News

Nobody stumps harder for the Pac-12 than Rick Neuheisel. While a return to coaching is intriguing to the former Rose Bowl MVP, he's a star on the airwaves.
UCLA coach Rick Neuheisel began his fourth season by acknowledging he's on a hot seat, and his Bruins haven't done much to cool it down in the last three months.
KENT — Rick Neuheisel’s attorneys are expected to rest their case today against the University of Washington and the NCAA, after calling Neuheisel’s financial adviser and an economic analyst ...
Rick Neuheisel is gleefully counting the millions from his lawsuit against the University of Washington and the NCAA, but he hardly qualifies as a sympathetic figure.
Rick Neuheisel finally gets his day in court. The former Washington football coach has waited 17 months for his trial against the NCAA and his ex-employer, firmly believing he will be vindicated ...
Rick Neuheisel is on shaky ground at UCLA. In his first three seasons at the school, the Bruins have only managed to appear in one bowl game under Neuheisel, and have never won more than three ...
Rick Neuheisel left King County Superior Court yesterday hoping to “break bread, shake hands and be friends” with the people he just spent five weeks challenging in court. After reaching a $4. ...
``Rick did not tell me he was going to San Francisco,'' Hedges said. ``There's no question that Rick was untruthful.'' Neuheisel was warned after that episode that more lies wouldn't be tolerated.
Rick Neuheisel bounded over, flashing his ever-present smile, and immediately launched into the patter. “He was like, ‘How are you doing?’ and ‘How’s your mom?’ ” Odighizuwa said.
Neuheisel did none of the above. Hedges needs to stand behind not only Neuheisel, but her own rules specialist, who correctly read Bylaw 10.3.
He casually drapes himself across his office couch as if he’s lounging by the pool. Yet none of it can mask the wintry truth. Rick Neuheisel has one more chance, and he knows it.
In just two-plus years in front of the camera, Rick Neuheisel has reinvented himself. As a coach, the 1979 Tempe McClintock High graduate had his problems, losing jobs at two Pac-12 schools.