Jump to content

MD athletics has a huge budget deficit


OregonBird

Recommended Posts

Currently, four Division-I schools nationwide treat competitive cheer as a varsity sport: Oregon, Baylor, Maryland and Quinnipiac. All are members of the fledgling NCSTA.

Recent efforts to define competitive cheer as a sport have been met with skepticism in part because some see it as a less expensive way to comply with Title IX than more established sports such as crew or gymnastics. Proponents say they're merely responding to a demand from the thousands of girls teenage and younger who have contributed to competitive cheer's explosive growth in recent years.

LINK (article is from July 2010)

Competitive cheer (or whatever it is now referred to as) is not recognized by the NCAA, although many other schools compete in it on an intercollegiate basis at the intramural level. Maryland was the first to make it a varsity sport a few years ago. It was done along side of a fundraising campaign to fully-fund several men's sports that had fewer scholarships available than the NCAA limit. Because all of the women's sports at the time were fully funded, UM essentially had to add a new women's sport to maintain Title IX compliance. And as the article indicates, cheer was a relatively inexpensive way to do it, since some of the infrastructure was already in place via intramural competition. While I can see why some might say it's outside the spirit of Title IX, I'm sure the young women who now have college scholarships and compete at the 4 aforementioned schools might argue otherwise.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 37
  • Created
  • Last Reply

http://www.usaswimming.org/Report/ReportHolder.aspx?TabId=1706&Alias=Rainbow&Lang=en&ItemId=49&mid=7135

Select 'Short Course Yards 2010-11' since this is the most recently completed full season. Then click 'Search'.

Above is a link to a ranking system for the Top club swim teams in the country. There were 2574 USA Swimming club teams last year:

#1 Curl-Burke (Surrounding the Washington Beltway)

#2 Rockville-Montgomery Swim Club

#6 NOVA of Virginia (Richmond)

#10 North Baltimore Aquatic Club

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As much as it stinks for the athletes to have their sports cut, we have absolutely no other solution. Maryland athletics is in the midst of an absolute budget CRISIS. The entire department in drowning in debt.

Plus, this outpouring of support for all of these secondary sports now that they're getting cut frustrates me. No one cared about any of these sports before they were getting cut and are now pretending to be their biggest supporters. Perhaps if all these people had supported the team before they were getting cut, they wouldn't be in this situation in the first place.

Also having been to the gym tonight, I can tell you for certain that we have some of the best swimming facilities in the country.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Maryland president Dr. Wallace D. Loh has approved recommendations from the university's Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics to cut eight sports teams.

Loh, who announced his decision Monday morning in a news release on Maryland's website, wrote that he concurred "with the entirety of this recommendation," which called for the elimination of eight varsity sports teams: men's cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track, men's swimming and diving, men's tennis, women's acrobatics and tumbling, women's swimming and diving, and women's water polo. Loh noted that "all athletic scholarship commitments and affected coaches' contracts will be honored."

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/terps/bal-maryland-sports-cuts-approved-1121,0,2849449.story

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Somebody want to tell me how Women's acrobatics and tumbling is a sport? That sounds like a class for three-year olds. If tumbling is a sport then there are some world class athletes outside of bars at 2AM. :D

I'm just glad wrestling made the cut. The Maryland wrestling program is really one of the better programs at the school.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Somebody want to tell me how Women's acrobatics and tumbling is a sport? That sounds like a class for three-year olds. If tumbling is a sport then there are some world class athletes outside of bars at 2AM. :D

I'm just glad wrestling made the cut. The Maryland wrestling program is really one of the better programs at the school.

Didn't your son have a scholarship offer from UM for wrestling? If so, have you been given assurances the program is safe?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Posts

    • emmett16 is right. Uppercut swings produce a lot of groundouts because the bat is not on the same plane as the ball for very long. The best swing stays on the same plane as the ball for a longer time. This will produce contact that creates backspin on the ball which makes it carry. That Ted Williams book is one of the best hitting books ever written.
    • I have to admit. I'm an addict. I'm an addict not of booze or drugs. I'm an addict for baseball .... It's still THE game for me and I love almost any team sport. But for me, when it's great, it's still the greatest game of them all. I hate to say it, but when my team wins ...it's like a hit of crack or coke and I have never and will never try those drugs. This one is a better high anyway. It's an adrenaline rush for me. It comes from my heart and soul. Like the other night in Anaheim I sat transfixed on the game. I dont need to look at the silly shell games on a scoreboard, nor hear what the players favorite singer is.. or eat a lot of junk, but I DO have to have my bag of peanuts. The Orioles were clinging to a one run lead, when, with the bases loaded, Mike Trout stepped up to the plate...a single and the game is tied...an extra base hit and the Orioles lose. Our pitcher Craig Kimbrel had to throw a strike to one of the all time greats, and somehow, someway, Trout looked at a third strike and the Orioles won. I lept into the air as if I had a million dollars on the game. I never bet on sports, but this was a better high than winning any bet anyway. Because it is pure and it comes from my deep place of caring when the 'Birds' win. Today in Anaheim, another nail biter, the game was in the ninth with two out and a runner on first. Suddenly the runner broke for second and catcher James McCann threw a strike to second base. Gunnar Henderson covering, made the tag and the ump called the runner out. And the game ended that way. Bang Bang. Personally I thought it was a blown call, but after review the call was upheld and the Orioles won another nail biter. I dont watch many other games, but every night I hit the crack pipe" of baseball. It's my addiction. I also love watching fantastic performers. Mookie Betts is an electric ballplayer . can do anything at the plate and in the field. The Orioles' Henderson is a must see ballplayer like Betts is. On Wednesday he hit a home run, a double, a single, drove in 3 runs got hit by a pitch , stole a base and made two game saving plays in the field. Baseball is a team sport but it's also watching the brilliant, mesmerizing individual performances. It's watching the best players in the world do what I think is the most difficult thing in sports , hit a baseball, throw a baseball, and field a baseball. It's hard to do. Anyway,it's still just April and it's a long, long season. Bryant Gumble once had a great line about the difference between football and baseball. He said "Baseball, is a never ending romance, but football is a one night stand." Yep, I'm an addict, a baseball junkie, and I make no apologies for it. I'll never go to rehab for my baseball addiction. I don't NEED to be cured. And I never will be. Jim Bouton said it best in "Ball Four" his great book. "In all the years you grip a baseball...you suddenly remember, it's really the other way around" Exactly.
    • Especially when you factor in the DL Hall trade too.  Suarez and Wells get bumped to the pen only if Bradish and Means are effective starters a decent part of the season.  Would the O's promote Povich or McDermott to pitch relief?  My guess is not anytime soon, but I dunno. A trade would for one or two arms would be best, but trading for good relief pitching is only harder now because so many teams can make the playoffs.  
    • But O'Hearn's numbers are inflated because he never bats against lefties, plus he's trash in the outfield.  If Santander's hitting does not improve this season of course you don't give him a QO, but that's unlikely.  He'll probably pick it up as the weather heats up.  Plus Tony plays at least a decent RF and can play first base too.   Like others have said, should the O's offer Santander a QO?  Maybe -- it depends on how he performs and how Kjerstad and Stowers perform.  
    • Wait, since when is money no object? It remains to be seen what the budget constraints are going to be with the new ownership, but if Santander is projected to put up 3.0 WAR for $20 million and his replacement (Kjerstad/Cowser/Stowers...) can put up 2.5 WAR for less than a million then that will be factored in.  The goal will never be about being better than the other 29 teams in a payroll vacuum.
    • I think you have a good understanding and I assume you’ve read Ted Williams Science of Hitting.  It’s all about lining up planes of pitch and bat.  Historically with sinkers and low strikes a higher attack angle played and was more in alignment with pitch plane.  In today’s game of spin and high zone fastball an uppercut swing gives you minimal chance and results in top spin grounders and swing & miss. 
    • I'll bow to your expertise even if it seems unlikely to my laymen understanding. 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...