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Athletic Department cuts football program

By Patrick McHugh

News Staff

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Published: Sunday, November 22, 2009

Updated: Monday, November 23, 2009

CLICK HERE to read an open letter from Athletics Director Peter Roby

Northeastern officials announced yesterday the decision to terminate school's intercollegiate football program, according to a press release from the university.

According to the release, the decision was made by a panel consisting of senior administrators, trustees, faculty, alumni, donors and students. The Athletics Review Panel has met since 2007 to discuss the direction of the Athletic Department. Peter Roby, director of athletics and recreation, headed this panel and made the initial recommendation to discontinue football, which the panel accepted.

In the release, Roby said the benchmark for defining a program’s success is not wins and losses, but creating a positive student-athlete experience.

“The primary motivation for this decision was based on the significant obstacles to providing this experience for our football players,” Roby said in the press release.

The release addressed the financial burdens of continuing to field a team, in part by saying that “elevating and sustaining a competitive Division 1 football program would require additional multimillion dollar investments on an ongoing basis.”

Mike Armini, vice president for marketing and communications, told The News a press conference to discuss the matter in detail will be held Monday morning at Matthews Arena at 11 a.m.

In an interview with The News from October 2007, Roby said cutting an athletic program was “a possibility,” citing the mandate from President Joseph Aoun for each department "to try and be distinctive and excellent."

According to the release, the decision follows the university’s attempt to “prioritize programs and invest in signature strengths.”

The decision to drop football comes less than a year after the Friends of Northeastern Athletics group wrote in a newsletter that football would not be dropped. In a Dec. 21, 2008 newsletter, the group wrote it met with Roby about future plans for the university's athletics programs. According to the newsletter, Roby reportedly remarked that there was no reason Northeastern football would not exist for the next four years.

The football team had not had a winning season since 2003. It completed its 74th season of play Saturday with a 33-27 victory at Rhode Island, finishing up the 2009 season with a record of 3-8, 3-5 in the Colonial Athletic Association. Armini said members of the football team who had been receiving an athletic scholarship will still continue to receive their scholarship until their graduation. As an NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) school, Northeastern's football team received 63 scholarships a year.

The departure of the football program leaves the school with 18 intercollegiate sports, in addition to club and intramural sports.

 

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90 comments

Happy
Wed Dec 2 2009 23:19
How many of you supporting the Columbus stadium actually live on Columbus Ave? A stadium in this RESIDENTIAL area would bring nothing but additional noise and disturbances. How would students living in the Columbus dorms get to class? As of now, most must utilize the footbridges from the parking lots and if they were to be obscured by a stadium how would they pass? A lot of people are forgetting that this area is not just Northeastern property. Many families and non-students live in this area and I would like to hear what they have to say about a stadium being built at their front door.

Bottom line: it sucks that NU had to cut the football team but I think the whole stadium thing is a non-issue. Even if it were favored by the university, who is to say that it would ever be approved by the city? As a resident of Columbus Avenue, I think a large scale stadium would be a major disturbance. Parsons Field is a 5 minute drive from NU and free shuttles have been provided to and from all games. Maybe people should have stopped complaining and demanding an on-campus stadium and just hopped on a shuttle to show support if the team meant so much to them!

winners?
Wed Dec 2 2009 01:05
I love these clowns on here that say "WE WANT WINNERS" at NU. are you guys dumb? Hockey Team hasnt won Hockey East since 1988 and the Basketball Team hasnt won since Reggie Lewis was playing. We want winners makes me laugh. the baseball and football have more conference titles than hockey and basketball in this decade and they were the two teams on the chop block. we want winners. f*&%^ off. nobody on here with that comment has any idea what they are talking about. we want winners haaa.
mike
Wed Dec 2 2009 00:58
basketball and hockey teams suck d&^% this year.
Profit & Loss
Mon Nov 30 2009 00:29
Northeastern makes a profit off the Ashland property [Warren Center].

Northeastern should have built the stadium, then sold Parsons or developed Parsons years ago.

Related Topic
Sun Nov 29 2009 12:51
In a related topic, why does the office manager of the Marino Center get the personal use of one of the athletic vans? He is always driving to and from work in one. He also shows up at the Marino Center early on Sunday mornings when the facility doesn't open until 10 or noon. Is this for his private personal workouts? Is he claiming all this private personal use of University property as income on his income taxes? Who else is getting vehicles and using facilities after hours for personal use?
How to pay for a Stadium
Sat Nov 28 2009 12:38
Sell an under-utilized university owned asset. Here are three options that are at least obvious to me.
1) Parsons Field: if NU were to build a multi-purpose stadium on-campus it could sell Parsons Field. Yes?.... Developable residential land in Brookline would probably fetch a nice price.
2) Henderson House: a fancy mansion in Weston, MA used for functions to which students and alumni are rarely (if ever) invited. Anyone ever been there? A mansion in one of the wealthiest towns in MA would probably fetch a nice price.
3) The Warren Center: 100-plus acres of university-owned property in Ashland, MA that includes a function hall. Anyone ever been to the Warren Center? Does anyone know where Ashland is? Won't fetch the per acre price of Brookline or Weston but a truly under-utilized asset that could be shed.
Bottom line: the administration is not and never has been committed to the football program.
Stadium should have built
Sat Nov 28 2009 08:45
The Kraft family had offered President Freeland to build a multi-use stadium for the N.E. Revolution and the Football team. It would be open to the city as well. It would have been located next to squash busters, where the Columbus Field currently is.

The city refused and Freeland said no. ---- Blame the city and your leadership. The plans were already drafted I have seen them.

The Truth
Sat Nov 28 2009 08:40
People are missing the point here. WE WANT WINNERS AT NU. The majority of college football players want to go to a place where they can get better in the hopes of making it to pro football. It is hard to recruit with no facilities. It is hard to compete in a big city without big support from rich donors. We have an NU alumni who started Fortress Financial the first private equity fund publicly traded. Why don't you send him a letter and ask why he didn't go T.B. Pickens on the program and build a $100mm stadium.
To Big Picture
Fri Nov 27 2009 21:03
No one cares any less about football than they care about womens field hockey, mens soccer, track & field, lightweight crew, womens ice hockey or womens diving etc. etc. Ever been to one of their events? They are all still standing. No one would protest if they were dropped.
The Big Picture
Fri Nov 27 2009 11:23
Let's face it, we got a ton more recognition from the ESPN article announcing the drop of the program versus people actually caring about the program being active. People glancing over it probably confused us for Northwestern.

It sucks for the players but this is definitely the right move for Northeastern.

jeramiah wright
Thu Nov 26 2009 17:48
roby wont take that dartmouth ad job I will make sure of it
Joe Falinski
Thu Nov 26 2009 12:19
Even if their record didn't show it, these guys have worked their asses off for years. I have the utmost respect for the players. I hope some of you find places elsewhere to play or at least stay here to finish out your degrees.

To whoever said they should take away the remaining guys scholarships, I hope you can reflect on how insensitive you sound. Use your real name next time so everyone knows who you are.

We're Just Getting Started !
Thu Nov 26 2009 10:01
Headline News - "NU Athletics Review Panel Euthanizes Football Program". The panel will now reconvene under its new name "Obama's Health Care Task Force".
Where's my Trojan Horse?
Thu Nov 26 2009 08:58
I guess someone forgot to tell Joe Aoun that the CAA isn't the PAC-10 and NU isn't USC. Whoops !
Roby Leaving?
Thu Nov 26 2009 08:55
Evidently dartblog.com thinks Pete is the man to replace the standing AD at Dartmouth when the AD retires next year. Pete is a Dartmouth alum BTW. Anyone do their homework on this one before they let Pete make the call? Thanks for the legacy Pete ! A c-note says you can't kill football at Dartmouth !
Stats Part 2
Wed Nov 25 2009 22:10
I've got to believe Pete Roby when he says its not about wins and losses. He went 58-98 (.372) in his six years at Harvard and they still have a basketball team. NU football's all-time record is 289-364-17 (.444) and they don't.
NU 84
Wed Nov 25 2009 20:45
Stop berating the football team. They should receive accolades. Their accomplishments should be measured on how well they did in spite of adversity. They have been playing in the same substandard "stadium" for decades. Since 1979 the university has upgraded Matthews Arena THREE times. Even the crew team got a BRAND NEW multi-million dollar boathouse a few years ago. All the football team got was a new mat for its multi-purpose high school field. The university never committed to these guys and they did their best with what they had. And no one seems to remember the 2002 CAA Champs. Screw the administration. Here's to the players.
Stats
Wed Nov 25 2009 19:57
Chew on this. Since 2002:
1) NU has won 39 football games. URI has won 27.
2) NU vs URI: NU has won 6 games. URI has won 2.
3) NU has won one CAA Championship. URI has won none.
4) NU went 3-8 this past year. URI went 1-10.
5) NU dropped football. URI did not.
m.jones
Wed Nov 25 2009 10:34
I hope Roby shows his face at the BU game today. I'd like to share my two cents with him on this. way to sell out your own people.
Christopher Brielman
Wed Nov 25 2009 09:26
Your Name: "roby has no idea what hes talking about. UNH plays in a stadium as bad as parsons. UNH is in the playoffs every year. its all hager, he killed the program. I hope he never works in football again. " In all fairness, UNH's stadium is *on campus.*






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