Ten years of D3football.com

A decade ago at this time, I was throwing the proverbial switch and getting ready to unleash D3football.com on the World Wide Web.

Lycoming def. Widener, 1998It had been a project we were attempting to keep secret, which was difficult to do, assembling 220-some football schedules, quick facts and the like without being noticed. In the weeks before our July 7, 1999, launch, we saw the competition, Division III Football Online, really ramp up its preseason coverage, much better than it had done previously. And since we were moving into what was basically another site’s established territory, we were concerned there would be a backlash.

That potential backlash had kept us from expanding Division III Basketball Online and adding a football site the year before. We did talk very seriously about doing it for the 1998 season, and there was definitely some split opinions among our inner circle at the time, which was basically me, Jim Stout and Ray Martel. But Ray and I took a break from our coverage of Catholic University football to cover the Widener-Lycoming game that fall, a classic in which Lyco rallied from a 13-2 deficit after starting with the ball on its 1-yard line with a little more than three minutes left, and we knew we had to cover this sport more often.

When I took over Division III Basketball Online in November 1997 I had this illusion that I could do it a few hours a night, a few nights a week, which would make the site more up-to-date than it had been previously and everyone would be happy. But that illusion quickly faded and by that time, the site already took up 20-30 hours a week during the basketball season. So I had a pretty good idea what I was getting into.

Your response, the fans’ response, to D3football.com was overwhelming, from the opening days. It eventually passed D3hoops.com in traffic and popularity and really drives the whole D3sports.com network. Thanks for being a part of it and choosing to follow NCAA Division III football with us. It’s been a very rewarding decade, getting to go across the country and see great football games, meet people, find good stories and bring them back to you.

And while this site is still really a labor of love, and may well never be my full-time job, I don’t love it or Division III football any less.

Spread the word.

Welcome to the fold, Pacific

Hopefully better late than never, D3football.com welcomes Pacific University to the Division III football-playing fold. In a year where D-III football was dealt a few blows, losing Blackburn, Principia, and most surprisingly, Colorado College, it’s good to see administrations are still seeing the value of football at their schools.

I was contacted by an AP reporter in Oregon for my take on why Pacific added football — she said it was added as a revenue generator. And while that sounds odd at the Division III level, for a sport that costs a lot of money to sponsor, it can still make sense. I wrote a piece about schools adding football several years ago and there are a few basic reasons, one of which is increased enrollment.

This isn’t to say that Pacific will bring in 200 extra new freshmen when it holds its first football camp, the way Mary Hardin-Baylor did, but football is about the biggest driver of undergraduate enrollment a school can add.

Here’s hoping Pacific, and Hendrix too, find success in Division III football.

Colorado College: Process was backwards

This letter was sent to the Colorado College administrators named below and later posted to the Save CC football mailing list:

Richard Celeste, President
Ken Ralph, Director of Athletics
Susan Ashley, Head of Faculty
Colorado College

Dear Mr. Celeste, Mr. Ralph, and Ms. Ashley,

My name is Ray Urban and I am the father of Luke Urban, CC class of
2012 and starting linebacker this past season for the CC Tigers. I am
writing this letter not to argue whether or not football should be in
CC’s future but to outline a road map that is more in the spirit of
what CC is (or should be) about.

PERCEPTION

Let’s face it, canceling an 0-9 program is much easier than canceling
a 9-0 program. To the casual observer and general public, the team was
uncompetitive. Even with living in Boston I managed to attend three
games and watched video feeds of all of the rest. This is a team that
with a few breaks, a few less injuries, and offensive play calling
that better matched the players skills could easily have been 4-5.
From the DePauw overtime loss to the final game against Centre College
we saw a team that deserved to be on the field.

PROCESS

Yes, the fiscal crisis demanded attention and football is a relatively
expensive sport. What should have happened is an open, transparent,
frank discussion amongst all stake holders including the players,
alumni, and the larger CC community as to the best course of action.
What actually took place was the exact opposite; closed, opaque,
dictatorial.

SCHEDULE

The proposed three year time frame is right; it just needs to be
implemented 180 degrees from the way proposed. Commit to playing for
three more seasons while the future of the program is discussed and a
plan is implemented to either continue or end the 124 year tradition.
That allows CC to honor the commitments made to the football players
in the classes of 2010, 2011, and 2012 and builds on the strong
athletic and football core represented by those players. Discontinuing
the program for three years guarantees its death.

SUPPORT

The talk of requiring the football program to raise a sufficiently
large endowment to would allow CC to not support it at all is patently
unfair. Surely the 124 year old program should receive at least the
level of financial support from CC that the average CC Division Three
sport at CC receives.

Football is indeed old fashioned. It rewards teamwork more than
individual excellence. It is complicated, rewarding studiousness. It
demands practice. It is never easy. Colorado College owes to the
history of the program, the players, and the integrity of the College
to make this important decision the right way.

Sincerely yours,

Ray Urban