And even when coming to their senses and making a basketball-first decision to switch conferences from the American Athletic back to their Big East roots, they have been too egotistical to take the corresponding step of dropping football back down to where it was two decades ago, the FCS level.
After thoroughly botching the one sport an athletic department cannot afford to botch, UConn is now going to make a bunch of athletes and coaches from non-revenue sports pay for their manifold mistakes. What a racket.
The attempt at big-time football never made sense at UConn to begin with. The recruiting footprint is small and shallow. The home stadium is in Hartford, 30 miles from the Storrs campus, a lousy arrangement. The demise of the Big East left the Huskies as the northernmost outpost in the geographically absurd AAC.
But UConn kept throwing money at the problems, kept clinging to the ego trip. Even as the school was moving back to the Big East and essentially bailing on football, there were splashy announcements last summer touting a revamped weight room and new locker room.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:There's no doubt UConn administration has made mistakes in the past (I would argue they were necessary and required gambles); however, the have, essentially, become the first FBS program to admit they could not earn a P5 invitation (where many more should), while prioritizing its student-athletes and their experiences. UConn, and especially Benedict, should be praised and highlighted, not ridiculed like Forde seemingly has.
Savannah Jay wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:There's no doubt UConn administration has made mistakes in the past (I would argue they were necessary and required gambles); however, the have, essentially, become the first FBS program to admit they could not earn a P5 invitation (where many more should), while prioritizing its student-athletes and their experiences. UConn, and especially Benedict, should be praised and highlighted, not ridiculed like Forde seemingly has.
This feels like a seminal moment for college sports (not just UCONN). The table below is from 2018 so, even if the latest numbers are a little different, the picture it paints is the same. Texas A&M's athletic department made $47M with no revenue from student fees or university funds...UCONN's athletic department was subsidized to the tune of $39M and still lost money. Georgia made $44M and regularly transfers money back to the university. A&M and Georgia were the extreme...but schools like UCONN and many of their former conference mates (Cincy, Memphis, UCF, Houston) are not playing the same game as the top 20 schools on this list. They are generating 40+% of athletic revenues from non-athletic sources and that's just not fiscally sustainable nor fiscally responsible, IMO (and i LOVE college sports).
https://sports.usatoday.com/ncaa/finances/
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