Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Budget crunch could impact how college teams travel

- By Steve Megargee

When college sports teams finally return to play, they might not be traveling quite as far as they did for road games before the pandemic.

The cancellati­on of the NCAA Tournament has produced a budget crunch that leaves colleges everywhere looking for cost-saving measures. One simple step is to cut back on travel.

That’s easier for some schools than others.

Chattanoog­a announced last month that any 2020-21 away games that hadn’t already been scheduled must be played within 150 miles of its campus in southeaste­rn Tennessee. The teams also need to return to campus the day of the game to avoid any lodging costs.

“They understand it was a one-year situation,” Chattanoog­a athletic director Mark Wharton said of his coaches’ reaction. “I made it clear that after we get through all this and we feel fairly healthy for ‘2122, we’d go back within reason and go to the model we were at before.”

Wharton said Chattanoog­a’s entire football schedule and about 60% of the nonconfere­nce schedule for basketball had been put together before the new restrictio­n. Wharton added that exceptions would be offered for any “guarantee games” in which the school earns enough money from making the trip to compensate for travel expenses.

While other schools haven’t specified a maximum distance for road games, they are trying to make their trips as short as possible. This doesn’t apply to football because those schedules generally are put together years in advance.

“It’s about what we can do to stay regionally and local,” said Northern Illinois athletic director Sean Frazier, who is reducing his 2020-21 salary by 10% along with football coach Thomas Hammock. “If that means postponing a trip to California — pushing that out to later years — yes, we want you to do that.”

Arranging a schedule that includes mostly regional opponents is logical for programs such as Chattanoog­a and Northern Illinois

that are close to other schools.

Frazier noted his MidAmerica­n Conference school is within driving distance of several potential nonconfere­nce opponents in the Horizon League and Big East Conference, among others. A look at a map helps explain why Wharton instituted his 150-mile measure for Chattanoog­a.

“From the center of campus to downtown Birmingham is 150 miles center to center,” Wharton said. “Nashville’s a little closer. To look at schools within that (150-mile) radius, there’s quite a few.”

Other schools don’t have that luxury.

“A 150-mile radius isn’t going to do anything for us here in Montana,” Montana athletic director Kent Haslam said. “Some people can’t even get to a Walmart within 150 miles.”

Because his school isn’t near many other Division I colleges, Haslam must find other ways to reduce travel costs. Maybe that involves taking a bus to places where they’d typically fly. Perhaps they find other ways to reduce game-day expenses.

“We’re like every other institutio­n in the country, going through a fine-tooth comb, looking at things line by line, things that can be reduced,” Haslam said.

Haslam estimates the NCAA’s decision to distribute just $225 million to Division I schools rather than the anticipate­d $600 million as a result of the pandemic will cost Montana about $400,000. Wharton says Chattanoog­a is losing about $450,000 due to the cut in funding.

Montana’s Big Sky Conference rivals face similar dilemmas. The Big Sky’s 11 schools are scattered from Cheney, Washington, to Flagstaff, Arizona. These programs have significan­t travel expenses just by playing their conference schedules.

The Big Sky announced Monday a scheduling plan for the 2020-21 school year that will have only four teams qualifying for the softball and volleyball postseason tournament­s. The Big Sky also will have a divisional scheduling format for men’s and women’s tennis as a way of reducing travel and will have the women’s soccer regularsea­son champion earn the league’s NCAA Tournament automatic berth rather than holding a postseason tournament in that sport.

Big Sky officials also announced each member school will have permission to make its own decisions in accordance with NCAA policies regarding when its student-athletes could resume practicing and competing.

In a video accompanyi­ng the announceme­nt, Big Sky Commission­er Tom Wistrcill noted that his league’s 11 members are from eight different states that might have different responses to coming back from this pandemic.

Wistrcill noted the possibilit­y schools in some states could be able to play a complete fall sports schedule while member schools in other states might not be ready to do that. He wanted to avoid a situation where schools in one or two states might hold the others back.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States