CAC loses an original member

The Mid-Atlantic Shuffle continues this offseason, as the NEAC shores up its automatic bid by admitting Gallaudet for the 2010-11 season.

Now, neither Division III school in the nation’s capital will be a member of the Capital Athletic Conference. Catholic left for the Landmark Conference early in the shuffle.

When we last left the NEAC, they were dipping into Texas in hopes of maintaining their tenuous automatic bid. With no details, we were left to wonder whether they were going to incorporate the University of Dallas into their round-robin schedule or base their entire automatic bid on a three-game conference tournament.

They chose the latter.

With two members who are still in the provisional membership stage of joining Division III, the league needed a D-III member to tide them over. Gallaudet will fill that hole and allow the league to cut ties with Dallas if it chooses.

Although Gallaudet was on probation with the Capital Athletic Conference, they were not booted from the conference, rather, they left of their own accord. And in the NEAC, they will spend a lot more money on travel, but they should be somewhat competitive in some sports.

Even I am beginning to get lost with the shuffling. D’Youville is out of the NEAC for next year, shuffling to the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference. The AMCC seems like it will lose Frostburg State, which was just offered membership in the Capital Athletic Conference for 2010-11. With Stevenson’s football program all but a done deal, perhaps for 2011, that would give the CAC four football programs: Frostburg State, Salisbury, Stevenson and Wesley.

The NEAC 2009-10 lineup looks like this: Cazenovia, Keuka, Penn State-Abington (provisional D-III), Penn State-Berks, Penn State-Harrisburg (provisional D-III), St. Elizabeth (no men’s basketball), SUNY-Cobleskill (provisional D-III), SUNY-Morrisville (provisional D-III), SUNYIT, University of Dallas, Wells (no women’s basketball) and Wilson (no men’s basketball).

With the CAC in a position to potentially sponsor football in 2011, more pieces will fall. Stay tuned.

The case for Centenary (La.) and D-III

The Shreveport Times broke a story on Wednesday that Centenary College, in Shreveport, La., had an exploratory meeting with the presidents of the American Southwest Conference as part of what seems to be “due diligence” concerning its ongoing intercollegiate athletics program.

The other Division III conference is reported to be the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference, whose presidents are scheduled to meet in the next 1-2 weeks. The report also said that two other D-1 conferences were being evaluated.

Thursday’s Shreveport Times reported on a news conference held by men’s basketball coach Greg Gary who completed his first year as head coach. Gary said that he thought D-I was the place for Centenary.

Centenary College, a private liberal arts college of 854 undergrads, and its athletic community are at a crossroads.

Centenary College has been a member of the Summit League, a non-football D-1 conference formerly known as the Mid-Continent Conference, since 2003. The Summit League spans nine states with its 10 full members, from Oakland College in Rochester, Mich., to Southern Utah in Cedar City, Utah. All other members are state schools except Oral Roberts University, in Tulsa. Four Summit League members play FCS football.

Travel from Shreveport to the rest of the league requires one and two layovers in major hubs. Air travel out of Shreveport goes to Memphis, DFW, Houston Intercontinental and Atlanta. There is no direct flight to Chicago from Shreveport, a feature that Oral Roberts in Tulsa enjoys. Fellow Summit league member Oral Roberts is still 347 miles away from Shreveport.

Centenary was recently placed on a postseason ban in men’s basketball for poor Academic Progress Rates (APR). The Centenary baseball program was also under scrutiny for APR issues in 2008-09.

The economic downturn is said to have decreased earnings from Centenary endowments by $1.5 million. The National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) 2008 report gave Centenary’s endowment at $118 million as of June 30, 2008. Centenary reported that the endowment was down 20% this year. The 2008 endowment was less than nearby D-III schools Austin, Southwestern and Trinity (Texas).

Centenary currently awards scholarships in men’s and women’s basketball, golf, soccer, swimming and tennis, baseball, softball and women’s gymnastics and volleyball. Full D-I funding for those varsity sports would entail 107.9 men’s scholarships and 112 scholarships for women, roughly 25% of the undergraduate student body. At current tuition rates of $22,000 per year, that is $4.8 million for 219.9 scholarships, a sum greater than the annual yield of the entire endowment at a prudent 4% rate of draw.

The challenge to find another D-I conference in the south is problematic. The Southland Conference is comprised of D-I (FCS for football) schools from Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas. All 12 members are public schools. Eight currently play football. Two more have announced the addition/restoration of football, and one is studying restoring football. The announced fundraising efforts to accomplish this have been in the tens of millions of dollars.

The Sun Belt Conference is a BCS-football conference of 13 schools over eight states including Louisiana. Louisiana Tech is in the Western Athletic Conference. The other, better known D-I options are not plausible.

Centenary has not mentioned the option of a non-football D-II conference, which would be the Heartland Conference, which extends the 1050 miles from Laredo, Texas to Jefferson City, Missouri.

So, Centenary has two options in Division III.

The American Southwest Conference is a 15-member conference in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi that is divided into two divisions, East and West. The eight-member West Division is west and south of the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Centenary is right in the middle of the seven-member East Division. Six of the seven ASC-East members are within a three-hour bus ride on the interstate from Shreveport. Being the eighth member would balance the “travel partner” schedule used by the ASC.

The ASC sponsors every varsity sport that Centenary offers except swimming and women’s gymnastics. Several ASC members have varsity or club swimming programs. men’s club lacrosse, which Centenary has, is being explored by a few ASC schools. Centenary swimming might be the catalyst for the ASC to add the sport. Women’s gymnastics might be the only casualty in a move to D-III. The membership of the ASC has seen four members add football in the last decade, which would also be an option for Centenary.

The case that the ASC makes is almost complete accommodation for Centenary’s sports, geographic proximity, and a minimum of missed class time. The ASC offered charter membership to Centenary when the conference was formed in 1996. The conference would presumably love to have Centenary.

The Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference is expected to receive the Centenary delegation at its Presidents’ meeting later this month. Although geographically more dispersed than the ASC, the SCAC can host all of Centenary’s sports except varsity gymnastics. The burgeoning interest in men’s lacrosse in the SCAC is also a plus for Centenary’s club team. If Centenary follows the model used by Birmingham-Southern when it announced its move to D-III in 2006, then male sports such as football and lacrosse are integral to the strategy. Centenary’s re-instituting football could become the SCAC’s 10th football program. The current male: female ratio of the student body is 42:58. Adding football might bring that closer to parity. (The SCAC does not sponsor women’s gymnastics either.)

The “fit” as a peer institution is what may give the SCAC its inside track. Centenary is one of 16 schools in the Associated Colleges of the South.

Fellow ACS members in the SCAC include Birmingham-Southern, Centre, Hendrix, Millsaps, Rhodes, Sewanee, Southwestern and Trinity (Texas). (Other D-III schools in the ACS include Spelman and Washington and Lee.)

Centenary would strengthen the western side of the SCAC. The SCAC has maintained that it wants to be a 12-member conference, but Colorado College’s decision to drop football this spring probably took some of the luster of having the Colorado Springs, Colo., school in the league. DePauw, in Greencastle, Ind., is another geographically isolated member of the conference. Since the SCAC uses a travel partner format for scheduling, the departure of Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology (Terre Haute, Ind.) from the SCAC because of travel constraints and missed class time for its student-athletes has made DePauw’s isolation more pronounced.

Centenary joined the Summit League in 2003. It has won an average of seven games in men’s basketball in the last five seasons. The budget crunch that has hit all college athletic programs seems to be affecting Centenary. B. David Rowe will become the 12th president of Centenary on August 1st. Dr Rowe is a Southwestern grad and has spent time at Emory and LaGrange. He has a solid D-III background. However, the decision may be made by the time that he begins.

The Centenary board has hard decisions to make, but Division III athletics seems to have more plusses than minuses for a school that prides itself in its academic reputation.

D-III identity: How are we different?

The more I become tuned to the D-III identity issue, the more I see things that jump out at me.

This comes from a recent Q&A with a university president, in the NCAA’s Champion magazine:

What attracted you to Division II?
O’Brien:
The critical issue is balance. When I was an undergrad at Auburn, there was less commercialization in athletics. I was in classes with the athletes and in a fraternity with them; I think that’s what Division II is all about now. Student-athletes first and foremost are students, as they were in the 1960s. So even though I was in Division I as a student and as an administrator for many years, I’ve always identified with that aspect of intercollegiate athletics in a higher education institution. It wasn’t a foreign concept to me.

What’s so special about Division II?
O’Brien:
The student-athletes themselves. Interacting with them, you know they are here primarily for an education, but they also are following their passion. They get to compete in intercollegiate volleyball and soccer and basketball and golf, but they also are getting their education.

Pat O’Brien (no, not that one) is the president of West Texas A&M. What he described about Division II may well be special, but it’s hardly unique. This is what Division III is all about. Division II student-athletes are certainly there to get their education, but they’re being compensated for playing sports. They may be following their passion, but with many of them on scholarship, it’s not the same.

This is why it’s hard to define Division III’s identity without referencing other divisions. Here’s at least one of them, a member of Division II’s Presidents Council if I interpret the article’s vague reference correctly, defining Division II the same way we would define Division III.

Division III needs to stand up for its own identity and not let Division II co-opt it.

NCAA on D-III identity movement

On a pretty busy day (day job, Randolph-Macon hiring, Sean Wallis announces he’s returning) a tweet caught my eye:

Published a new blog post: Mondays with Myles and Friends: DIII Identity

This from the NCAA’s official blog, the Double-A Zone. So I was hoping this would be some serious discussion of the issues facing Division III and its struggles to gain attention in a noisy collegiate athletics landscape.

In five minutes of interview, admittedly, that would be tough to do.

Unfortunately, even in the NCAA’s attempt to promote this concept, it drops the ball. It’s hard to take a program seriously when it mispronounces the name of the guest right out of the gate. And maybe I’m nitpicking, but the NCAA’s Twitter message promoting the interview had a broken link — at least, it didn’t fit in Twitter’s 140-character limit.

But it’s hard to expect more when the national office has so many people who don’t care about Division III.

Anyway, here’s the interview with NCAA vice president for Division III Dan Dutcher. (That’s in case the embed below doesn’t work for you.)

RIP, Patrick Abegg

Patrick Abegg was a Division III guy, through and through. From his days as a student manager at Wash U to his last basketball season, when he was our featured bracketologist, the Division III equivalent of Joe Lunardi, Patrick loved Division III.

Patrick Abegg and familyThat’s why it’s so disappointing to have to tell you that Patrick died this past week of a staph infection. He was just 44.

I don’t know more details than that. Patrick’s brother sings in our church choir and he was not there this morning. When our director told us why he was absent, my heart sank.

I know Patrick left a lasting impression at Wash U. Mark Edwards, the men’s basketball coach, has talked more than once about Patrick as his student manager in the 1980s. Patrick was in Salem last year when the Bears brought home their first Division III men’s basketball national title.

But his lasting legacy to Division III basketball fans was his data, and his analysis over the past decade. Years before D3hoops.com was doing the same, Patrick was collecting schedules and results for every Division III basketball team, and calculating his own ranking out of this. Over the past year or so, it became clear his projections were pretty darn good, and worthy of whatever credence and prominence we could give them. His 2002-03 data got us started with publishing schedules and results for all team, a jump-start without which we might not have gotten started for several more years.

I still have his 2001-02 data on my hard drive, and one of my long list of items for this summer was to incorporate that into the site, then try to get more data from him for previous years.

Here’s some of the last data he analyzed for Division III fans:

Final regular-season Pool C rankings for men
Final regular-season Pool C rankings for women

And here’s an interesting post, in which Patrick discusses the effect one game can have on a team’s playoff chances.

We’ll miss you, Patrick, and Division III will miss you.