A_Slab_of_Bacon
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Not sure I approve of this slang....Not literally sweaty....sweaty in "sweaty try hard" sense.
Not sure I approve of this slang....Not literally sweaty....sweaty in "sweaty try hard" sense.
Don't forget to wear a mask!
It's cheap, and it's usually rich kids who play. Wouldn't be surprised if there were very little scholarships involved, low coaching salaries, and the kids (families) purchase their own clubs.
Just fyi, D1 players for the most part are supplied equipment by the companies that make it for the visibility and hopes of building a relationship whether they are a Tour Pro or Club Pro prospect.
Apparel I am sure falls under the overall contracts schools sign.
I always wondered how that works for coaches.
They usually have such new gear handy / on all the time.
I imagine PJ has a pullover dispenser in his office. Like he walks back from pratice and throws his old one in the trash and puts on a new one or something....
The few times I have seen D1 Golf coaches, they for sure enjoy top of the line equipment and clothing.
Side note, Reusse had an article this Sunday about Jim Dutcher being on the NCAA Coaches Nike advisory board back in the late 70s. He was offered free gear for the players and $100,000 over 5 yrs or stock. He went with stock. Smart guy.
Title IX isn't a violation of NCAA rules. You don't get fined or sanctioned.Our ire over this is misplaced. The blame of COVID rests entirely with China. We are all paying an enormous price for their intentional or negligent actions with regard to the virus. The Title IX aspect is just a red herring. As I understand the facts, the U's male/female ratios are only slightly out of compliance with the Title IX proportionality rule and it is not likely the U would be sanctioned at these levels. I am not aware of any university being penalized for having violated the proportionality dictates.
I don't disagree with most of what you said here, but I would point out a couple of things. First, while there is certainly a threat of litigation for failing to comply with Title IX, the U has also taken the position that it will strive to be in compliance with the intention of the law. That means being proactive to be in compliance and not just reactive when someone threatens to sue.Title IX isn't a violation of NCAA rules. You don't get fined or sanctioned.
It's a law and thus provides an avenue for legal remediation to the wronged. IE, they can get sued over it.
But let's call a spade a spade: saving $2M a year does almost nothing to remedy a $75M shortfall (maybe that will drop all the way down to $40M, with football back on?). If they actually wanted to save those sports, they could've simply borrowed a few more millions on top of the many millions they will be borrowing to patch the shortfall.
No. The actual thing is: they've wanted to cut a few sports, for many years. And this was their opportunity.
That's one aspect, but there also needs to be proportionality in scholarships. We can't, for example, offer 85 football scholarships and count 85 rowers paying their own way as evidence of "equal opportunities."FWIW, the actual spirit of the law is to ensure that schools provide opportunities for the underrepresented sex (obviously females) to compete in athletics such that they fulfill the "interests and abilities" of that group. That's technically all levels: recreational, intramural, club, and varsity.
Given the U's total offerings for females ... I don't see any possible way forward for a lawsuit to allege that such opportunities are sufficiently lacking.
Sure, that's not wrong. But if you start going down that route, how is it "fair" that PJ Fleck makes $4.xxx million per year and has a staff of 10 coaches, while rowing has like two coaches that probably don't even make six figures? How is it "fair" that football flies chartered airbuses, riding private coaches to the airport that roll directly out onto the tarmac, while rowing takes the light rail, stands in line at security like everyone else, and flies commercial? Etc.That's one aspect, but there also needs to be proportionality in scholarships. We can't, for example, offer 85 football scholarships and count 85 rowers paying their own way as evidence of "equal opportunities."
Those things are potentially problematic, but the focus seems to be mostly on the student-athlete access to services. Coaches salaries are dictated by the market. Athletes at the U have access to the Athletes Village, medical and training staff, academic assistance, counseling, etc. Is everything totally equal? No, but things have vastly improved in that regard over the years. I don't think the experience of non-revenue sport athletes is much different now whether you play baseball, softball or tennis. I am sure that there is also an aspect of a "don't rock the boat" attitude among many in the non-revenue sports who know that they are subject to elimination if the costs related to their sport get too high.Sure, that's not wrong. But if you start going down that route, how is it "fair" that PJ Fleck makes $4.xxx million per year and has a staff of 10 coaches, while rowing has like two coaches that probably don't even make six figures? How is it "fair" that football flies chartered airbuses, riding private coaches to the airport that roll directly out onto the tarmac, while rowing takes the light rail, stands in line at security like everyone else, and flies commercial? Etc.
I know the obvious and not incorrect answer is "revenue generated". But how does that fit into the legal framework of "proportionality"? Seems iffy to me, if challenged.
While I disagree with gendered sports (if we are going to split sports it should be by more measurable standards. I've seen women in many sports that are way better than some men competing in the same sport but they never get to show it, but I digress.), there have been a few instances of women making it onto teams at the high school level and it's getting more frequent as time goes on. One, if I recall, played in the secondary and * may * have joined a college team.Where is it written that football is a men's sport? If there was a woman that was talented enough to make the team and earn a scholarship, I think they would be welcomed with open arms.
--The previous comment was 99% in jest. Please be gentle in your criticisms of it.
I think the gymnastics and tennis teams are toast, but they need to keep track and field.
That's my opinion.
Yeah - seems odd they can't keep it balanced.The U turns away countless applicants every year. It sounds like the Admissions office isn’t doing their job if they can’t do a better job of gender balancing the student body. Don’t cut sports for Title IX; admit more men.
The U turns away countless applicants every year. It sounds like the Admissions office isn’t doing their job if they can’t do a better job of gender balancing the student body. Don’t cut sports for Title IX; admit more men.
Isn't illegal? I don't think you're allowed to "discriminate" on gender, like that.Yeah - seems odd they can't keep it balanced.
I believe you're correct, that there are no savings in terms of coaches or rosters. In fact, I don't believe the NCAA allows the school to award "separate" scholarships for indoor vs outdoor. They just allow what is essentially the sport of Track & Field to be formally split into two separate championship segments, one in the winter (indoor) and one in the spring (outdoor). I'm sure there's more nuance and history to it than that, which the split recognizes.Well that happened, sort of. Outdoor Track & Field saved but the others are cut. If they are keeping Outdoor, not sure why Indoor gets the boot, isn't it all the same coaches & participants?
while Southern California has only indoor track on the men’s side.
I believe you're correct, that there are no savings in terms of coaches or rosters. In fact, I don't believe the NCAA allows the school to award "separate" scholarships for indoor vs outdoor. They just allow what is essentially the sport of Track & Field to be formally split into two separate championship segments, one in the winter (indoor) and one in the spring (outdoor). I'm sure there's more nuance and history to it than that, which the split recognizes.
Lots of sports have off-seasons with organized practice, like spring football. And probably some sports actually play exhibition matches in their off-seasons. I know volleyball does, in the spring.
Anyway, in the Big Ten at least, Maryland also does not have indoor on the men's side.
STrib article today quotes a current track athlete as saying no indoor season will affect recruiting.
https://www.startribune.com/univers...r-track-doesn-t-need-indoor-season/572696062/
Among the athletes were a handful representing track and field, who learned early in the meeting that men’s outdoor track would be saved as part of an amended resolution. But eventually, the regents voted 7-5 to eliminate men’s indoor track after this school year, along with men’s gymnastics and men’s tennis.
Based on the immediate buzz, it seemed far from a victory for Gophers men’s track.
“Obviously, it’s pretty shocking and pretty new for us just as an idea,” senior distance runner Jordan MacIntosh said. “Because what is track without indoor? That’s half our sport. Thinking that you can recruit just as well with an outdoor program and no indoor program is pretty naive.”
Athletic director Mark Coyle, who first announced the proposed sports cuts Sept. 10, said Friday’s new resolution sprouted from “ongoing conversations” with the regents.
While at least one regent called it a compromise, MacIntosh reiterated what many of his men’s track teammates told him, that the U decisionmakers “really don’t understand the sport.”
“That shows with their new proposal,” he said.
Among Big Ten men’s programs, the Gophers will join two other schools that don’t offer the standard trio of cross-country, indoor track and outdoor track. Maryland has outdoor track only, and Northwestern has none of the three on the men’s side.
There are an estimated 20 Division I schools in the country that have men’s cross-country and only have men’s outdoor track. In the Pac-12, Oregon State and Utah don’t have men’s track and field, while Southern California has only indoor track on the men’s side.
“These have been difficult, difficult decisions,” Coyle said on a video news conference Friday. “Difficult, difficult conversations. I think [university] President [Joan] Gabel used the word ‘heartbreaking.’”
The Gophers men’s track and field roster for the coming indoor season has 48 athletes, 10 more than the NCAA average. Seventeen of Minnesota’s current track athletes also compete in cross-country.
At another level, the Minnesota State High School League sponsors outdoor track but has no indoor program.
But at the college level, training depends on having both an indoor and outdoor season. Eliminating indoor competition would make it extremely difficult to prepare for the outdoor season, sophomore distance runner Eli Hoeft said.
“To get those good hard workouts and races in, being in Minnesota, it’s hard to find good opportunities to get fit and really get in good shape unless it’s indoor track and field,” Hoeft said. “There is a ton of value that having an indoor brings.”
Hoeft, who couldn’t compete in his first indoor season last year because of pandemic cancellations, said several teammates entered the transfer portal in the past month.
The former 1,600-meter state champion at Hopkins hasn’t decided yet on his future, but he said he’s fortunate to have cross-country to compete in, along with outdoor track.
“At this point, I absolutely love the University of Minnesota and everything they stand for,” Hoeft said. “At the end of the day, I think we can have a tone-deaf athletic director and athletic department, but we’re still here for our teammates, coaches and the University of Minnesota community. We’re going to represent them the best way possible.”
One thing I wonder about, could (some) of the athletes compete in indoor meets as "unattached"? I know this is a thing in wrestling, at least.