The Pac-12’s unprecedented response to Caleb Williams’ transfer should spark a new era of football messaging – Orange County Register

Quarterback Caleb Williams’ decision last week to transfer to USC wasn’t the least bit surprising given his ties to new coach Lincoln Riley.

But the reaction to Williams’ decision at Pac-12 headquarters, which acknowledged the news on multiple media platforms, was completely unprecedented and entirely appropriate.

It left us flabbergasted, frankly, but in a good way for the future of Pac-12 football messaging. The conference office should take a more active role in spreading the word when teams score major wins in the talent acquisition game.

Welcome to a discussion about a commissioner with a knack for social media, an evolving strategy in San Francisco and the fair but unequal treatment of the 12 football programs.

Let’s start with the timeline of events:

— On Feb. 1, Williams announced his decision to join the Trojans via his Twitter account at 9:03 am

— Approximately two hours later, Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff retweeted a video clip from ESPN’s SportsCenter and quoted a line from the show about the Williams news: “Axis shift in college football.”

— By mid-afternoon, the Pac-12’s main Twitter account had blasted out a link to an article published on the conference website: “Check out what people are saying about @USC_FB adding transfer QB @CALEBcsw”

— The article itself featured a dash of background information on Williams and displayed a series of glowing tweets from former Trojans and reactions to the new by media outlets.

Granted, it was huge news. National news. Here was the No. 1 quarterback in the transfer portal, a potential Heisman Trophy candidate, joining forces with his high-profile former coach in the nation’s largest media market at one of the sport’s blue-blood programs.

It immediately dominated the news cycle, as we’d expect.

But the reaction on official Pac-12 platforms was whole unexpected.

To the best of our knowledge, the conference’s social media accounts had never trumpeted news about the arrival of a specific recruit or transfer. They are all about the teams, the current athletes and (occasionally) the alumni.

In the past, HQ might have worried about accusations of preference treatment or been leery of setting a precedent. But this is a new era.

That became clear last summer, when Kliavkoff spoke publicly about the difference between fair and equal treatment when it came to strategic issues like football scheduling.

Kliavkoff’s presence on social media isn’t new. He’s active and engaged but careful not to get sucked into the weeds. He generally tweets about conference initiatives and collective successes — a stark contrast to his predecessor, Larry Scott, who didn’t have a Twitter account (at least an official one).

When Kliavkoff retweeted the SportsCenter clip about Williams, we noticed. And when the conference’s social media team followed up a few hours later, we definitely noticed.

An entire article on Williams seven months before he’ll set foot on the Coliseum field?

We don’t recall a similar reaction from San Francisco three years ago when mega-recruit Kayvon Thibodeaux signed with Oregon.

Or when USC’s basketball team signed Evan Mobley, the No. 1 big man in the country, two years ago.

Or even last winter, when five-star quarterback Sam Huard signed with Washington.

But Williams was national news, because of his success last season at Oklahoma, in a way those players weren’t.

And Kliavkoff understands the value of social media messaging. (His tweet about Williams gave the social media team the cover it needed to publish the article.)

And, crucially, the schools recognize that times have changed, that fair doesn’t mean equal. (We aren’t aware of any grumbling about the publication of content on Williams from any of the other 11 campuses.)

So what’s next? How will Kliavkoff and the conference office determine when a transfer or recruit is worthy of a tweet or an entire article or — dare we say it — a TikTok video?

Clearly, HQ cannot promote intra-conference transfers; it must focus on players entering the league. And it can’t become entangled in bar-setting or line-drawing. The messaging has to be organic … what feels right under the circumstances.

But make no mistake: It should use the Williams situation as propellant.

Why not create a social media team in San Francisco that’s entirely devoted to football recruiting, a team that’s in daily contact with the player personnel staffs at each program, a team that’s designed to complement and augment what the schools are doing.

The content could be directed at specific recruits, either subtly or overtly, depending on the situation and the limits of NCAA rules.

https://www.ocregister.com/2022/02/07/the-pac-12s-unprecedented-response-to-caleb-williams-should-spark-a-new-era-of-football-messaging/ The Pac-12’s unprecedented response to Caleb Williams’ transfer should spark a new era of football messaging – Orange County Register

Huynh Nguyen

TheHitc is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – admin@thehitc.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Related Articles

Back to top button