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Pick Up the Phone, Save a College Team
Reprint from the Washington Post
By Greg Sandoval
Washington Post Staff Writer
The attempt to save non-profit sports from the budget axe wielded by many
major universities entered a new realm over the weekend: the domain formerly
inhabited primarily by Jerry Lewis and has-been television stars singing
“Feelings.”
The University of Minnesota athletic department, its men’s golf
and gymnastics teams and its women’s golf teams facing elimination,
held a three-hour telethon on a Twin Cities’ NBC affiliate Sunday
afternoon.
In a fundraising effort that organizers said was unprecedented, the school
raised more than $670,000 with entertainment that consisted of little
more than the school’s marching band and pleas from luminaries.
An additional online auction that ended yesterday brought in almost $18,000.
“We’re trying to be creative and come up with something that
sparks some interest,” Katie Weiss, the newly appointed Minnesota
women’s golf coach, said of the telethon.
This is a dire time for many so-called minor sports that do not generate
much revenue. For instance, about 171 wrestling programs have been eliminated
in the past 20 years, according to the National Wrestling Coaches Foundation.
Yesterday, St. John’s in New York cut football and men’s track
(indoor, outdoor and cross-country). Men’s and women’s swimming
will be eliminated after the 2003-2004 academic year.
Two weeks ago, supporters of the soon-to-be-defunct men’s and women’s
swim teams at Dartmouth tried to call attention to their predicament by
offering to sell both squads for $212,000 on an Internet auction site,
eBay. The sale garnered lots of headlines but few serious bids. Eventually,
eBay removed the auction.
The Minnesota telethon was no publicity stunt. Golfing great Arnold Palmer;
Gov. Jesse Ventura, the one-time pro-wrestling personality and actor;
and former Minnesota Twins player Paul Molitor were among those who appeared
urging donations.
A committee called Save Gopher Sports seeks to raise $2.8 million by Feb.
1, the school-imposed deadline. Having raised $1.5 million prior to the
telethon, the committee needs to raise at least another $500,000.
Lou Nanna, an all-American hockey player at Minnesota and an ex-NHL coach
and player who is a member of the committee, came up with the idea for
the telethon. Nanne, whose charity work includes the Lewis’s Muscular
Dystrophy telethon, said that when the fundraising effort for the teams
began to slow, he told the committee “that three hours of television
would do wonders for us.”
The TV station donated the airtime, said committee co-chair Harvey Mackey.
Minnesota Athletic Director Joel Maturi blames the cuts nationally on
the slumping U.S. economy, tuition increases that have made it more expensive
for athletic departments to fund scholarships, Title IX compliance and
what Maturi describes as an “arms race” between schools. To
attract top football and men’s basketball players, athletic departments
have built new arenas and practice facilities.
In addition, salaries for major college football and basketball coaches
have increased. Michigan State last week unsuccessfully offered to pay
Washington Redskins assistant coach Marvin Lewis $1.8 million a year to
become football coach. At Minnesota, Glen Mason, in his sixth year as
football coach, earns about $1.3 million in annual base salary, according
to reports.
Regardless of the cost., Maturi said he doesnt want to see a single sport
lost.
“I don’t want to be the athletic director remembered for whacking
three sports,” he said.
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