Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Many programs feel sting of cuts

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The meeting was brief. A few minutes tops.

Temple Athletic Director Kevin Clark didn’t mince words. Standing inside the football team’s indoor practice facility earlier this month, Clark scanned the crowd of dozens of student-athletes — none of them football players — and told them the financiall­y strapped athletic department was cutting their sport at the end of the 2013-14 academic year.

There weren’t a lot of details. No lengthy questionan­d- answer session. Sitting alongside his 16 teammates on the men’s gymnastics team, sophomore Evan Eigner sat in stunned silence.

“When I heard the news,” Eigner said, “I kind of went numb a little bit.”

Temple’s announceme­nt that it’s going from 24 sports to 17 next fall, a move that will eventually save about $3 million to $3.5 million a year, was just the latest in a growing line of colleges and universiti­es that are reshaping overextend­ed athletic programs by shuttering smaller sports to help make those that remain — particular­ly those designed to bring in revenue — more competitiv­e.

To be honest, Eigner still isn’t sure what happened. He understood the athletic department was in a tight spot money-wise. He knew there had been talk about changes and the threat of cuts. It was all just white noise until suddenly, it became only too real.

He heard the part where Clark said the school would honor all of the scholarshi­ps for the affected student-athletes until they graduated. He heard the part where Clark said the school would do what it could to find new athletic homes for those wishing to transfer.

Eigner just didn’t hear what he would consider a sensible argument for cutting a program that takes up a small fraction of the athletic department budget yet nets conference championsh­ips..

“Gymnastics is a big part of my life, he said. “Competing collegiate­ly is a big goal of mine. For our team, gymnastics is really a part of our identities. If you take away the opportunit­y, you’re affecting who we are as individual­s.”

A growing number of whom are finding themselves forced to choose between staying in school or competing elsewhere after their programs are dissolved to help other sports deal with geographic­ally confoundin­g — if more lucrative — conference alignments, increased travel budgets and coach salaries.

Rutgers did it in 2007. Maryland followed suit in 2012. It’s not just the schools in power conference­s either. Robert Morris, which plays in the Northeaste­rn Conference, is trimming seven sports in 2014. Spelman College, a Division III historical­ly black women’s college in Atlanta, dropped intercolle­giate athletics altogether this year in favor of a health and fitness program designed to benefit all 2,100 students.

While athletic department­s at the Division I level aren’t going anywhere, schools that opt to downsize are faced with thorny questions. The biggest is the notion that athletes in one sport are more valuable to the school — and vice versa — than athletes in another.

“It’s a football thing and chasing the dollars, but there’s nowhere in the mission statement of the athletic department that its goal is to raise money,” said Turoff, who has led Temple men’s gymnastics to 18 Eastern Intercolle­giate Gymnastics League titles. “It’s to give opportunit­y to student athletes.”

Robert Morris athletic director Craig Coleman isn’t quite so sure that’s a fair assessment. Like Clark at Temple and Maryland Athletic Director Kevin Anderson, Coleman stressed the school’s decision-making is designed to do a better job of providing a level playing field for the sports it does offer.

The private school located 15 minutes west of Pittsburgh is thriving. Enrollment is skyrocketi­ng so quickly the university bought a Holiday Inn located just off campus and turned it into a dorm. It wasn’t always that way. Robert Morris added six sports between 2004-06 in part to help make the transforma­tion from commuter school into a destinatio­n. While Coleman allows it worked, it also stretched the department thin.

“For years, the emphasis was on growing enrollment and adding sports and not necessaril­y having funding to make those sports competitiv­e,” Coleman said. “It was about quantity and not quality.”

The Colonials spent less money per student-athlete than any other program in the NEC. While there was enough money to field 23 teams, there wasn’t enough in the school’s $13 million athletic budget to give each sport what the school feels is necessary to become a contender.

The field hockey program, one the Colonials are cutting, went 11-8 this fall but is one of the few Division I programs in the country that doesn’t practice or play on an artificial surface. The substandar­d facilities makes scheduling difficult.

“It’s like having the ice hockey team practicing on slush,” Coleman said.

With no plans or money to build a state-of-the-art field and a travel budget stretched to the limit, the school felt it would be easier cut field hockey entirely. Coleman said several field hockey players are in the process of transferri­ng, one of the reasons Robert Morris announced the decision early.

Coleman pledges to invest the estimated $1 million to $1.3 million the school will save when the students for the six eliminated sports are off the books to beefing up the recruiting and travel budgets for the remaining sports, including a men’s basketball program that upset mighty Kentucky in the NIT last spring. The victory, complete with a court-storming at the final buzzer, gave the school the kind of splashy public relations boost Olympic sports can’t provide.

It’s that way across the board in college athletics, where football and men’s basketball are typically the engines that drive the budget. Yet even with television money pouring into power conference­s, the price of keeping up with the big boys is steep.

In 2012, the cost of operating a Division I football program rose 10.8 percent according to the NCAA. At the same time, revenue rose only 4.6 percent. The declining profit margin — if the program is profitable at all — combined with the shifting conference affiliatio­n landscape is putting some schools in a bind. But with belt-tightening on college campuses becoming more widespread even as tuition levels jump at an exponentia­l rate, athletic department­s are no longer immune.

“Obviously an opportunit­y has been taken away from us,” Eigner said. “We’re trying not to think about it too much, if that makes sense. We can only control what we can control. This sport is really who we are.”

 ?? AP/TOM GRALISH ?? Fred Turoff,
Temple’s men’s gymnastics coach, learned recently that the school is cutting the sport after the 2013-2014 school year.
AP/TOM GRALISH Fred Turoff, Temple’s men’s gymnastics coach, learned recently that the school is cutting the sport after the 2013-2014 school year.

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