If you are referring Fred he said in the south. That is true.The Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
If you are referring Fred he said in the south. That is true.The Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
When the season shut down in midMarch Bowling Green had in fact played 1 of their 9 games in the state of Ohio. Even that one was at Youngstown. Their closest game before that was 10 hours away. At least 1/2 of their MAC games would have been away. Northern teams have to spend the first half of the season traveling vast distances to find thawed ground. It is understandable that northern teams would be more willing to cut baseball. Not only do they have to travel but they probably practice indoors.affirm wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 7:05 pmThe Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
I mentioned them in my post, another thread, May 20, 3:14.
But furmanoid replied, 2 minutes later, "didn't realize people could even play baseball in such a place."
Bowling Green is in Ohio, >21,000 students. Yes, I believe they do play some baseball in Ohio.
Bowling Green did not cut baseball because of weather. They have played baseball 102 years.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 9:33 pmWhen the season shut down in midMarch Bowling Green had in fact played 1 of their 9 games in the state of Ohio. Even that one was at Youngstown. Their closest game before that was 10 hours away. At least 1/2 of their MAC games would have been away. Northern teams have to spend the first half of the season traveling vast distances to find thawed ground. It is understandable that northern teams would be more willing to cut baseball. Not only do they have to travel but they probably practice indoors.affirm wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 7:05 pmThe Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
I mentioned them in my post, another thread, May 20, 3:14.
But furmanoid replied, 2 minutes later, "didn't realize people could even play baseball in such a place."
Bowling Green is in Ohio, >21,000 students. Yes, I believe they do play some baseball in Ohio.
Didn’t say they cut it because of the weather! But if they, like many other schools, were looking for savings opportunities in their athletic budgets then the travel budget for baseball probably jumped off the page. They, like many northern schools, can’t play without extreme travel. Our travel budget doesn’t need to be all that crazy.affirm wrote: ↑Thu May 28, 2020 9:44 amBowling Green did not cut baseball because of weather. They have played baseball 102 years.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 9:33 pmWhen the season shut down in midMarch Bowling Green had in fact played 1 of their 9 games in the state of Ohio. Even that one was at Youngstown. Their closest game before that was 10 hours away. At least 1/2 of their MAC games would have been away. Northern teams have to spend the first half of the season traveling vast distances to find thawed ground. It is understandable that northern teams would be more willing to cut baseball. Not only do they have to travel but they probably practice indoors.affirm wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 7:05 pmThe Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
I mentioned them in my post, another thread, May 20, 3:14.
But furmanoid replied, 2 minutes later, "didn't realize people could even play baseball in such a place."
Bowling Green is in Ohio, >21,000 students. Yes, I believe they do play some baseball in Ohio.
Bowling Green has a more impressive baseball history than Furman does. In fact, Furman baseball accomplishments are very hard to find. (Don't tell me about regular season mid-week games we have won against the likes of Clemson, USC, and Georgia on a rare occasion, or other big schools, maybe every couple of years, when those teams are probably saving their better pitchers for more important games, so we are able to outscore and "upset" them. Numerous examples can be noticed, in any season, of small schools winning over large, well-know, well-supported baseball schools or big name schools that are not necessarily "baseball schools".)
Specific Furman baseball accomplishments ARE somewhat hard to find.
Bowling Green ("that 'unknown' school from the frozen tundra of the north", some might wish to call them), on the other hand, has accomplishments that are very easy to find.
After the school was first established 110 years ago, Bowling Green began varsity intercollegiate competition 102 years ago. The went on to win 12 regular-season conference championships [most recently 2013]), six MAC East Division titles and three conference tournament championships. They have reached the NCAA Tournament on four occasions, most recently 2013.
Bowling Green in its baseball history has had roughly 50 players drafted and an additional 50 sign free-agent contracts. The most famous BG baseball alum is Cy Young winner Orel Hershiser, who pitched for BG from 1977-79 and tossed no-hitter against Kent State on May 4, 1979. He was named 1988 World Series MVP when his Los Angeles Dodgers defeated Oakland in five games.
Danny Schmitz is a three-time MAC Coach of the Year and has won seven conference championships. He entered his 30th year in 2020 as the conference's active leader in all-time wins. Twice under Schmitz's leadership the program won a school-record 36 games (1999 and 2001).
Information about support for Bowling Green baseball is also easier to find. A former Bowling Green State University baseball standout who helped BG win the Mid-American Conference in 1972, and later became one of the school's most prominent donors — the baseball facility is now named for him — donated $1 million to the baseball program in 2014.
Bowling Green's AD Bob Moosbrugger is a former BG baseball player.
Bowling Green's elimination of baseball was announced on the Friday 3 days before the Furman announcement.
A group interested in "saving" baseball at Bowling Green already had $1.3 million in committed contributions by Memorial Day. The group has proposed that the money raised would be distributed during the five-year window the campaign set to find alternative sources of revenue for baseball. Organizers said 10 percent of the contributions — about $130,000 — came from the families of current Bowling Green baseball players. The campaign said that it had 140 total contributors as of Monday. While the campaign quickly surpassed the seven-figure threshold, it has significantly more work to complete in the coming weeks. Its stated goals are to raise between $3.5 and $4 million across the five-year period, establish a limited liability company to serve as a fundraising arm for the program, etc.
I have not found any information about any similar level of successful organization by persons who are vocally opposed to the elimination of Furman baseball.
Tuition does work this way when you add 5 kids to a school, but tuition does not work this way when you add 50 or so kids to the school. Furman has to increase budgets across the board proportionally for an increased enrollment. The single largest metric for school rankings is student faculty ratio. When you add students faculty numbers increase, staff numbers increase, room and board expenses increase, utility bills increase, and student activities funding increases.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Thu May 28, 2020 12:31 pmDidn’t say they cut it because of the weather! But if they, like many other schools, were looking for savings opportunities in their athletic budgets then the travel budget for baseball probably jumped off the page. They, like many northern schools, can’t play without extreme travel. Our travel budget doesn’t need to be all that crazy.affirm wrote: ↑Thu May 28, 2020 9:44 amBowling Green did not cut baseball because of weather. They have played baseball 102 years.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 9:33 pmWhen the season shut down in midMarch Bowling Green had in fact played 1 of their 9 games in the state of Ohio. Even that one was at Youngstown. Their closest game before that was 10 hours away. At least 1/2 of their MAC games would have been away. Northern teams have to spend the first half of the season traveling vast distances to find thawed ground. It is understandable that northern teams would be more willing to cut baseball. Not only do they have to travel but they probably practice indoors.affirm wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 7:05 pmThe Jackal wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 1:32 pmBowling Green dropped baseball the week before Furman did.
I mentioned them in my post, another thread, May 20, 3:14.
But furmanoid replied, 2 minutes later, "didn't realize people could even play baseball in such a place."
Bowling Green is in Ohio, >21,000 students. Yes, I believe they do play some baseball in Ohio.
Bowling Green has a more impressive baseball history than Furman does. In fact, Furman baseball accomplishments are very hard to find. (Don't tell me about regular season mid-week games we have won against the likes of Clemson, USC, and Georgia on a rare occasion, or other big schools, maybe every couple of years, when those teams are probably saving their better pitchers for more important games, so we are able to outscore and "upset" them. Numerous examples can be noticed, in any season, of small schools winning over large, well-know, well-supported baseball schools or big name schools that are not necessarily "baseball schools".)
Specific Furman baseball accomplishments ARE somewhat hard to find.
Bowling Green ("that 'unknown' school from the frozen tundra of the north", some might wish to call them), on the other hand, has accomplishments that are very easy to find.
After the school was first established 110 years ago, Bowling Green began varsity intercollegiate competition 102 years ago. The went on to win 12 regular-season conference championships [most recently 2013]), six MAC East Division titles and three conference tournament championships. They have reached the NCAA Tournament on four occasions, most recently 2013.
Bowling Green in its baseball history has had roughly 50 players drafted and an additional 50 sign free-agent contracts. The most famous BG baseball alum is Cy Young winner Orel Hershiser, who pitched for BG from 1977-79 and tossed no-hitter against Kent State on May 4, 1979. He was named 1988 World Series MVP when his Los Angeles Dodgers defeated Oakland in five games.
Danny Schmitz is a three-time MAC Coach of the Year and has won seven conference championships. He entered his 30th year in 2020 as the conference's active leader in all-time wins. Twice under Schmitz's leadership the program won a school-record 36 games (1999 and 2001).
Information about support for Bowling Green baseball is also easier to find. A former Bowling Green State University baseball standout who helped BG win the Mid-American Conference in 1972, and later became one of the school's most prominent donors — the baseball facility is now named for him — donated $1 million to the baseball program in 2014.
Bowling Green's AD Bob Moosbrugger is a former BG baseball player.
Bowling Green's elimination of baseball was announced on the Friday 3 days before the Furman announcement.
A group interested in "saving" baseball at Bowling Green already had $1.3 million in committed contributions by Memorial Day. The group has proposed that the money raised would be distributed during the five-year window the campaign set to find alternative sources of revenue for baseball. Organizers said 10 percent of the contributions — about $130,000 — came from the families of current Bowling Green baseball players. The campaign said that it had 140 total contributors as of Monday. While the campaign quickly surpassed the seven-figure threshold, it has significantly more work to complete in the coming weeks. Its stated goals are to raise between $3.5 and $4 million across the five-year period, establish a limited liability company to serve as a fundraising arm for the program, etc.
I have not found any information about any similar level of successful organization by persons who are vocally opposed to the elimination of Furman baseball.
It sounds like the main thing that kills us is our scholarship costs which are really high on paper because our tuition is so high. But that is sort of imaginary since an empty seat in a classroom costs the same as one holding up an athlete and the empty seat isn’t going to fork out $55k either.
Brown University is one of THE top-rated universities in the nation.FUBeAR wrote: ↑Thu May 28, 2020 10:11 pm
We just need better ‘Spin Doctors’...
New initiative to reshape, improve competitiveness in Brown varsity and club athletics
The Excellence in Brown Athletics Initiative will revise the University’s roster of varsity sports teams, invest in club sports and enhance recruitment, squad sizes, coaching, training and facilities.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — With the goals of improving the competitiveness of varsity athletics teams, enhancing the strength of club sports and upholding its commitment to providing equal opportunities in athletics for women and men, Brown University has launched a bold plan to reshape its athletics program.
[WOW...Sounds AWESOME!]
7 paragraphs later...
Effective immediately for the 2020-21 academic year, the University will transition 11 varsity teams to club status. Brown will cease training, competition and operations at the varsity level for men's and women’s fencing; men's and women’s golf; women’s skiing; men's and women’s squash; women’s equestrian; and men’s track, field and cross country (which are three varsity sports under federal Title IX rules governing access to opportunities in sports).
....oh, THAT kind of “Excellence.”
We may yet see them but I agree I thought we would have see a few alreadyapaladin wrote: ↑Thu Jul 09, 2020 1:55 pmStanford sponsored 36 sports and is now down to 25. Of course all of the “sports” they cut are laughable and are attributable to Stanford’s snobbish, elitist attitude. For example there are only 2 field hockey teams on the west coast.
Where are all those other SoCon sports being cut as we were told to expect?