![]() |
Quote:
Quote:
|
^^ The fact that your school's alums don't have their priorities in order doesn't mean that all school systems should fall prey to the football is king mentality. Many manage to survive without a football team, even after having one. I think your alums would get over it eventually.
|
Quote:
I think your 'purist' stand, while commendable on some levels, really ignores a fundamental reality of the college experience for literally millions of Americans, beyond being basically impossible. |
Quote:
|
Okay, for the record, all my school's alumni are not football-mad neanderthals who would spontaneously combust if the hallowed pigskin were vanquished from the campus. However, there is a semi-organized group of very involved and very generous alumni from the 1950s and 1960s, most of whom were football players. It is these fellows to whom I'm referring.
I just personally find it unfair that our men's track, cross country, tennis and golf teams had to be eliminated because there aren't enough women playing on the nine teams (3 more than the men) that were offered. That's not the men's fault. |
Quote:
Is getting rid of football actually the solution? No, not really. Should some schools consider it? Probably. |
Wish mine would. But no, they are going to D-1. They can't fill the current stadium, so the obvious solution is enlarge it. I keep hearing about all the money athletics brings in, but no one can quote me any numbers. If football were indeed such a great money maker I have no doubt the athletic department would be shouting it from the rooftops. Instead, supporters point to those few programs which do turn a profit, ignoring the fact that those programs have television deals that I will bet TX State will never be offered.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Football drives the train, though, so there's good reason why a Texas State or UL-Monroe wants in on that particular action: it's absurdly profitable. That profitability opens new doors - admissions requests go up, endowment and donations increase, etc. I can understand, on some level, why DF and others feel this is "dirty money" but there are about a dozen better arguments to counter that (increased opportunity for non-traditional students, destruction of regionalism in the student population, etc etc etc), plus the tangible cash benefits so greatly outweigh any of the intangible negatives or "seedy feelings" in my mind that it becomes a no-brainer. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
@ the bold - this seems to be the greatest driving force to build the school's football program. When you have a team with a winning season(s) then admissions go up. Case-in-point: Texas. When they started winning a lot of football games admission requests went up, and they became very selective on their admissions requirements. For a while they only accepted the top 10% of students from their hs graduating class. This weekend I heard UT has now gone up to top 8%. |
Quote:
In fact, I can't see a single way in which Iowa would "save money" by eliminating sports. I can see dozens of ways in which they can and do capitalize on sports, though. For a school like Iowa, who is at least break-even with its athletic programs, all of these ancillary benefits pile up purely into the profit category. I suspect that even a relatively large loss on sports still creates enough of the ancillary advantages to push the net total into a win for the school. Now, step out of the mid-tier and into the OSUs and UTs of the world, and you're stacking money like it's your job. Thus, the haves/have-nots disparity - many schools get a tangible or ancillary benefit. Others bring in nine figures. |
I'd trust the numbers more if they hadn't been posted by the athletic department - who knows what they consider expenses? TX State doesn't have the athletic department budget on the athletic dept. website that I can find. I found the entire budget on-line, but can't get it to print so I can check it out. I would be SHOCKED if the athletic department were self-supporting, but feel free to prove me wrong.
|
Quote:
Also, when a budget matches up dollar to dollar like that, I flat out don't believe it. There's no way that's an accurate representation of money actually earned/spent. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:47 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.