Las Vegas Review-Journal

IS UNLV FOOTBALL WORTH SAVING?

Other schools cut program to balance budget, help other sports

- By Mark Anderson Las Vegas Review-journal ED GRANEY COMMENTARY

FULLERTON, Calif. — High on a bookshelf behind Steve Ditolla sits a photo of Gene Murphy, Cal State Fullerton’s last football coach.

Through a window in the office Murphy once used, Ditolla can see an expanse of grass that served as the football team’s practice fields.

Ditolla feels the sport to his core, but he was one of the decision-makers when it came to cutting football at Fullerton after the 1992 season. Administra­tors examined different ways to keep football but decided the only viable option was eliminatin­g a program losing $750,000 per year.

UNLV

“It was the toughest thing to do,” said Ditolla, Fullerton’s senior associate athletic director. “It was by far the toughest decision, but it was the right decision. I can tell you from a personal standpoint, nobody loves football more than me. It still stings.”

With the Rebels struggling to draw fans and keep interest in the Las Vegas market, should this be an option for the UNLV athletic department? The second of a five-part series on UNLV sports examines this question.

Dropping football isn’t on UNLV’S radar. Rebels officials are progressin­g with constructi­on of the Fertitta Football Complex and the move to join the Raiders in the new Las Vegas stadium in 2020.

It’s a topic that pops up from time to time as the Rebels continue to struggle to win. The football program might have hit its lowest point this season, especially as it raises expectatio­ns each year. The last winning season was in 2013, and the one before that was in 2000.

Small crowds, big cost

The football program is a financial drain on the athletic department, with crowds sometimes around 10,000 at the 35,500-seat Sam Boyd Stadium. In the most recent available financial numbers, UNLV took in $5.9 million in revenue for the program for the 2016-17 fiscal year and spent $9.8 million.

Rebels athletic director Desiree Reed-francois indicated, however, that eliminatin­g football is not an option.

“Our whole NCAA governance model is based upon one sport, and that’s football,” she said. “Our conference affiliatio­n is based upon football. If you look at TV ratings and TV revenue, football is the one that moves the needle.

“Also, the beauty of football is it brings people together.”

She pointed to the reclamatio­n projects at Texas Christian under coach Gary Patterson, Cincinnati under Mark Dantonio and other top coaches who followed, Virginia Tech under Frank Beamer and Kansas State under Bill Snyder.

“What I know is it can be done here,” Reed-francois said. “We’ve studied this. There’s never going to be one that’s exactly the same scenario, but they provide illustrati­ons and help us to formulate our plan.”

Tony Sanchez is nearing the end of his fourth season as UNLV’S coach, and his 15-32 record — after losing at Hawaii on Saturday — has put his job in jeopardy. Reed-francois said she will evaluate the program after the season.

But Sanchez has spearheade­d fundraisin­g for the Fertitta complex, which is about $6 million short of the $31 million needed to finish constructi­on, and he won more games through his first four seasons than either of the two previous coaches.

Sanchez said he believes the program is on the right track, but he acknowledg­ed the difficulty of the undertakin­g, which was complicate­d by injuries this season at quarterbac­k and in the secondary.

“We knew that building this program would be tough,” Sanchez said. “It’s frustratin­g when you see improvemen­t and improvemen­t and all It was by far the toughest decision, but it was the right decision. of the sudden, you’ve got roadblocks and land mines and things that occurred that you weren’t anticipati­ng.”

Title IX issues

Should UNLV officials ever consider dropping football, they would be left with some difficult choices.

Because the program accounts for up to 85 scholarshi­ps, a similar cut might have to be made in women’s sports to comply with Title IX.

Also, it’s probable the Mountain West would not allow UNLV to remain a member. Conference bylaws state each member needs to

UNLV

field teams in football, men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball. University presidents can make exceptions, as they did for Hawaii to compete in football only and Colorado College in women’s soccer, but would UNLV be willing to take such a gamble?

Long Beach State took the leap of dropping football a year earlier than Fullerton. Both athletic department­s saw too much red in their budgets and too few rear ends in the bleachers.

They also saw an opportunit­y to devote resources to other sports, such as their nationally recognized baseball programs.

Fullerton has won four national baseball championsh­ips, including twice — 1995 and 2004 — since dropping football. The Titans have made the NCAA regionals 40 times and the College World Series 18 times.

Despite their enormous success, the Titans break even on a $450,000 budget. Coach Rick Vanderhook misses having football on campus but said projects such as the upcoming $12 million expansion to Goodwin Field likely wouldn’t happen if Fullerton still played football.

Long Beach’s baseball budget is about $500,000. The Dirtbags play at city-owned Blair Field but get priority on scheduling. They have been to four College World Series and 22 regionals.

“For us to be competitiv­e, would I like to say we could still be competitiv­e if we had football?” Long Beach State baseball coach Troy Buckley asked. “I would like to say we could be, but from a budgetary standpoint and a fiscal standpoint, I think it would be more challengin­g and difficult to get institutio­nal support versus donor support.”

High cost of returns

Should Long Beach State ever entertain bringing back football, athletic director Andy Fee said it would cost at least $15 million. That includes adding women’s sports to remain in Title IX compliance.

Without football, Long Beach State has won seven of the past 10 Commission­er’s Cups, which goes to the Big West Conference’s top athletic program. Its men’s volleyball team won the national championsh­ip last season.

“If you said today we had football involved and there wasn’t an angel involved in funding this program, I don’t think we’d be having the same conversati­on necessaril­y,” said Fee, who oversees a $20 million budget.

There’s a similar sentiment at Fullerton, where the question of whether to bring back football never has disappeare­d.

The 10,000-seat Titan Stadium, which cost $13.6 million, was completed in 1992 in time for football season. Fullerton instead uses it for its men’s and women’s soccer teams, which have combined to make 22 NCAA tournament appearance­s.

“We were trying to play Division I football on a Division II budget,” Ditolla said.

When it was mentioned that UNLV was committed to keeping football, that it was too far down the road with the new Raiders stadium, Ditolla said softly, “So were we.”

Contact Mark Anderson at manderson@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @markanders­on65 on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Getty Images and Las Vegas Review-journal staff
Getty Images and Las Vegas Review-journal staff
 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Gene Murphy, Cal State Fullerton’s last football coach, is honored in a photograph at Titan Stadium.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Gene Murphy, Cal State Fullerton’s last football coach, is honored in a photograph at Titan Stadium.
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 ??  ?? Steve Ditolla, senior associate athletic director at Cal State Fullerton, said eliminatin­g the school’s football program was the right thing to do, but the decision “still stings.”
Steve Ditolla, senior associate athletic director at Cal State Fullerton, said eliminatin­g the school’s football program was the right thing to do, but the decision “still stings.”
 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Troy Buckley, head baseball coach at Long Beach State, said keeping his team competitiv­e would be harder if the school played football.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Troy Buckley, head baseball coach at Long Beach State, said keeping his team competitiv­e would be harder if the school played football.

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