Santa Fe New Mexican

UNM soccer coach vows to keep his team alive after cuts

Regents’ decision to cut 4 teams spurs anger; ski coach Landstedt leaving for Utah

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — The men’s soccer team at the University of New Mexico has had a dozen NCAA Tournament appearance­s, and hopefuls from around the world have competed to play for the program.

But regents at the state’s flagship university voted Thursday to cut the program, which has among the highest profiles nationally of Lobos men’s sports.

The decision was met immediatel­y by boos and heckles from some of those who packed the regents’ meeting. In the hours since, regents, lawmakers and other elected leaders have been flooded with phone messages and emails. Countless social media posts expressed everything from anger to disbelief and calls for action.

Head coach Jeremy Fishbein is among those digging in his heels.

“Our heads are down and we are focused,” he wrote in an email Friday. “New Mexico Lobo soccer is a vital part of our community and we will not be CUT! I believe in New Mexico and what is right..OUR PROGRAM IS WHAT IS RIGHT!”

Also cut were the men’s and women’s skiing teams, the beach volleyball program and the diving squad on the women’s swimming team. On Friday, the exodus began when longtime skiing coach Fredrik Landstedt announced he was taking over as director of skiing at the University of Utah.

He had been at UNM for 21 years as an assistant and head coach.

Fishbein’s soccer team has twice reached the Final Four. There have also been a championsh­ip game appearance and conference titles over the years. Outside the successes on the field, Fishbein told regents of his players’ wins in the classroom, their community service and the inspiratio­n they have provided to children from around New Mexico.

He said Friday that he was most concerned with his players.

The team won’t be dissolved until July 2019, and the university has promised to honor the scholarshi­ps of the affected student-athletes through their graduation. But Fishbein said large

conference schools already are recruiting his players.

“Unless the wrong is righted immediatel­y, our best and brightest may be transferri­ng,” he said, mentioning offers from programs in the Pac-12 and Big Ten.

In presenting to regents the recommenda­tions to cut the four sports, top university officials said it would be “the right thing to do” if the athletic department has any hope of turning around its finances and meeting federal gender equality requiremen­ts under Title IX.

University President Garnett Stokes and athletic director Eddie Nuñez pointed to an analysis of the university’s sports programs that found expenses have continued to increase, revenues have decreased and the operating budgets for each sports program have been incrementa­lly reduced over the past decade while costs continue to rise.

There’s some guaranteed revenue from conference distributi­ons, multimedia rights deals and an apparel agreement with Nike, but the analysis acknowledg­ed that fluctuatio­ns in all other areas have a significan­t impact on the department’s bottom line.

It also mentions shortfalls in budgeted ticket sales and fundraisin­g efforts over the past two years.

The report was released late Wednesday. Some critics have voiced concerns that the public was not able to review the documents in time for the regents meeting. They’re suggesting the university may have violated open government standards.

At least one complaint has been lodged with the Attorney General’s Office, but it’s unlikely any of the wrangling could reverse the university’s course.

Greg Williams, an Albuquerqu­e attorney whose son was recruited to play for the Lobo soccer team in the fall, shared his concerns in a letter to university leaders that the public was effectivel­y shut out of the process.

Williams said in an interview that the decision affects many people and sends a message the university is not capable of properly operating its athletic department.

“It’s very hard for people outside of New Mexico to understand how a university could not manage to keep a program that has been successful by every measure — including on-field performanc­e and academics — and it really casts the university in a poor light around the country,” Williams said.

United Soccer Coaches, a Missouri-based organizati­on that represents coaches at all levels, said in a statement Friday that spending in college athletics has gotten to the point of being a detriment to the opportunit­ies of student-athletes in sports other than football and basketball.

“The value that these student-athletes bring to their school and their communitie­s needs to carry a greater weight instead of taking the easy route of cutting programs,” the group said.

According to the analysis of UNM’s programs, more than two dozen universiti­es around the U.S. have eliminated varsity sports programs in the last five years to address financial, gender equity or other concerns.

The report states that cutting soccer and the other teams along with roster modificati­ons for certain sports will save around $1 million annually. That’s not enough to fill the budget shortfall, and university officials say other changes will have to be made to curb costs and raise more money.

The New Mexican’s Will Webber contribute­d to this report.

 ?? GREG SORBER/THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP ?? UNM men’s soccer coach Jeremy Fishbein argues against cutting the team during Thursday’s regents’ meeting.
GREG SORBER/THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL VIA AP UNM men’s soccer coach Jeremy Fishbein argues against cutting the team during Thursday’s regents’ meeting.
 ??  ?? Fredrik Landstedt
Fredrik Landstedt
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