matter. All I had was a text from KSL, that said. Utah joins Pac-10 live coverage on 102.7 FM, 1160 AM. . . I was shocked, and I have to admit being a huge cougar fan I was pretty upset; actually I was furious. And although it took me a few days to regain my sense of logic on the issue I eventually applied my rational faculty to the matter and came to the conclusion that the Utes are actually inadvertently stepping down a trail to mediocrity. Let me explain.


Now, with this new invitation to the Pac-10 I’m sure that the Utes have reason to celebrate, after all they are moving into a higher class Conference; more elite than any they have ever been apart of.. . . But that’s actually the biggest down side to this situation. Can the Utes even survive in a Conference as big as the Pac-10? History would argue against the Utes.

Let’s take a nice even number—“50”—and look at the Utes success over the last fifty years: They have 2 BCS titles, 11 bowl wins, and 6 Conference Championships: 2 Coming from the WAC and 4 Coming from the MWC, (on a side note, 3 of the 6 were shared conference titles.) Now try to understand that MWC and the WAC are and have been Conferences, that well, haven’t exactly been crowned among the more prestigious and elite conferences in the nation.…but still, from these conferences the Utes only earned 6 titles in 50 years. ––Now as they move on to an elite conference competing against teams like USC and UCLA on a yearly basis, how do they expect to be more successful than 6 titles in 50 years, coming from lower class conferences, in which ½ of their championships were ties? My answer is…Ute fans… don’t hold your breath, because your team may just become the ‘Butler’ of the Pac-12.

Now in contrast, in the last 50 years BYU has won 23 Conference championships (From the same conferences as Utah), 17 Bowl game wins, 1 National Championship, 17 top 25 finishing seasons, and 1 Heisman winner. Now shouldn’t a team like this be the one that is up for consideration when talking about which teams deserve to move into better conferences? I guess we will find out, but until we do, BYU along with TCU and now Boise will have a great time Ruling the MWC without the Utes. BYU may be in a smaller pond, but we are the big fish, and quite frankly the more deserving Team, more the more experienced Team, and historically proven the better team altogether.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Your vision of Success

As I look out into this audience I see, my family, my teachers, my friends, I would like to thank each one of you for the support you’ve given us all- to get us each to this point today….I look out and I see my fellow classmates of The Class of 2010. . . But more importantly I see a group of individuals, each with different backgrounds, ideas, desires, and achievements. We are each here today to celebrate those Achievements; Today is the day of our graduation.— Tomorrow we begin our days of independence; relying on nothing but our own vision and judgment to guide us.. . . Lancers, as you now forge ahead, you leave behind the solace of high school; but enter into a world of achievement- where success is in sight, will you press on and choose to pursue it?

Ayn Rand once said, “The ladder of success is best climbed by stepping on the rungs of opportunity.” The United States of America is a land of opportunity, and throughout the course of our lives we will be faced with more opportunity than any person before us. . Ronald Regan, said, “Each generation goes further than the generation preceding it because it stands on the shoulders of that generation.” — Our graduating class holds in its hands the achievements of our parents, teachers, and those who paved the roads before us. We honor them for their courage and merits, as we reach for our own success, and recognize that our triumphs begin with theirs.
A line from The Fountainhead reads, “Throughout the centuries there were men who took first steps down new roads armed with nothing but their own vision.” As we each Race towards our visions it is important to realize that you will fail if you fail to proceed with a passion. History is filled with examples of those who succeeded—against all odds—— their passion and individual desires guided them to success.

Call a child dull and hopeless and flunk him in the sixth grade, and you have a Winston Churchill. Tell a young boy that he has no talent, and that he should give up, and you have a Walt Disney. Deny a child the ability to see, hear and speak, and you have a Helen Keller. Call a boy a slow learner "retarded" and write him off as uneducable, and you have an Albert Einstein. Take an undeveloped nation whose people have no rights, no government, no trained army, and no conceivable chance at liberty—and you have the beginning of The United States of America. . . All of these examples were told that they could not, that they would never. They fought, they suffered, and they paid. But they won. Because they wanted their visions to much, to let anyone deny them from chasing it.

My Grandfather recently told me, “Jason you’re a lucky person, you already know what you want to be, so be sure, at all costs to never give up on it. Take every position, every opportunity, every internship, job or class that will bring you closer to that goal. And just don’t ever give up on it. I expect great things from you.” My friends, the world expects great things from us. But as Dr. Howard Thurman put it "Don't ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive." Ladies and Gentlemen, The road to success is by no means easy. . . in fact it is meant to be hard.. . . But you can rise above anything that stands against you; if you will swear allegiance to yourself, to your own values, to your own goals and to your vision, and promise to follow them as far down the road of achievement as your ability and ambition will carry you.

I’ll end with a quote from a character from the Famous book, Atlas Shrugged. John Galt once said, “Do not let the hero in your soul perish, in lonely frustration for the life you deserved. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won, it exists, it is real, it is possible, it's yours.” Friends, there is a reason that both the Lancer Legend and Creed end with the words; “The World is mine”. It’s because, the world truly is yours . . . This IS our time. Now Go out there, and take it!!!