Las Vegas Review-Journal

Dropping sport not right move

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COUNTLESS books have been written on the subject. It’s a common theme in your movie of choice. Bible passages suggest it strengthen­s our endurance.

You know, King David and all. But while failure is not considered fatal to those whose determinat­ion is strong enough to overcome it, UNLV’S football program has for decades existed with medical personnel standing over it holding those defibrilla­tor paddles.

The Rebels always seem another losing season away from a few powerful electric shocks.

It has caused some — OK, many — OK, a legion of folks — to won

GRANEY

derifsuchi­neptnessis­worthittoa public university’s bottom line.

It has led them to suggest that football at UNLV simply isn’t worth it, that either cutting the sport totally or dropping to a Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n level — where it could perhaps exist among a Big Skyworldof­southernut­ahanduc Davisandmo­ntanaandth­elike—is a far more practical option.

With all due respect to Grizzlies head coach Bobby Hauck, because I’d love to see if the Montana special teams looked any better in Las Vegas than those for UNLV when Hauck ran things, it’s a mistaken propositio­n.

Notthattho­sewhosugge­stsuch drastic change don’t own ample evidence — we are talking about a Rebels program that began playing in 1968 and has an all-time winning percentage of 39.

It has one winning season since 2000.

But here’s the part often lost in the suggestion that UNLV would be better off without major college football: Such a move wouldn’t come without serious consequenc­es. Athletic department­s traveling that road save money, certainly, but they also cash in their chips in what has become a high-stakes poker game.

Division I-A football costs millions, but it also can make millions. Just not at the level UNLV now finds itself. Not yet for the Rebels. Not ever, maybe.

But no football would mean reducing your overall scholarshi­p numbers by 85, which could lead to significan­t reductions on the women’s side, because suddenly those gender equity issues that football often causes wouldn’t have to be balanced out by as many female sports.

There would be massive cuts to the overall budget, and UNLV would be left without a major magnet for fundraisin­g. Football is the porch to Division I athletic department­s, that which draws more eyes than anything.

Losing football often means losing ties to alums. It affects everyone, perhaps more externally than internally. People want to read and hear about it and men’s basketball.

“When I first got there, I really took a long look at football,” said Jim Livengood, UNLV’S athletic director from 2009-13. “In other words, could football be something? In a lot of places, at this level, football can contribute. It can’t pay for everything else like a Power Five school, but it can more than contribute and help others. I don’t know if there is an answer (for UNLV) and yet I sure know it’s not an easy one.”

It never is with Rebels football, but for a program less than two years from kicking off in a new NFL domed stadium as its home base and in the process of raising the new on-campus Fertitta Football Complex, anything less than forging ahead in the wake of another losing record and no postseason berth isn’t an option.

Even at UNLV, where that hill as been a virtual Everest of challenges.

The Rebels just need to keep climbing, is all.

It would help, of course, if they could somehow get beyond base camp.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @ edgraney on Twitter.

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