Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Oh my gosh. My friend Bob Lee has really done it this time.

He calls it like we all see it:

Players From Mars - Fans From Venus

With everyone lathered up over sports agents and athletes, this is an appropriate time to bring up some serious ponderables. Today’s title comes from a psycho-babble book about men & women being different.....

SEC FB coaches like Saban and Miles and Spurrier are trashing "sports agents" as sleazy pimps. Isn't that like Kim Jong Il telling us Hugo Chavez is a bed-wetter?

Enjoy the entire thought.  You just have to read this.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

The Ivy Way, Part 2


Presently the United States is suffering a recession. People are out of work. Folks are losing their houses to foreclosure, da, da,da. Some college programs are cash rich and some are struggling.

According to Forbes Magazine, in 2005 there were 10 college football teams raked in at least $45 million in revenues--among them, the University of Notre Dame, University of Georgia, Ohio State and Auburn University--compared to none the previous five years. Forbes Magazine

In 2007–08 according to a study by The Orlando Sentinel, there were six college football programs with over $90 million in football revenue and nine more with revenues of over $80 million. If you care, Louisiana-Monroe had the smallest income at $7.8 million.

So is college football all about the money or what? In order to sustain and surpass such profits, schools will have to raise ticket and concession prices, demand heftier donations for the privilege of purchasing season tickets, and garner more lucrative corporate sponsorships, among other yet devised means.

To keep up with their conference and national foes, new facilities will need to be built and present ones renovated. For example, there is a lot of profit in building and selling luxury suites at stadiums. Recruiting budgets will certainly need to be increased as recruiting bases get larger and coaches’ salaries will zoom. All will require larger and larger budgets and the income to support such budgets.

Why? To what purpose does the athletic arms war contribute to a university, its mission and its goals? At many of these schools barely one-half of their Saturday gladiators even graduate.



















Thursday, July 8, 2010

2010 FCS Preseason Poll

1.  Montana
2.  Appalachian State
3.  William & Mary
4.  Villanova
5.  South Carolina State
6.  Southern Illinois
7.  Elon
8.  Richmond
9.  New Hampshire
10.  South Dakota State
11.  Delaware

Villanova won it all in 2009, but doesn't have the talent to repeat. 
Montana can never be counted out any year.
William & Mary could be in the title game.
Appalacian State will see what life is like witout Armanti Edwards.
The title game has been moved from Chattanooga to Frisco, Texas, and will have to compete with the Cotton Bowl.  Too bad for the FCS.  No team within 600 miles will be in the championship game.

Monday, July 5, 2010

The Ivy League Concept

The Ivy League members are: Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton and Yale. The Ivy League competes in the NCAA Division 1 in all sports. Football competes in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), once known as I-AA.

Before the advent of athlete scholarships at most present day football-playing schools, the Ivy League won more than 40 recognized national football championships. Princeton won 24 and Yale, 19.

The league sponsors more sports and more teams than any conference in the country, 33 men’s and women’s sports and an average of 35 varsity teams at each school. There are no athletic scholarships at Ivy League schools.

“Athletes shall be admitted as students and awarded financial aid only on the basis of the same academic standards and economic need as are applied to all other students”. Wikipedia.com

Since 2002, the Ivy League…

- Produced 47 NCAA individual national champions.

- Amassed nearly 100 student-athletes per year earning All-American honors

- Totaled 136 Academic All-Americans

- Had 223 competitors at the five Olympic Games (2000 – 2010), collecting 91 metals, including six gold.

“This successful competition in Division I national athletics is achieved by approaching athletics as a key part of the student's regular undergraduate experience: with rigorous academic standards, the nation's highest four-year graduation rates (the same as those for non-athletes), and without athletics scholarships. Ivy athletic programs receive multi-million-dollar institutional support as part of each institution’s overall academic programs, independent of win-loss or competitive records and together with extensive programs of intramural and recreational athletics.” IvyLeaguesports.com

Athletics is funded through the general school budget, not athletics receipts. Harvard will have a football program regardless of gate receipts or television revenue. Athletics is one part of the total academic program. Isn’t this the way college athletics programs should be managed?

Of course there are no 80- or 90- or 100,000 seat stadiums in the Ivy League. You will not see an IL school in a bowl game. (The Ivy League presidents forbid post season play in football). There are no $2 million coaches in the Ivy either. But every athlete is a real student-athlete. Every athlete is in the same admissions pool as every other student. Every athlete takes real courses and is on track to graduate.

Why would this same philosophy not work at, say, an SEC school? Because many athletes at SEC schools do not have to meet the same admissions standards as non-athlete students. Are there students at SEC or Big 12 or ACC schools who are academically prepared for college? Students who will never graduate? The Ivy League has a graduation rate of over 90%, compared to some SEC schools who graduate (within five years) only 50% of their athletes. Yet everyFootball Bowl Subdivision () FBS school spends hundreds of thousands of dollars to support tutoring programs for athletes. Is this to help them graduate or just to stay eligible?

One can say that we are not comparing apples to apples. The Ivy League schools have a different philosophy than other schools, especially the large public universities. This is a fair assessment. But let’s do a little “out-of-the-box” thinking for a few paragraphs.

END of PART 1

Happy 4th ... maybe

Hope no one lost any fingers lighting fireworks.  My neighborhood was a fireworks war zone from about 9:30 pm until midnight.  My poor dog barked himself hoarse. 

Every year we are reminded of the wisdom of our founding fathers.  A government for the people and by the people was unheard of in the 18th century.  The US Constitution has stood the test of time.  Now we take our country and our freedoms too much for granted. 

We always felt reasonably safe through wars, the Great Depression, desegregation, and a multitude of other fears and threats.  We knew that our present leaders were just as wise as the Ben Franklins and George Washingtons of the past.  We looked on them as intelligent men and women who possessed integrity and were willing to give up a normal comfortable life to be "public servents".  Oh my.  The time has come to maybe be a little fearful of a government structure that has become too huge, with far too many dishonest hands in the common barrel.  Men and women who have no fear of God as did the founding fathers. 

Guess maybe we have become too smart, too saavy for a God of the ages.  We have highly educated, very intelligent, honest men and women to run the government.  Why should I be afraid.  If they can't solve the problems, our computers will eventually do it.  More... maybe.