FB: College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin

Started by admin, August 16, 2005, 05:04:00 AM

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Pat Coleman

Quote from: BIGBLUE BEN on Today at 01:22:46 PM
Quote from: CarollFan on Yesterday at 01:47:01 PMCCIW announcement on CUW

CUW announcement

Does this mean the CCIW will do away with the 1 non-conference game every year or will there be a rotating schedule every year where you don't play one team? I would prefer the non-conference game to be removed so that Rivalries are protected.

Starting next year, nobody will play Wash U., unless they choose to do so in non-conference. (AKA this is WashU's last year in the CCIW for football.)
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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

Quote from: WUPHF on Today at 11:56:09 AM
Quote from: ncc_fan on Today at 09:43:44 AMWomen's triathlon is indeed a (non-NCAA) college sport, though just 41 schools across all divisions sponsor it currently. In addition to CUW, both Millikin and NCC have varsity programs, and NCC's team has finished 1st or 2nd among D3 schools since 2017. 

Thanks, I am in favor of more sports if the economics supports it so I love that triathlon is a thing.

Quote from: Gregory Sager on Today at 11:03:14 AMI'm disappointed that CUW doesn't have cross-country skiing, chess, or rodeo teams.

Are there any alpine or nordic skiing programs in Wisconsin?  It seems to me that there are enough high school programs to support more college programs.

Just one, UW-Green Bay. But there's a league, the Central Collegiate Ski Association, that includes several schools in adjacent states that have varsity ski programs: Michigan Tech, Northern Michigan, St. Cloud State, St. Scholastica, and St. Olaf. (As you can see, NCAA skiing is interdivisional.) Unlike the other ski conferences in the NCAA, the CCSA sponsors Nordic (cross-country) skiing only and thus doesn't compete in Alpine (downhill) skiing. That's probably a concession to the limited access to downhill ski resorts in the upper Midwest, although MTU and NMU aren't that far from the Porcupine Mountains Ski Area and the Snowriver Mountain Ski Resort up in the U.P., and St. Scholastica is pretty close to the Giants Ridge ski resort up on the Iron Range.
"To see what is in front of one's nose is a constant struggle." -- George Orwell

WUPHF

Quote from: Gregory Sager on Today at 01:30:38 PMJust one, UW-Green Bay. But there's a league, the Central Collegiate Ski Association, that includes several schools in adjacent states that have varsity ski programs: Michigan Tech, Northern Michigan, St. Cloud State, St. Scholastica, and St. Olaf. (As you can see, NCAA skiing is interdivisional.) Unlike the other ski conferences in the NCAA, the CCSA sponsors Nordic (cross-country) skiing only and thus doesn't compete in Alpine (downhill) skiing. That's probably a concession to the limited access to downhill ski resorts in the upper Midwest, although MTU and NMU aren't that far from the Porcupine Mountains Ski Area and the Snowriver Mountain Ski Resort up in the U.P., and St. Scholastica is pretty close to the Giants Ridge ski resort up on the Iron Range.

Thanks Greg, interesting.

Gregory Sager

Quote from: BIGBLUE BEN on Today at 01:22:46 PM
Quote from: CarollFan on Yesterday at 01:47:01 PMCCIW announcement on CUW

CUW announcement

Does this mean the CCIW will do away with the 1 non-conference game every year or will there be a rotating schedule every year where you don't play one team? I would prefer the non-conference game to be removed so that Rivalries are protected.

This will still be a ten-team league for football, so the current pattern of nine CCIW games starting in Week Three, following a non-conference game and a bye (in either order) in Week One and Week Two, will stay the same after a one-year hiatus.

The only difference is that associate member Wash U is leaving the circuit and full member Concordia (WI) is joining ... which means more bus time will be logged by your Big Blue, but the MU winning percentage will benefit. The Falcons are definitely not on par with the Bears on the gridiron.

The one-year hiatus is what seems to be the sticking point. Wash U is gone for good after this season, but CUW doesn't begin CCIW play until the fall of 2027. I haven't checked this out with anybody official yet, but it appears to me that CCIW teams will have to pick up an extra non-conference game for the 2026 season. Tellingly, the FUTURE SCHEDULES dropdown on the CCIW football page is blank at the moment.

The issue here isn't that the CCIW will have to go back to a nine-team format for 2026 (two non-conference games for everybody, with a staggered bye scheduled in amongst the nine teams over the course of Weeks Three thru Eleven as they play an eight-game CCIW schedule). It's that the schedule will last for only one season, with the league returning to a ten-team format (one non-con game in either Week One or Week Two, alternated with a bye, followed by nine CCIW games in Weeks Three thru Eleven) in 2027 with the inclusion of CUW in the round-robin. And D3 college football scheduling for non-conference typically runs on two-year contracts, with one team home the first year and the other team home the second. That's going to make it much harder for coaches to get that extra non-con game scheduled for 2026.
"To see what is in front of one's nose is a constant struggle." -- George Orwell

USee

WashU is dropping off and CUW is replacing them. There will still be 1 Non Conf game for everyone