FurmanFan23 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 10:16 am
As a current student I believe the issue is that most Furman students are not interested in attending games. Furman pulls academic students which are just not interested in sports. The majority of FU students outside the Greeks could care less about FU football and Basketball. Attendance would be a lot worse if Greek life was to disappear. The majority of students I see at the games in the student section are either have a greek affiliation or are part of another FU sport team supporting basketball or Football
I disagree.
Admittedly, I graduated a little over 10 years ago so things HAVE probably changed but I think the issue is that the students who are interested in sports, and I do believe they exist, aren't interested in watching Furman specifically. Most students interested in sports were raised watching other teams and if they follow Tennessee, Clemson, FSU, or any other nationally relevant college football program at best they go to the games while they are a student because they like football and plan to lose interest after the graduate (at least this is what other students told me their plan was back in the day).
Having now graduated, I do run into alumni of FCS programs periodically. Most alumni would describe their school's team as terrible because they are comparing them to the national powers that they are more familiar with. The fact that their school's football program had a winning record and had some play-off appearances while they were a student means nothing to them short of said program making it to the national championship.
I don't see Furman students or alumni building a substantially stronger relationship with the football program. I LOVE Furman football but what benefits it has with alumni outreach, etc. I am skeptical of. However, many small programs throughout the South are adding football (ETCU, Stetson, Mercer, Coastal Carolina, GSU, etc. ) or reinvesting in their football programs (VMI, Davidson, etc.). I don't think university administrations would be adding football or reinvesting in it, including Furman's peers, if they weren't confident there were benefits. One of those benefits I suspect is that a university's academic street cred seems to have become increasingly tied to whether it can field a football team and at what level that football team competes at.
When I came to Furman the Palidins were ranked #5 nationally and were a perennial power in the FCS. At that time, the students took a ton of pride in the football program but by the time I graduated...
So, I think Furman needs to be a perennial power in the FCS to hold the students attention both while attending Furman and as alumni.