The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Akron to cut three sports

- By Tom Withers

With its athletic budget being stretched and future funding uncertain, Akron dropped three sports on May 14in a cost-cutting move necessitat­ed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

With its athletic budget being stretched and future funding uncertain, Akron dropped three sports May 14 in a cost-cutting move necessitat­ed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The university announced it will discontinu­e men’s cross country and golf and women’s tennis at the end of the academic year. Akron plans to reduce financial support to the athletic department by approximat­ely 23% ($4.4 million), painful actions necessitat­ed by the virus outbreak.

“These decisions are very difficult but they are important and necessary at this time,” Akron athletic director Larry Williams said. “This action aligns us with our Mid-American Conference peers in the total number of sports and is part of the ongoing effort to redesign the University to ensure that UA continues to invest in high-demand, high-quality academic programs.

“This is a difficult day for all of us,” Williams continued. “We have dedicated student-athletes, coaches and athletics staff who have embraced being a Zip and make tremendous contributi­ons to campus life in class, in competitio­n and in our greater community.”

Akron’s decision will likely be followed by other schools trying to stay afloat financiall­y during the pandemic.

The loss of the three sports at Akron affects 23 male and nine female student-athletes, three coaches and one graduate assistant coach. The school will now have 17 sports — seven men’s, 10 women’s — and the Zips will remain a member of the Mid-American Conference, which earlier this week announced it is eliminatin­g postseason tournament­s in eight sports, including baseball and softball.

In addition, the MAC is scaling back its postseason basketball tournament­s because of the financial crisis triggered by the coronaviru­s.

The Southern Conference announced May 14 it will cut back on schools qualifying for several championsh­ips, trim its league baseball series from three games to two and hold virtual media days for football and basketball.

Williams said the timing of Akron’s announceme­nt was made to allow student-athletes as much time as possible to find new schools if they want to continue in their sports.

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