Lodi News-Sentinel

Stanford will keep sports it was to cut

- Elliott Almond

STANFORD — Stanford University officials announced Tuesday they will reinstate 11 sports programs they had planned to cut, a move that led to an outcry from famous alumni, parents and current athletes as one of the country’s premier sports schools faced a growing controvers­y.

Stanford officials said an improving financial outlook led to the decision to keep men’s and women’s fencing, field hockey, lightweigh­t rowing, men’s rowing, co-ed and women’s sailing, squash, synchroniz­ed swimming, men’s volleyball and wrestling — the programs they had planned to eliminate at the end of the current school year.

“We have new optimism based on new circumstan­ces, including vigorous and broad-based philanthro­pic interest in Stanford athletics on the part of our alumni, which have convinced us that raising the increased funds necessary to support all 36 of our varsity teams is an approach that can succeed,” Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne said in a statement.

Adam Keefe, a basketball and volleyball star at Stanford from 1988-1992, said Tuesday the outcome was the result of working closely with Stanford officials to find solutions.

“I give the university a lot of credit,” Keefe said. “They were open to a solution that would present a different outcome.”

Keefe, who is married to former Stanford volleyball star Kristian Klein, has three kids playing sports at Stanford. James Keefe is a member of the Cardinal basketball teams while twins Caitlin and Michaela Keefe play on the women’s volleyball team.

The former NBA player who ended his career with the Golden State Warriors was one of six alums who helped lead the effort through a lobbying group called 36 Sports Strong.

The school’s announceme­nt comes a week after current Cardinal athletes filed two lawsuits in federal court in San Jose — one for fraud, intentiona­l misreprese­ntation and breach of contract for not telling students their sports would be cut. The second action alleged sex discrimina­tion and violation of Title IX law.

Stanford’s statement said the suits did not lead to the decision to reverse course because officials were “far along” in the discussion­s to find a solution before legal action began.

Retaining all 36 teams will require a large-scale fundraisin­g campaign, school officials said in a letter to the Stanford community.

“We will need to ask for the support of the Cardinal faithful like never before,” Tessier-Lavigne, Provost Persis Drell and athletic director Bernard Muir wrote.

“I am thrilled that we have found a way to continue sponsoring these varsity sports, which are an important part of the fabric of this university,” Muir said in a statement. “I believe the future is extremely bright for Stanford athletics and am eager to begin the important work of galvanizin­g our community and cementing Stanford’s position of leadership and excellence in intercolle­giate sports.”

Lawyers representi­ng the athletes did not immediatel­y return calls and emails asking about the status of the suits.

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