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Thread: Xavier FCS Football???
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11-02-2022, 03:57 PM #111"I’m willing to sacrifice everything for this team. I’m going to dive for every loose ball, close out harder on every shot, block out for every rebound. I’m going to play harder than I’ve ever played. And I need you all to follow me." -MB '17
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11-02-2022, 04:18 PM #112
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11-02-2022, 04:30 PM #113
Most D1 schools that have recently added football have done so because they felt the need to strengthen their foothold within D1. I believe there are only seven conferences that don't play football at any level (America East, A10, Big East, Big West, Horizon, MVC, Summit League, WCC). If you're not in one of those conferences, and you don't have football, you're going to feel like you're at a huge political disadvantage when it comes to your place within the conference. And even with that, several schools within the MVC, Summit League, and A10 field football teams. So, the schools who are adding football aren't really in the same boat that Xavier's in.
D1 non-scholarship football is a very limited scope. Most of those schools have actually had football for a very long time. There's the Ivy League, which isn't really applicable to Xavier either, and there's the PFL. Believe it or not, I think most of those schools have had football for over 100 years. So...it's not that they just added it. I think the better question to ask is why are they choosing to play non-scholarship football in the PFL?? The PFL is actually relatively new, and not all the teams have been in it for that long.
The answer is it helps with male enrollment, and it therefore makes money for the institution.
Here is something else that is undeniably true. You're not going to lose more than a million dollars on football if you're only spending a million dollars on it in the first place. I think nearly every small private school, who charges private school tuition, would happily spend a million dollars a year on ANYTHING that they felt would virtually guarantee them 100 tuition paying students a year. If it were a rec center, they'd do it. If it were an eSports club, they'd do it. If it were a foodcourt, they'd do it.
Football will guarantee them 100 students that would not otherwise be there. Are there other ways to attract students?? Sure. But football is definitely on the list.
And aside from all that, it doesn't COST the athletic department ANYTHING. That's why Butler, and Dayton, and Davidson (who's been to the playoffs) never even consider leaving the PFL. That's why when San Diego looked like they were going to implement scholarships and go to the Big Sky, they decided not to. The WCC is a better basketball conference, and the overall cost to football for the athletic dept. was zero."You can't fix stupid." Ron White
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11-02-2022, 04:47 PM #114
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11-02-2022, 06:58 PM #115
They are sure as heck spending more than a million dollars on the new practice gym and other capital improvements to Cintas.
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11-02-2022, 07:01 PM #116
This just isn't true. Sure, it doesn't cost as much as scholarship football but it isn't free. Even if we say the university will take the increased tuition payments and pay for the $1.5mil football budget...
The athletic director will spend time worrying about football instead of the existing sports. We will need additional athletic trainers and athletic training space. We will need more support staff in every area -- compliance, academic support, sports information, strength and conditioning -- and bigger spaces to accommodate the 100 additional student athletes.
And the biggest issue: if we add 100 male student athletes, we'd need to add about 130 female student athletes to stay in Title IX compliance (since the university is currently about 57% female). So we'd go from supporting about 330 student athletes to a whopping 550. This is a terrible idea.
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11-02-2022, 07:56 PM #117
Do the Title IX requirements come into play if it's non-scholarship football?
...he went up late, and I was already up there.
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11-02-2022, 08:06 PM #118
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11-02-2022, 08:46 PM #119
Yes. There are three aspects to Title IX compliance:
An institution must meet all of the following requirements in order to be in compliance with Title IX:
(1) For participation requirements, institutions officials must meet one of the following three tests. An institution may:
• Provide participation opportunities for women and men that are substantially proportionate to their respective rates of enrollment of full-time undergraduate students;
• Demonstrate a history and continuing practice of program expansion for the underrepresented sex;
• Fully and effectively accommodate the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex; and,
(2) Female and male student-athletes must receive athletics scholarship dollars proportional to their participation; and,
(3) Equal treatment of female and male student-athletes in the eleven provisions as mentioned above.
https://www.ncaa.org/sports/2014/1/2...tions.aspx#how
So it is true that non-scholarship football doesn't affect the scholarship piece. But if you lose the proportional opportunities aspect, it's really hard to demonstrate the other two participation options while adding a men's sport.
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11-02-2022, 08:51 PM #120
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If it was a terrible idea it would have been shot down from the start. The staff, coaches, equipment and insurance are all part of the football budget, and there are examples all over the Midwest that this is doable. Even being very conservative, say the 100 athletes pay $28k a year, and the budget is $1.5Mil. That's still a $1.3mil cushion. Believe me, Butler is one of the most tightwad schools in America, and they have had football since forever. That alone is proof that this will work.
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