I was about to post this to the off topic board, but a former Cal player/grad assistant is involved, so I'll post here.
Here's startling news from UC Riverside: "UCR's budget advisory committee recently listed elimination of athletics, coupled with building a more robust intramural sports program, among four ideas for permanent cuts."
Stan Morrison, former AD of UCR (1999-2011) who played basketball at Cal from 1959-61, told the Press-Enterprise that eliminating athletics would be a "beyond-huge mistake" because in his view: "Athletics is a part of the fabric of all of the great universities in our country."
Following that story from the Riverside Press-Enterprise, UCR AD Tamica Smith Jones issued a response stating in part: "...we clearly want Athletics to be here as we believe we bring tremendous value to our university, and...we are committed to ensuring our future is sustainable for years to come."
My responses to this story:
Yes, COVID-19 has been brutal to the UC and state budgets, but one has to wonder how the financial situation got so bad at UCR that complete elimination of varsity athletics has to be considered, not just downgrading from D1. (Side note: At my alma mater San Jose State, around the same time as the early 2000s state budget crisis, there was a small but vocal movement among faculty to downgrade athletics from what was then Division 1A.)
Also, if athletics is supposed to bring value, UCR surely hasn't shown it as a D1 member. UCR men's basketball routinely made the D2 NCAA Tournament from the '70s to '90s. Since moving up to D1 in 2001, the team has had just two winning seasons and has not finished better than 8-8 in a weak Big West Conference. To make matters worse, UCR's coach left this summer after just two seasons to be associate HC at Arkansas under Eric Musselman. Although UCR women's basketball has been a winning D1 program (three NCAA Tournaments since 2006 and making the WNIT in 2016), the coach resigned shortly before last season due to multiple accusations of abusive behavior.
In the six months since the national sports shutdown, both P5 (recent examples: Iowa and Stanford) and mid-major D1 schools have had to eliminate entire "non revenue" teams. But UCR is the first D1 school I've heard of that's even thinking of a complete elimination of varsity athletics - the last D1 school I can find that 100% dropped intercollegiate athletics was Northeastern Illinois in 1998.
Here's startling news from UC Riverside: "UCR's budget advisory committee recently listed elimination of athletics, coupled with building a more robust intramural sports program, among four ideas for permanent cuts."
Stan Morrison, former AD of UCR (1999-2011) who played basketball at Cal from 1959-61, told the Press-Enterprise that eliminating athletics would be a "beyond-huge mistake" because in his view: "Athletics is a part of the fabric of all of the great universities in our country."
Following that story from the Riverside Press-Enterprise, UCR AD Tamica Smith Jones issued a response stating in part: "...we clearly want Athletics to be here as we believe we bring tremendous value to our university, and...we are committed to ensuring our future is sustainable for years to come."
My responses to this story:
Yes, COVID-19 has been brutal to the UC and state budgets, but one has to wonder how the financial situation got so bad at UCR that complete elimination of varsity athletics has to be considered, not just downgrading from D1. (Side note: At my alma mater San Jose State, around the same time as the early 2000s state budget crisis, there was a small but vocal movement among faculty to downgrade athletics from what was then Division 1A.)
Also, if athletics is supposed to bring value, UCR surely hasn't shown it as a D1 member. UCR men's basketball routinely made the D2 NCAA Tournament from the '70s to '90s. Since moving up to D1 in 2001, the team has had just two winning seasons and has not finished better than 8-8 in a weak Big West Conference. To make matters worse, UCR's coach left this summer after just two seasons to be associate HC at Arkansas under Eric Musselman. Although UCR women's basketball has been a winning D1 program (three NCAA Tournaments since 2006 and making the WNIT in 2016), the coach resigned shortly before last season due to multiple accusations of abusive behavior.
In the six months since the national sports shutdown, both P5 (recent examples: Iowa and Stanford) and mid-major D1 schools have had to eliminate entire "non revenue" teams. But UCR is the first D1 school I've heard of that's even thinking of a complete elimination of varsity athletics - the last D1 school I can find that 100% dropped intercollegiate athletics was Northeastern Illinois in 1998.