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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Professor: Colleges Using Coronavirus as Excuse to Cut Sports Programs
2020-05-26
[Breitbart] Universities are beginning to cut sports programs as budgets continue to be devastated by the coronavirus. However, one professor thinks that those schools are using the pandemic as an excuse to cut sports programs they wanted to get rid of anyway.

B. David Ridpath, associate professor of sports business at Ohio University and interim president of the Drake Group, a national nonprofit advocacy organization, blasted the schools looking to cut sports to make up for budget holes.

"There’s a lot of fat that can be cut before sports being dropped," Ridpath said. "I think dropping sports is basically a knee-jerk reaction, and many of the schools are using the pandemic as an excuse for something they already wanted to do. There may come a time where dropping a sport is a viable solution, but it should be the last one and based on many different things.

"Dropping a sport and saying you are doing it for gender equity, I think, is an excuse," the professor exclaimed.

Looking a the programs that have been cut, it does appear that men’s programs have been hardest hit.

"All but three of the 15 programs that have reportedly been eliminated at Division I colleges," the paper notes, "including Cincinnati, Old Dominion, Akron, Central Michigan, East Carolina, and Florida International are men’s sports, which are often the first to be trimmed as schools, especially those with football programs, strive to comply with Title IX, the federal law requiring gender equity for participation and scholarship opportunities."

There are reportedly 499,217 student-athletes in the U.S. system of higher education, the more programs that are cut, the more of these students who will not be paying tuition, the paper reminds readers.

"Dropping these sports, you’re likely losing bodies, and that counts against your overall enrollment," Ridpath noted. "Enrollment is going down nationwide, and (colleges cutting sports) are not really looking at the whole picture here."

The cuts seen already including four sports cut at Akron, the elimination of baseball at Bowling Green, an end to the men’s indoor and outdoor track and field programs in Central Michigan, and the suspension of men’s and women’s tennis at Green Bay, the paper said.
Posted by:Besoeker

#16  And just let the bassetbaw playas go pro when they are 16, it's then to 25 when they are in their prime.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-05-26 15:20  

#15  The biggest and best football programs are profit centers. Their universities use them to fund the expensive campus recreational and athletic facilities used by tens of thousands of ordinary students who don't play competitive sports.

What will likely happen is that football + women's sports will survive and maybe even thrive. But those men's sports that are not revenue-generating will be whacked. Say goodbye to some/all of: men's rowing, water polo, lacrosse, wrestling, gymnastics, fencing etc.
Posted by: Lex   2020-05-26 11:37  

#14  It will be fun to watch college sports boosters and forever quarantine nuts wandering around in circles muttering to themselves.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-05-26 09:24  

#13  Let them run for profit sports camps.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-05-26 09:13  

#12  Good. Cut away. To paraphrase a recent article, this crisis is just accelerating things that were already in motion. And NCAA football...what a racket.
Posted by: Clem   2020-05-26 09:06  

#11  Just go ahead and start formal minor leagues for football and basketball and stop treating illiterates to free degrees.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2020-05-26 08:24  

#10  Er if it makes a loss it should be dropped.

Same with Marx-Faith studies degrees
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2020-05-26 08:03  

#9  Dunno, seems to me some colleges are sports teams with a library attached for show. Read that a winning football team was a real money-maker.... you didn't think all those wymyn's studies programs paid for themselves did you?
Posted by: Mercutio   2020-05-26 08:03  

#8  Back to A&Ms, practical studies that the state needs for commerce and health, a return on investment. Let private institutions cover the rest without public subsidizes.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2020-05-26 06:59  

#7  When I was at CWRU I accidentally saw a down of one college football game while looking out a high rise window near the stadium.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-05-26 06:08  

#6  ^Neither am I - just use Google Translate.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-05-26 01:36  

#5  I have no idea, g(r)omgoru. It was the trailing daughters and Mr. Wife who studied Latin — I only know the common culture bits.
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-05-26 01:30  

#4  ^Isn't it more like: "sine litteris, et ad munus collegium gradu", TW?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-05-26 01:11  

#3  None of that Mens sana in corpore sano silliness, please, we have Studies studies to get taught.
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-05-26 00:47  

#2  If only they did it 100 years ago.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-05-26 00:42  

#1  "Dropping these sports, you’re likely losing bodies, and that counts against your overall enrollment,"

A numbers game then is it? Nothing to do with actual education. Thanks for the confirmation.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-05-26 00:40  

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