Hofstra University also punts varsity football
12/04/2009
Two weeks ago, Colonial Athletic Association member Northeastern University dropped their football program.
I commented on the situation by stating that other schools were in the same predicament as Northeastern and should consider also dropping football. This week, another Colonial Athletic Association member, Hofstra University, also decided to drop football. The reasons cited for the move are noted on an
excellent FAQ that is definitely worth reading:
The board voted unanimously last night (Wednesday, December 2) to eliminate the football program and reallocate those savings to academic initiatives, in order to further the University’s academic mission. At the Football Championship Subdivision (formerly known as Division I-AA) level, football could not attain significant national recognition, and it has had low student, community and media interest, attendance and financial support. In addition, the football program, the largest of the athletic programs, is by far the most expensive. In the end, we could not continue to justify the expense of football compared to the benefits it brought to the University.[…]
We will increase need-based scholarships, and consider enhancements to a variety of existing programs, including the hard sciences and engineering, as well as investments in new programs such as public health and other health-related fields. Hofstra has made significant strides in the past decade, and academic excellence has been and will continue to be our highest priority. To continue our momentum and strive to become one of our nation’s best institutions of higher education, we must invest in academics and programs in which we can compete at the highest level. It is more essential than ever that we invest our resources wisely, and consider fully how we meet our mission as a university.A university actually wants to stick to their mission? A university realizes the importance of need-based scholarships and academic program enhancement? A university realizes that it is quite pointless competing in Division I-AA football? A university realizes that football is a drain on resources?
It kind of makes you wonder what took Hofstra so long to make this decision. The uselessness, and perhaps danger, of the football team on the university’s core mission should have been obvious years ago. While I could slam Hofstra for waiting so long to make the move, I wish to congratulate the school for being brave enough to submit to common sense. Many schools, if not most schools, are not as wise as Hofstra.
While the claims of academic support and financial aid gains may just be a P.R. cover to justify dropping the team , I sincerely hope that the university sticks to their word. How wonderful is it that a university is committed to providing financial aid and high quality academics in an era of inflated higher education costs and deflated academic (particularly undergraduate) quality? Hopefully the academic community and general population will realize that Hofstra has the right plan.
As a side note, I was intrigued by a user comment made in reference to this story on
espn.com. A user named TheMick6677 said the following:
4.5 [million dollars]
is nothin to the schools with endowments and how much money they are making by over charging for schooling. they can afford to keep it going. schools with no football are pointless so hofstra is just another stupid pointless school.Apparently, TheMick6677 has not heard about endowment earmarks. Also, TheMick6677 is failing to connect overcharged tuition to mission drift. The last part of TheMick6677’s comment is both hilarious and sad! Is this the reasoning universities appease to when starting and supporting sports programs?