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Cool TU-ESPN Connection

Um, we need to exploit this:



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From McAlester to TU to ESPN: George Conner was vital in network’s development

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While insisting that he “never was a sports nut,” George Conner is linked to the most significant of all sports television networks — ESPN.
This week’s season-opening football games for University of Tulsa, University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State are being presented on ESPN platforms, and ESPN as we know it today might not exist if Conner hadn’t gotten involved in 1978-79.
“Nothing could be as exciting as what we did at ESPN,” Conner said this week during an interview in his midtown Tulsa home, which essentially is a museum decorated with fascinating artifacts from ESPN’s early years.
Conner is the grandson of George Washington O’Neal, who in a horse-drawn wagon moved his family from Missouri and settled in Coal County, Oklahoma. O’Neal was a member of the first Oklahoma Legislature and in 1907 was a participant in the writing of the Oklahoma Constitution.
In McAlester, Conner’s parents operated a Coca-Cola distributorship. After graduating from TU with a marketing degree in 1964, Conner went to work for Skelly Oil in downtown Tulsa.
When Getty Oil gained control of Skelly in 1974, Conner became a Getty finance manager and moved to a seaside home in Marina del Rey, California. For a young person — and Conner at that time was a young person — Marina del Rey was a paradise community in the Los Angeles area.
As J. Paul Getty was regarded during the ’70s as the world’s wealthiest person, Getty Oil was saturated with money. In December 1978, Conner was asked by Getty executive Stu Evey to conduct a three-week study of an investment opportunity: a proposed Connecticut-based cable television network, committed all day and every day to sports programming.
Bill Rasmussen, who had been a National Hockey League publicist, and his son Scott had the idea for the network. They called it the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network or the ESP Network. Eventually, it became ESPN.
The Rasmussens, however, did not have the funds to make ESPN a reality. Seven potential investors said no to the all-sports proposal before Getty asked Conner to measure ESPN’s potential.
Then-Dallas Cowboys general manager and president Tex Schramm told Conner that he didn’t believe an ESPN type of situation would succeed.
Rasmussen requested $10 million in seed money for the use of a satellite dish and for talent salaries, production-personnel salaries and equipment purchases.
Evey called Conner on New Year’s Eve 1978 and asked for a definitive recommendation. Conner’s response: “If Bill needs an answer today, we’ve got to tell him no. But I like the idea, and I think you do. Why don’t we fund his payroll and some other expenses while we continue to look at it?”
Evey presented that option to Rasmussen — that Getty would pour some money into the ESPN startup while attempting to determine whether there would be a large-scale commitment. Rasmussen was overjoyed.
“That’s how it all started,” Conner says. “I told Getty that I would recommend (the investment) only if we used the highest-quality people and equipment, as most new businesses did not succeed.
“I think one reason the Getty people trusted my judgment was because I never was a sports nut. I enjoy sports, but I’m a business person and a financial person. I wasn’t affected by being around sports stars or media stars.”
In Peter Fox’s recently published book “The Early Years of ESPN: 300 Daydreams and Nightmares,” chapter 3 is titled “By George” and filled with Conner’s memories of his ESPN experience.
In a 2022 text-message exchange with Conner, Rasmussen stated “I still firmly believe” that without Conner as the bridge to Getty money, there would have been no ESPN.
ESPN went live on Sept. 7, 1979. Because so few homes had cable, the audience in that moment was estimated to have been only 30,000 viewers.
Today, about 68 million U.S. households have access to the ESPN television channel. The ESPN+ streaming app has 25 million subscribers. A recent Bank of America analysis estimated ESPN’s overall value at $24 billion.
“Getty was hesitant to tell me to move to Connecticut (in 1979) because they knew how much I loved living in Marina del Rey,” Conner recalled. He did make the move, though, and was ESPN’s vice president in charge of corporate finance. He had an office on the ESPN campus.
It was an exhilarating experience, but there was a terrible setback. Conner was a passenger in a car that skidded on an icy Bristol road and plowed into a tree. He sustained a broken right femur, a crushed knee, a crushed ankle and two broken wrists. Today, he still is affected by those injuries.
With an investment that eventually grew to $160 million, Conner reports, Getty Oil owned a majority stake in ESPN. Conner says the return on that investment exceeded $300 million. After Texaco took control of Getty Oil in 1984, the Getty-ESPN relationship ended.
After 3½ years at ESPN, Conner decided in 1982 that he was ready for a break. He was asked by Getty to return to Los Angeles and to oversee the construction of Getty Oil’s high-rise headquarters in the San Fernando Valley. His reply: “I’m not going back.”
“I had planned to leave Getty Oil after I was finished at ESPN,” Conner explained this week. “I had saved up for it.”
Conner wanted a one-year vacation, but it became a five-year reset on his life.
“After I left Getty and was back in Marina del Rey,” he said, “I was up at 4 o’clock in the morning each day and played the stock market until it closed. And then I got on a bicycle and rode up to Santa Monica and got a hot dog on a stick and played on the beach.”
A call from a TU fraternity brother resulted in a move back to Oklahoma. Conner would be a partner in the acquisition and management of two Tulsa medical companies near the intersection of 15th and Utica. There was the promise that Conner would have the flexibility to make frequent trips back to Los Angeles, but, he recalls, “I ran those companies for 12 years and went back to Marina del Rey twice in those 12 years.”
Conner’s favorite pastime now is stock activity and managing money. He says he may visit ESPN in November. He hasn’t been back to Bristol since 2004, when he attended an ESPN25 event — a commemoration of ESPN’s 25th anniversary.
That night, Conner was stopped and embraced by SportsCenter legend Chris Berman, who was fully aware of Conner’s role in ESPN’s development.
“Thank you, George,” Berman said.

This is the Democratic Party.

“I vote Democrat because I want to give the lesser than’s just enough social welfare to keep them happy, to keep them from revolting & storming my palace.”

I heard this for years at southern hills.

“the true secret to get what you want in life is only by earning it or by taking it & one is immensely easier than the other…” So they vote Democrat

Many of these guys are the people who never talk about someone’s daughter unless they’re tryna sleep wit her.

“I vote Democrat because I want to give the lesser than’s just enough social welfare to keep them happy, to keep them from revolting & storming my palace.”
Party as we burn it all down screw the average person… that’s the mentality. Why? “Because F them. We’re better than them.” This is their answer.

“I’m cool with 20% as long as they’ll never see 50% of what I’ve got…” before another corrects him “not 50%, 40%! They won’t see 40% of what I have!” That’s their ongoing joke their 20% price tag… which is often the difference in taxes between Democrat & Republican.

These people are racist af behind the scenes

TU Men's Soccer Fall 2024

Disappointing loss knowing you thoroughly outplayed the #24 team in the country. I mean Louisville had 1 dangerous attack all game. The 2 goals weren't even team defensive mistakes. Your GK absolutely needs to make both of those saves. I mean TU had like a 17-7 advantage in shots, probably an 8 or 9 to maybe 3 in corners. And somewhere around a 60/40 advantage in possession. I think TU will be OK. They do need to find some finishing in the final 1/3 but I think Belong and the kid from Ghana that played the majority of the game at the 9 are going to find plenty of goals this season.

TU absolutely needs to keep Torrijos healthy. He makes everything go and you can notice the drop off when Dalby is in at the 6. I like This defenders. They're pretty damn good. Louisville wasn't able to find any space in the middle at all and they played with good shape and understanding of each other and their cover responsibilities. Again, I didn't feel that either goal was due to a defensive mistake.
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Tulsa Mayoral Election Primary

Keith seems like a nice person and I would see her mayoral tenure as kind of a caretaker role. I think she would be a consensus builder. But I don't know if we would get big and bold.

Monroe worked his house district like crazy to get out the vote. My neighbor held a "come meet Monroe" event at a brewery on sixth street last week. They canvassed the neighborhood encouraging votes and signs. He seems like a bolder leader, which is why I prefer him. Plus he supports my pet project with actions - which is passenger rail for Tulsa (which is obviously not a main piller of his campaign, but still...).

We are about to enter a phase where other cities will be bounding past us with updated public facilities like arenas, convention hotels, stadiums. We need a mayor willing to take risks - and working collaboratively with the tribes could help. That's alongside making real headway on homelessness, which he is promoting as part of his campaign.

TU Men's Soccer Fall 2024

Only the second game but this is starting to look at bit like last season.
GK needs to be better. If you give up 3 goals and they're all from distance, you may need to adjust the way you position yourself when the ball is in shooting range. Teams know he plays high and are shooting from everywhere. Louisville took a shot with 20 seconds left from MF because Lopez was at the top of the 18.

TU Men's Soccer Fall 2024

TU scores just before half to make it 2-1 Louisville. Louisville's 2nd goal was a carbon copy of their first, maybe a touch closer. Alex needs to stay back on his line because TU thoroughly dominated the half and going against the wind. A lot of good looks and dangerous crosses off corners. Louisville has not been able to create anything or keep possession. I think they made 2 forward subs that half but their MFs and defenders had to work hard that half as they were chasing TU all over the place.

TUs goal was scored by Ian Belong, the kid from Bartlesville. I'd say TU was more dangerous with their 3 sub forwards than they were with the starters.

Honestly with the group of 16 players who have played for TU, they are a good and dangerous team, a lot like 2 years ago. They need better goalkeeping and can't give up cheap goals like they have. My understanding is the goal conceded to UNLV was a similar goal.

TU Men's Soccer Fall 2024

Louisville scores 10 minutes in from 40 yds catching Lopez off his line. TU has controlled the majority of play to this point keeping Louisville on their heels and without being able to control any possession. Louisville has already picked up 2 yellows and I'll be shocked if they finish the game with 11 players. They go in for tackles hard and on the ground almost every challenge.
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TU Men's Soccer Fall 2024

At the TU vs Louisville game. Will let everyone know the starters are when they announce them. Segukuchi (sp?) I'm willing to bet he starts at the 7 or 11. And maybe the kid from Bartlesville might be the 9.

Hard to tell just from warm ups but it appears Louisville only brought 1 keeper unless the other already went to the locker room.

It also appears TU has put up a new scoreboard for soccer. Wish they would have put up a small video board with it for replays. I know this one is on ESPN + but it looks like TU might be upping their production quality some. They've got the big time TV cameras out. One on a scissor lift in the north end zone and one at about MF up by the press box.
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