New Mexico Daily Lobo
URL: http://www.dailylobo.com/index.php/article/2012/01/athletics_ups_fund_request_along_with_ambitions
Current Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2012 00:13:23 -0700
UNM sophomore Kendall Spencer (right) speaks about the opportunities he has had as a student athlete at UNM during the Student Fee Review Board meeting on Sunday afternoon in the SUB. Athletics requested 3.5 million in student fees.
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Athletics ups fund request along with ambitions
The Athletics department lost its status as a group guaranteed funding, but that didn’t stop it from asking for more money than years before.
UNM Athletics requested $3.5 million in student fees this year from the Student Fee Review Board, up from about $1.9 million it recieved in fiscal year 2012.
Tim Cass, senior associate director of Athletics, said the large increase in funding from students could propel the University into the Bowl Championship Series (BCS), a group of six big-name conferences that generate funds for Athletics primarily through television deals.
During the SFRB hearing Sunday, Cass said securing a spot for UNM in the BCS would make Athletics financially sustainable and could even fund the University’s academic mission.
“I think with the recent movement in terms of the University of Houston (and other teams) which are similar universities, it’s much more likely than it was a couple of years ago for UNM to get in,” he said. “The close-knit fraternity is becoming more open, and with the improvements we’ve made in our facilities and the level our programs are competing at nationally I do think there is a good chance we could get in.”
Cass said the funding from student fees would help improve facilities, coaching and recruitment to help improve UNM’s sport teams.
The Atlantic Coast Conference, Big East, Southeastern Conference, Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12 make up the six Division I conferences of the BCS.
In the last few years, Mountain West schools Utah, Boise State and Texas Christian accepted invitations into the BCS conferences.
Cass said entrance into the BCS would make UNM Athletics financially self-sufficient.
“It would generate $10-20 million, mainly from television revenues,” he said.
Henry Villegas, the assistant athletic director overseeing academics, said the poor performance of the football team’s losing record made it difficult to gain entrance into BCS.
UNM Athletics reported a total budget of about $30 million to SFRB, including the possible $3.5 million in student fees, which would make up about 11 percent of the budget.
SFRB Chair Katie Richardson, who questioned the Athletics representatives about its funding sources, said she is skeptical about funding an organization that does not directly contribute to the academic mission.
SFRB member Japji Hundal said he would like to see more commitment from the Athletics department to fund sports other than the primary revenue-drawing programs.
“I want to know, ‘What is the status of the other programs besides football,’” he said. “There is a lot of student participation in … these programs like soccer, and volleyball … how does that contribute to the University?”
Cass said although other programs see high levels of success, many are not ticketed, and do not produce funding and are supported by the larger sports like football.
“We do wonderfully in other sports like volleyball, but we have to depend on our ticketed sports for revenue,” Cass said. “Six out of eight of our ticketed sports rank in the top 25 percent of the nation for attendance.”
On Thursday, UNM President David Schmidly approved Student Fee Review Board’s recommendation to eliminate the “protected status” of nine groups that receive guaranteed funding from student fees, including Athletics.
While the program will not be guaranteed an amount by SFRB, the program still receives a guaranteed amount of student fees which will be set by the President’s Strategic Budget Leadership Team, an organization that takes recommendations from the SFRB.



5 comments
Shorty
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What rubbish! Increased student fees will somehow magically “propel” UNM into some magical fairytale land where money grows on the football tree in such copious amounts that it will even help fund academics? I hope no one on the SFRB that believes that garbage. UNM Athletics is a long way from being a university cash cow and no one should be taken in by suggestions otherwise. Kudos to the SFRB for revoking Athletics Department’s protected status – I hope for the sake of the student body and the university’s academic mission that they continue to have the guts to stand up to Athletics.
Chris M.
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Here’s a link to a great NY Times article about why increased commercialization of college sports might not be the best for UNM. The take home message is that there is plenty of research that finds big-time college athletics to be detrimental to average academic performance.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/education/edlife/how-big-time-sports-ate-college-life.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&sq=college athletics&st=cse&scp=2#
Brilliant Financial Consideration
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Why would we increase funding to a program that doesn’t win games. And why would the BCS give us a bowl bid when we don’t win games and were ranked as the WORST team in the nation according to ESPN for… what like 7..8 weeks?
Wally
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Cass’s statements are absurd and any thinking adult or mature student at UNM knows it. BCS membership, which may go by the wayside in a few years anyway, is predicated on success in football and fan/alum support.. UNM is at or near the bottom in these categories and has been for years…with little hope of imroving much as evidenced by the poor tradition, lack of in-state D-1 recruits, and fan apathy.
Lawrence
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Right you are, Wally.
Athletics does not produce enough net revenues to help fund academics even at most successful jock schools — it certainly won’t at a sports backwater like UNM (in football anyway).
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Only a fool would believe it; infortunately, common sense is not all that common these days.
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