St. Thomas removed from the MIAC

Started by justafan12, May 22, 2019, 03:45:12 PM

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justafan12

Appears this was already posted in the West region football forum.  There are lots more comments there.

Gray Fox

Quote from: justafan12 on May 22, 2019, 03:54:06 PM
Appears this was already posted in the West region football forum.  There are lots more comments there.

  "Lots" is an understatement. :D
Fierce When Roused

old scot

Wow. Don't think I have ever heard of a school getting banished from a conference for their sports teams winning too much. Sooo sad. What has become of this country. Everyone has to be treated with kid gloves care and not hurt the feelings of the other schools. Maybe St. T should buy the rest of the conference schools participation trophies. Makes me sick

Pat Coleman

I'm OK with having a big-picture discussion here about whether this might lead to more expulsions, etc.
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Quote from: old 40 on September 25, 2007, 08:23:57 PMLet's discuss (sports) in a positive way, sometimes kidding each other with no disrespect.

Gregory Sager

I honestly don't see this as a catalyst for other leagues taking similar measures to their own perennial winners (e.g., the ARC kicking out Wartburg, the Centennial giving the heave-ho to Johns Hopkins, or the ODAC bouncing Washington & Lee). The circumstances regarding St. Thomas seem to be pretty MIAC-specific.

Then again, maybe I'm just being naive. Or maybe the prevalence of schools that are bad fits for their leagues is broader than I imagined.
"To see what is in front of one's nose is a constant struggle." -- George Orwell

Mr. Ypsi

Quote from: Gregory Sager on May 22, 2019, 06:24:03 PM
I honestly don't see this as a catalyst for other leagues taking similar measures to their own perennial winners (e.g., the ARC kicking out Wartburg, the Centennial giving the heave-ho to Johns Hopkins, or the ODAC bouncing Washington & Lee). The circumstances regarding St. Thomas seem to be pretty MIAC-specific.

Then again, maybe I'm just being naive. Or maybe the prevalence of schools that are bad fits for their leagues is broader than I imagined.

Yeah, I don't know the ins-and-outs of most conferences, but no one but the MIAC seems to have bottom-feeders who have billion-dollar endowments and simply CHOOSE not be competitive athletically.  Bottom-feeders in other conferences at least try, although circumstances may make competitiveness almost impossible.  I doubt K'zoo will ever challenge for a MIAA football title, but their tennis teams are essentially unbeatable.  Your North Park has fizzled in it's rise in football after Coach Conway ran out of sons (;D), but you've still got 83% of the conference's national basketball titles to fall back on (and a heckuva soccer team, in case the bball titles are starting to grow mold).  Wilmington gets kicked around as much as St. Olaf, and not JUST by UMU, but I don't hear them whining.

St. Olaf, Carleton, and Macalester strike me as overly-entitled children who just can't muster the guts to compete, so just take their billion dollar balls and go home.  I don't know the inner details, but it would seem that if they were the only ones threatening to bolt, the MIAC would have been better off saying "don't let the door hit your ass on the way out" and replace them with a couple of UMAC teams.

Captain_Joe08

Quote from: Gregory Sager on May 22, 2019, 06:24:03 PM
I honestly don't see this as a catalyst for other leagues taking similar measures to their own perennial winners (e.g., the ARC kicking out Wartburg, the Centennial giving the heave-ho to Johns Hopkins, or the ODAC bouncing Washington & Lee). The circumstances regarding St. Thomas seem to be pretty MIAC-specific.

Then again, maybe I'm just being naive. Or maybe the prevalence of schools that are bad fits for their leagues is broader than I imagined.

Who knows at this point. The Pandora's Box has been opened today. Who also reaches inside to do the same remains to be seen.
Once a Warrior always a Warrior.
WLC Men's Tennis (2014 NACC Tournament Champs)
2014 MIAA Football Pick 'Em Champ
2014 WIAC Football Pick 'Em Regular Season Co-Champ
2014 National Confidence Playoff Champion
Milwaukee Brewers: 2018 NL Central Champions

Ron Boerger

A conference has the right to decide the terms of membership in said conference.  This is D3, and so those factors include a wide number of things such as admissions standards, role of athletics in the greater scholastic environment, spending on athletics and facilities, enrollment, public vs private, and so forth.  The unfortunate thing in this situation is that the MIAC is saying it's solely because St. Thomas is kicking their collective butt and totally ignoring (at least in public) the other factors above that contribute to said butt-kicking.   Maybe that was the pound of flesh St. Thomas was able to extract in exchange for "involuntary withdrawal". 

I'm sensitive to this because the SCAC went through something similar when the SAA split off.  The publicly stated reason was that it was all about travel and the resultant demands on students, but there was an undercurrent that it also was because the remaining SCAC schools weren't up to SAA academic standards (reinforced by the president of one school; true in some but not all cases).  Again, schools/conferences have the right to do what's right for their membership/student-athletes, but you need to be clear about what those factors are.  If the sole reason for the MIAC to kick out a charter member is that they can't compete, woe to the conference for the precedent just set. 

Ralph Turner

With respect to the SAA, I am not privy to the personalities involved, but Oglethorpe is/was not a member of the Associated of Colleges of the South. If the idea was for Sewanee, Rhodes, Millsaps, Birmingham-Southern, Hendrix, and Centre to enforce "standards", why was Oglethorpe invited to the SAA?   Just asking...

Pat Coleman

Quote from: Ralph Turner on May 23, 2019, 10:38:33 AM
With respect to the SAA, I am not privy to the personalities involved, but Oglethorpe is/was not a member of the Associated of Colleges of the South. If the idea was for Sewanee, Rhodes, Millsaps, Birmingham-Southern, Hendrix, and Centre to enforce "standards", why was Oglethorpe invited to the SAA?   Just asking...

Probably because there is also a standard for an automatic bid. :)
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Quote from: old 40 on September 25, 2007, 08:23:57 PMLet's discuss (sports) in a positive way, sometimes kidding each other with no disrespect.

Ralph Turner

Quote from: Pat Coleman on May 23, 2019, 10:39:12 AM
Quote from: Ralph Turner on May 23, 2019, 10:38:33 AM
With respect to the SAA, I am not privy to the personalities involved, but Oglethorpe is/was not a member of the Associated of Colleges of the South. If the idea was for Sewanee, Rhodes, Millsaps, Birmingham-Southern, Hendrix, and Centre to enforce "standards", why was Oglethorpe invited to the SAA?   Just asking...

Probably because there is also a standard for an automatic bid. :)
Ohh... okay...

;)

AO

Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on May 22, 2019, 10:59:12 PM
Quote from: Gregory Sager on May 22, 2019, 06:24:03 PM
I honestly don't see this as a catalyst for other leagues taking similar measures to their own perennial winners (e.g., the ARC kicking out Wartburg, the Centennial giving the heave-ho to Johns Hopkins, or the ODAC bouncing Washington & Lee). The circumstances regarding St. Thomas seem to be pretty MIAC-specific.

Then again, maybe I'm just being naive. Or maybe the prevalence of schools that are bad fits for their leagues is broader than I imagined.

Yeah, I don't know the ins-and-outs of most conferences, but no one but the MIAC seems to have bottom-feeders who have billion-dollar endowments and simply CHOOSE not be competitive athletically.  Bottom-feeders in other conferences at least try, although circumstances may make competitiveness almost impossible.  I doubt K'zoo will ever challenge for a MIAA football title, but their tennis teams are essentially unbeatable.  Your North Park has fizzled in it's rise in football after Coach Conway ran out of sons (;D), but you've still got 83% of the conference's national basketball titles to fall back on (and a heckuva soccer team, in case the bball titles are starting to grow mold).  Wilmington gets kicked around as much as St. Olaf, and not JUST by UMU, but I don't hear them whining.

St. Olaf, Carleton, and Macalester strike me as overly-entitled children who just can't muster the guts to compete, so just take their billion dollar balls and go home.  I don't know the inner details, but it would seem that if they were the only ones threatening to bolt, the MIAC would have been better off saying "don't let the door hit your ass on the way out" and replace them with a couple of UMAC teams.
Macalester, St. Olaf and Carleton actually do spend a lot of money on athletics and do quite well in many sports besides football.  Augsburg, Hamline and St. Mary's are typically in a lower tier than St. Olaf or Carleton.  Macalester spends more than Gustavus, Concordia or Bethel but doesn't have similar success.  At a certain point schools just need to understand that there is more to athletics than winning.

Pat Coleman

More to winning ... and also more than just spending money.
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Quote from: old 40 on September 25, 2007, 08:23:57 PMLet's discuss (sports) in a positive way, sometimes kidding each other with no disrespect.

Oline89

Kicking a team out of a league because they win too much is not in the spirit of competitive sports.  That being said, getting kicked in the teeth for decades is not much fun for the student athletes, parents, fans, alumni etc.  A few years ago, teams departed the LL for similar reasons and joined a "lower ranked" conference.  This led to a tougher, although smaller LL, while at the same time opening up the playoff opportunity to the departed teams.  Unfortunately, this was probably not an option for the MIAC, due to geography.  Tough situation, certainly no easy answer.