I'm sorry I honestly don't know what any of this means. You have storage with wars or something?
As for UC Davis—yes, it’s a respected institution. But have you seen downtown Davis lately? It’s a ghost town. If the university wants to be a catalyst for regional vibrancy, it can’t just rely on lab work and modest sports success. It needs energy. It needs foot traffic. It needs something that draws people in beyond the walls of the classroom. A more competitive athletics program does exactly that. You can look to places like Boise, Eugene, or even Fresno to see how this works when done wellquote]
Lately ? I can't recall a time when it wasn't quiet. Perhaps it was busy around the time David Bowie was releasing his biggest hits? I also don't recall a time when Davis proclaimed, "We must make a push for regional vibrancy !" It's not in danger of being a quiet campus. It already is.
As you know, there are two Davises every year that co-exist from Fall to early Summer. One is the actual city, the permanent residents. The other is the collection of UCD students interacting with local businesses, some of which are tailored specifically to them. These Davises exist in the same space but their relationship is not necessarily harmonious
Now the permanent residents have mixed thoughts on the students. They like the money coming into town, but they could do without students' nuisance behaviors (noise, excessive drinking, stabbing people..). They also like their nice, quiet, and usually safe city, and among these permanent residents are many NIMBY (Not In My Backyard) types. The NIMBY's are the ones who make enough noise in the public meetings to keep things the way they are. If businesses that close at or before 8 is what they want, that's their decision. They have to live there all year round so they might as well be comfortable. Lack of vibrant businesses in downtown is a City of Davis problem, not a UC Davis problem.
Of course the students also bear responsibility. Their spending behaviors largely determine what businesses thrive, as you also know, and when summer comes there are lean times. If there is a large and sustained demand from the students for certain businesses or for things to be open later there are adjustments made. Unfortunately for Downtown Davis, UCD brings in the most studious of the studious types who are buried in their books at night, not out looking to have a good time. That is related to the nature of the courses, but it still isn't a UCD problem. What are they going to do, tell the professors to make their classes easier so restaurants can stay open longer ?
You picked three curious examples of illustrating sports done right improving and energizing their cities. Fresno is a pit stain, and has been one for a long time. Unless a drastic overhaul has been completed in the last 4 years that I didn't hear about (would think that would be on world news), Fresno's downtown is full of boarded-up buildings, and the area near Fresno State is sketchy too. Should I be looking in a history book for this success rather than at the present ?
By the way, for some Fresno-related fun you can go to hotels.com and look up the University Square Hotel (Formerly the Picadilly Inn). It is the closest hotel or motel to Fresno State. What's entertaining are the often humorously-worded reviews (a guest reported seeing a fetus stain. Did some previous guests perform an abortion in the room ?) and the even more ridiculous responses from the hotel. I came across this gem when I was looking for a place near Fresno State a couple of years ago, and I prefer to read a couple dozen reviews before booking. Did not book a room.
Boise State's situation compared to UCD is apples and oranges. For one thing Boise has a significantly larger population. More importantly though, Boise State isn't just the only game in town, its the only game for a large chunk of ID too. UCD students (or any residents of Davis) when bored can hop on a train to the Bay Area. In Boise there isn't even a train ! Where would one gò if there were ? You could screen "Frozen" dubbed into French at Albertson's Stadium, and 30,000 bored people would still show up to watch it.
The downtown is decent and clean, but you can't attribute any of the action to all the fleeing Californians moving in and spending ?
I haven't been to Eugene, so my source of information (the 1 person I know who lives there) may be biased. Anyhow they told me it has been going to the dogs because of the lax approach to policing. Well, it's in OR so that at least sounds right. They may have bars that use clever duck puns, but I do know they've effectively pushed their longtime minor league baseball team (over 50 years) out the door while simultaneously moaning that they can't keep them. That's not college sports, but it's not a shining example of a sports crazy town either.
Now, as for me being a “free agent fan”? Darling, if I’m a free agent, I’m LeBron in a Gunrock headband. Yes, I’ll drop in on a Hornets game. Yes, I’ll nod politely at Sac’s new uniforms like someone admiring an ex’s glow-up. But let’s not pretend I’m moving in with them. I’ll be back in Davis before curfew, probably dragging half of Sacramento with me to see what real agricultural pride cow tipping looks like.
And if I open a Davis sports bar...(Hey Dan, anytime time you want to lower sqft lease numbers!) it will be the coolest Aggie bar of all time. I might even call it the "Post-Grad."
Winning matters. Not because donors demand trophies or because fans crave ego boosts, but because competition at its core is about striving for excellence. Athletics isn’t a side activity—it’s a proving ground. It teaches resilience, teamwork, and ambition in ways no lecture hall can replicate. To dismiss winning as a tertiary concern in collegiate sports is to miss the point entirely. No student-athlete trains day in and day out to provide alumni with a "decent experience." They train to win. And we, as alumni and fans, owe it to them to support that mindset.
There are plenty of deep backfields across the country, especially at the elite P4 programs who have a conveyor belt of impressive talent. However, when it comes to a mixture of talent, experience and production, one of the deepest is in the FCS.
Sacramento State has been an FCS recruiting juggernaut since the program hired Brennan Marion as their head coach on December 21st. The former UNLV offensive coordinator made numerous important additions through the transfer portal, which included a complete overhaul of the backfield.
First, one important member of the 2024 backfield does return, Curron Borders. After redshirting in 2023, Borders played in all 12 games last season, totaling 361 yards and one touchdown on the ground, while averaging 5.6 yards per carry.
Borders will face stiff competition during this off-season to attempt to earn playing time in 2025. First, two FBS transfers will try to make an immediate impact. Savion Red (Nevada) began his collegiate career at Texas before transferring to Nevada prior to the 2024 season. With the Wolf Pack, he rushed for 687 yards and a team leading eight touchdowns. The other FBS addition is Rodney Hammond Jr. (Pittsburgh), who in four seasons with the Panthers rushed for 1,546 yards and 14 touchdowns.
The most intriguing transfer addition by the Hornets may turn out to be Jamar Curtis (Lafayette). A two-time Walter Payton Award finalist, which is the FCS Heisman Trophy, Curtis rushed for 2,598 yards and 31 touchdowns over the last two seasons. On top of that he has added 49 receptions for 396 yards and three touchdowns.
How the Hornets will split the carries amongst Curtis, Hammond, Red and Borders is unclear at this point and likely will be a work in progress throughout summer camp and into the season. But this is a problem that many programs across the country would love to have. Splitting carries will keep the backfield fresh throughout the season, which should help make the Hornets a viable threat in the Big Sky Conference in 2025.
Since Coach Marion's hiring, Sacramento State has become one of the more polarizing programs in the country.
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