Kennel Delivers Annual Communique To The Masses

Cue the laugh track, here comes Bob Kennel’s annual communique.

__________________________________________________________________
Open Letter to Chancellor James Oblinger 23 March 2006

Subject: NC State’s “Institutional Control”

Dear Chancellor Oblinger,
NC State is a Great University, and you are doing an excellent job building upon the strengths of previous Chancellors and taking us even further. Sincere thanks to you.
I am writing concerning our NC State athletic program and some rumblings within our fan base. My family has strongly supported NC State athletics for over 60 years, and I competed for the Wolfpack in the late 50’s one year in basketball and four in football and baseball under four NC Sports Hall of Fame coaches. My red blood runs very deep.
The level of discourse concerning NC State athletics needs to be raised to a higher standard than it currently sits with some media, Internet boards, and some individuals. This is very important for our great institution. It is well known that the general public often simplistically judges sports scores on a win-lose basis while the “scores” for the importance of the Centennial Campus precedent, or 30,000 students entrusted to the University, or Billion Dollar “Achieve” campaign are not known on a daily or seasonal basis.
Recently I have been embarrassed for our University by some of the stories, language, and rumors emanating from the media, Internet, and individuals concerning our men’s basketball team and coach Herb Sendek. But the issue goes far beyond that to the subject of NC State’s “Institutional Control.” NC State has experienced external “gotcha” campaigns going back sixteen years to Coach Valvano, five years to Coach Avent, last year to Coach Sendek, and six months ago to Coach Amato where someone was after a coach’s scalp.
Sixteen years ago we did not have “Institutional Control” when Coach Valvano was dismissed. (I was the President of the Alumni Association at the time and saw first hand how decision making was taken away from NC State because we didn’t have Institutional Control in place). Today we do have it, and fortunately these last-named coaches are still representing NC State very well.
The real question is “What do you do with those who wish to influence hiring and firing decisions of the University outside of Institutional Control?” Following are some thoughts on this subject for three publics with which the University must deal:

MEDIA: NC State is subject to both local and national media, and they will always be with us. It is strange that media outside North Carolina questions why some of our fans want to get rid of a successful coach such as Herb Sendek. Locally, however, we have seen TV, several newspaper writers, and even an anonymous Technician editorial playing up negativity at inopportune times over the past two weeks.

MESSAGE BOARD FANS: Duke and Carolina may have their “WalMart” fans, but NC State has its “Message Board” fans (as well as “radio call-in” fans). Recently there has been a steady drumbeat of posters with “Fire Herb” mentality, with some individuals having literally thousands of separate posts on message boards. They are in the minority; but their anonymous and numerous posts help feed a negative frenzy. I personally interact with many of them under the name “58 Wolf Kennel” to try to reason and to understand what makes them tick. Indeed the Internet message boards are usually enjoyable for information, humor, discussions, and even emotional outlets on many subjects. However when the Internet Board or Blogger mentality tries to effect change by rumor planting or obsessive posts they will come up short in the outcome but can poison the waters in the process. Simple examples involve hurting NC State’s national image, upsetting the families of coaches, and potentially harming recruiting.

IMPORTANT INDIVIDUALS: Every organization from universities to companies to churches has important individuals who influence decisions even though they are not the decision makers themselves. Sometimes they influence by their counsel, sometimes by their financial commitments. NC State is no exception, and NC State athletics has greatly benefited from both influences. For example, the Wolfpack Club provides excellent support for NC State athletics on the basis of such people as do individuals supporting the ACHIEVE Program. Such people are often very strong in their opinions as well as their influence. NC State is fortunate to have very few of its important people who join in the negative feeding frenzies, but it does happen. Sometimes it’s not unlike a good church Deacon who withholds his tithe until the Minister is asked to leave.

INSTITUTIONAL CONTROL: Ultimately this involves the authority and responsibility of the Chancellor and the Board of Trustees to deal with athletics as well as all other University issues. For athletics this authority line goes through the Athletic Department and NC State Athletic Director Lee Fowler. He is charged with directing a competitive, clean, and cost-effective athletic program that will bring honor to the University. Responsibility for hiring and firing of coaches and other staff reside with the Chancellor and Athletic Director with the concurrence of the Board of Trustees. This is as it should be. The Chancellor may also seek input from his Council on Athletics made up of Faculty, Staff, Students, Alumni, and Wolfpack Club representatives. (I have had the honor of serving twice on this Council in the mid 1990’s and mid 2000’s, and I believe the overall health of our athletics program is the best it has ever been).

How does NC State judiciously exercise its Institutional Control given loud inputs from the three public “voices” above? After considerable thought, here is how I believe each of the three might be handled.

(a) Media: Continue to be polite but firm that you will make all personnel decisions with inputs from the Athletic Director, advice as desired from the representative Council on Athletics, and concurrence from the Trustees. You might even chide the local media for helping feed some of negative frenzy by often using and being used by the Internet rumor mills. You should assure the national media that NC State has firm Institutional Control of both its athletic programs and its expanded land-grant mission.

(b) Message Board Fans: They should simply be ignored. The anonymous nature of the Message Boards leaves it no credibility in either quality or quantity of posted information. Reason is not their agenda when what they seek is personnel change. There is no appeasement for negative feelings; and debating just inflames the passions. Of course, signed letters and e-mails identifying who and why a position is being taken should always be accepted, but you and your staff must always determine the position you wish to take. There may be a few empty seats. The Wolfpack Club would probably take some temporary heat, possibly with slightly reduced membership or participation at events; but I believe they strongly support your decisions.

(c) Important Individuals: This is the most difficult issue to deal with because such people are usually well thought out as well as influential. Once you and staff have listened to them and formed your own decisions, they will just have to live with it. At one time seven years ago, I did not agree with the timing of Chancellor Fox’s decision on relieving Coach O’Cain and gave her a letter on my reasons (even though not one of the important persons). However, once she made the decision, I fully supported it and told her so. Her decision was difficult but ultimately wise, and she clearly exercised Institutional Control.

There are also clear benefits to the Chancellor in dealing with such athletic issues.

• The NCAA likes to see demonstrations of Institutional Control.
• It’s good for every Chancellor to have on his or her record.
• It shows the University community that you and the AD are responsibly in charge of all our coaches to run competitive, clean, cost-effective programs.
• It also gives an answer to some national perceptions that some of the inmates were loose.

Finally, I wish to state my personal support for whatever decisions you make. I also trust the recommendations that AD Lee Fowler makes and any actions of the Board of Trustees. I have known most members of the Trustees for many years and implicitly trust their judgment as well as their Chair Wendell Murphy. I also believe the Council on Athletics can always be helpful in giving a representative view from the faculty, staff, students, alumni, and Wolfpackers.
Congratulations again on the overall job you are doing and wisdom on future decisions as well.

Sincerely,

Bob Kennel ‘58

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77 Responses to Kennel Delivers Annual Communique To The Masses

  1. Mr O 03/31/2006 at 11:09 AM #

    Jeff: What other areas at NC State do we not strive for success? Generally, I only see you talk about athletics.

    You guys posted something yesterday that had us ranked second in terms of overall value. That seemed to be a sign that maybe there are some areas of the university where we are striving for success.

    I am not saying you should do anything extra for NC State. That is your choice. I was just asking questions because it appeared that your desire/willingness to help NC State graduates was tied to specifically the administration’s support of Herb Sendek.

    LTRs in basketball don’t make sense for me personally. I live 400 miles from Raleigh and I have no intentions to relocate back to NC. When I lived in NC, financially it didn’t make sense for me to have LTRs. I have LTRs in football and my approach to our coaching situation will be the exact same.

  2. Jon Smith 03/31/2006 at 11:43 AM #

    I will give you an example of NCSU excellence outside of sports – this impacted my family directly. My dog was sick last year and the vet said we should give her an MRI. There are only 2 MRIs for animals in the entire US and luckily for me 1 of them is at NCSU. The reason NCSU has an animal MRI is that the Vet school is very highly ranked and NCSU also helped pay for it and made a very big effort to get it built at NCSU as opposed to another vet school. (it cost about $5 mil) It’s very prestigious for NCSU to have that type of medical equipment.

  3. BJD95 03/31/2006 at 12:18 PM #

    ^ The vet school does indeed kick ass. It’s a great resource when you have a sick pet. They diagnosed my cat with a rare mosquito allergy (usually only found in horses) several years ago.

  4. class of '74 03/31/2006 at 12:35 PM #

    ^A young lady who worked for me decided to return to school to become a vet and NCSU is seen as the #4 Vet School in the nation. Not bad for a relatively new program! You would be amazed at the distances people travel and the types of clientele that use our vet school facilities. It is truly first class.

  5. Cardiff Giant 03/31/2006 at 12:36 PM #

    Tommy B’s friends refer to him, affectionately I am sure, as “Corky.”

  6. cfpack03 03/31/2006 at 12:36 PM #

    Sure Kennel may be arrogant, but who isn’t arrogant when it comes to our personal opinions. The man is from the old school. He respects the decision-making authority and trusts that their actions are in the best interests of the university. His approach may be a little uncommon these days, but I still respect his stand.

  7. cfpack03 03/31/2006 at 12:43 PM #

    I think the insults a little immature. How does this contend an arguement or maintain the topic?

  8. class of '74 03/31/2006 at 12:43 PM #

    ^you can not be serious?

  9. class of '74 03/31/2006 at 12:52 PM #

    ^^Did you check your reading and comprehension skills at the door? The man speaks as if he were some oracle on high. He is nothing more than a self important blowhard who could not walk through a room without tripping over his self-righteous ego.

  10. Sammy Kent 03/31/2006 at 12:53 PM #

    quote “He respects the decision-making authority and trusts that their actions are in the best interests of the university.” quote

    Well, no he doesn’t. He trusts that their actions are in the best interests of the University as long as he agrees with them. Case in point:

    “At one time seven years ago, I did not agree with the timing of Chancellor Fox’s decision on relieving Coach O’Cain and gave her a letter on my reasons…”

  11. ThomYorkepack 03/31/2006 at 12:57 PM #

    ^You couldn’t be more right.

  12. StewMan07 03/31/2006 at 1:17 PM #

    You either play to win, or your playing not to lose. If your playing not to lose, you will lose every time! Right now NC State is playing not to lose. There is a clear division among the fan base between those who are just happy with having a clean program with good graduation rates, and those who want to win. Frankly it seems as though the new generation of state graduates who had to endure the 90’s mediocrity are a big portion of the let’s just win crowd, and it’s starting to spread to some of the other generations who can remember great wolfpack success. GOOD! I’m an 2003 graduate and frankly it burns my ass to no end, how mediocre this our athletics are and how we feel like if we are just in the ball game with carolina and duke in athletics or academics that it’s alright. Dadgummit I want us to DOMINATE in everything we do. It seems to me that every state fan I know feels the same way, so I dunno where people think there is a lot of support for this type of administration or attitude, but it must be a select few that really do support this crap.

    Finally Bob Kennel graduated in 1958, he lived in a different era, and really should have a hard time relating to anything relevant today. I take anything he says with a BIG grain of salt.

  13. Rick 03/31/2006 at 1:53 PM #

    “I think the insults a little immature. How does this contend an arguement or maintain the topic?”

    If you have never had any posts with him you would see he is not above insulting.

  14. cfpack03 03/31/2006 at 2:19 PM #

    “quote “He respects the decision-making authority and trusts that their actions are in the best interests of the university.â€? quote

    Well, no he doesn’t. He trusts that their actions are in the best interests of the University as long as he agrees with them. Case in point:

    “At one time seven years ago, I did not agree with the timing of Chancellor Fox’s decision on relieving Coach O’Cain and gave her a letter on my reasons…â€? ”

    He disagreed with Fox but still supported the decision. Case in point:
    “However, once she made the decision, I fully supported it and told her so. ”

    Obviously, I’m not as intimate with the guy as some here may be, especially this is the first time I’ve ever heard of the man, so fire away.
    I don’t have as much background on his characher, but from the letter, I still respect the man for his ‘seeming’ integrity and old school approach to the issue.

  15. cfpack03 03/31/2006 at 2:39 PM #

    Most people write to the Chancelor to bitch and complain. Kennel wrote to voice his concern while also reinforcing his support. I don’t really see anything wrong with it.
    I personally don’t share his unwavering loyalty though. Sometimes you have to take the bottle away from the drunk uncle, and for a while now thats uncle Lee.

  16. dan 03/31/2006 at 2:51 PM #

    “But…you cannot ignore the fact that this growing feeling amongst large numbers of Wolfpackers is very REAL when hundreds to thousands of people have been voicing their frustrations to the University (and on the internet).”

    I’m not ignoring it. I just don’t think it carries over to a students professional career. If I read your posts correctly, you’re trying to suggest otherwise.

    NC State grads are going to be successful or unsuccessful for many, many reasons completely un-related to the sports program. If current NC State grads continue to perform at the level past grads have, then there will be plenty of employers out there wanting to hire them. My employer included. The performance of the football and basketball teams do not impact that. Can you show me data or give me a case study to suggest otherwise?

  17. site admin 03/31/2006 at 3:32 PM #

    ^ You don’t understand a thing that I am saying.

  18. Feel the Hate 03/31/2006 at 3:38 PM #

    We should send Kennell lots and lots of “open letters” until he’s covered in them, then tie him to a stake and a light the letters and burn him!

  19. Jon Smith 03/31/2006 at 3:56 PM #

    I know that some alums are going to be upset about Sendek and not support NCSU but I don’t think it’s a big issue.

    How many NCSU alums are there vs. WPC members? The vast majority of alums are not WPC members so they are not going to withhold money since they aren’t giving any to being with.

  20. Trout 03/31/2006 at 4:01 PM #

    ^ Approx 150,000 NC State alumni. Approx 19,000 WPC members.

    The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences raises more more annually than the WPC.

  21. dan 03/31/2006 at 5:54 PM #

    ^ Enlighten me site admin. Please.

    Let’s try again. Jeff wrote

    “Knowing that the mission of one of NC State’s most visible divisions – athletics – settles for such mediocrity in its gross mis-management, why would I (or anyone) bother spending time raising my voice and promoting NC State? I can only assume that kind of mediocrity runs rampant throughout the rest of the University.”

    I say

    1. You are welcome to feel this way, however it’s been my experience (and my employers) that this is your loss. As long as NC State grads continue to perform at a high level at my job, HR will continue to recruit there. Regardless if NC State wins another football or basketball game.

    I will continue to raise my voice for my employer to recruit NC State students because

    1. Part of my professional reputation depends on me referring talent to our company. NC State students have talent.

    2. I have to work with the people we hire, and, I’ve worked very well with NC State grads in the past.

    When (1) and (2) change, then my feelings about hiring NC State grads change. Why do you think the rules of a free market don’t apply here?

    Again, I’d appreciate to understand where I’m going wrong here.

  22. 70wolf 03/31/2006 at 9:26 PM #

    without question Kennel is the most arrogant , egotistical SOB with delusions of grandure that I have ever seen connected with our University. Has anyone actually seen his diploma? Are we sure he did not graduate from UNC ?? He sure carries on like one of those obnoxious bastxxds from Chapel Hill. I have heard rumors that he was one of the key figures, behind the scenes ,who drove V out of NC State. Can anyone verify or expand on this ??

  23. lonchaney87 03/31/2006 at 10:21 PM #

    Oddly enough, my brother (CE – ’94) and I (Econ – ’87) were in the Alumni Assn. BBQ tent before the Clemson game last year and Kennel barged in at our already full table to pick the brains of those present. He asked us “what we thought of Herb and the basketball prospects for this season.” We told him the obvious, that “there had been anemic progress the last few years and we were not overly optimistic for the season nor pleased with the tenure of HS”(how prophetic, I know). He said “he could sleep at night” and “knew we were a clean progam.” We responded that we thought that was a minimum requirement and that looking at results, Herb wasn’t getting it done, not even close. He went on a tirade that “if you didn’t recognize Herb as a great coach then you didn’t know basketball,” informed us that “he played several sports for State” and asked us “what do you want?” Pretty simply we said “championships.” He was pretty much a jackass about it and I wanted to go across the table on him, but given that he looked older than dirt I restrained myself. My brother and I did give him a profanity-free but loud earful and he stormed off. I can’t wait to see his royal highness this year. He was at most of those Alumni BBQs before the games.

  24. Pakkfan 03/31/2006 at 11:27 PM #

    “Council on Athletics made up of Faculty, Staff, Students, Alumni, and Wolfpack Club representatives. (I have had the honor of serving twice on this Council in the mid 1990’s and mid 2000’s, and I believe the overall health of our athletics program is the best it has ever been).”

    You know I was reading intently until I got to that part.

    If I were a member of a group that did such a sorry job with hiring Lee Fowler and Herb I’d defend myself and my actions as well I guess.

    Thanks for unmasking your “unbiased” viewpoint in the issue of Herb and Leeboy.

  25. graywolf 04/01/2006 at 9:10 AM #

    Tommy may get his wish. See:
    arizonastate.scout.com/2/515571.html

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