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Athletic Department cuts football program

News Staff

Published: Sunday, November 22, 2009

Updated: Monday, November 23, 2009 21:11

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

Mary Ann Girlasskisser
Mon Nov 23 2009 09:14
Mattew D. Soleyn, no one cares what you think, why do you feel the need to constantly weigh in on every comment board. Get over yourself.

Northeastern football has been on the chopping block for a while, its about time they were cut, they have been terrrible for a long time. What I don't get is the university still honoring the scholarships of the players who will not be playing. I hope that they curtailed the full scholarships given to freshman and sophomores this year and last, otherwise the university will be spendings mad dollars for these kids to sit on their asses.

Your name
Mon Nov 23 2009 08:30
"and it's not like playing for nu is a stepping stone for pro football careers. that has always confused me - do nu's football players actually think their nu football careers will lead to any level of success in football beyond college?"

Actually a tight end who graduated last year was projected to have a decent selection in the NFL draft. Unfortunately they detected a rare heart condition at the NFL combine and he had to retire. A decent amount of NFL players do actually emirge from D-1AA or FCS football and get NFL playing careers. For whatever reason alot of players aren't scouted to well in HS and have to play at that level or some players would rather get a shoot at playing this level than fighting for a spot at a BCS level team. I am not defending or agreeing with cutting the football team I am just saying get your facts straight. Before you talk outta your ass

John
Mon Nov 23 2009 08:07
Hockey has an on-campus venue and sells out. Football did not, and so fans didn't go to the games which hurt the morale. Even the big homecoming games did not sell out at football or come close.
Your name
Mon Nov 23 2009 07:03
"get your facts straight and get over it you got cut from jv football in 10th grade its ok man. let it go"

wow, this is clearly a comment from a football player who's too stupid to succeed in anything else. why is it so difficult for you guys to realize that lots of people don't care about football or sports AT ALL? and it's not like playing for nu is a stepping stone for pro football careers. that has always confused me - do nu's football players actually think their nu football careers will lead to any level of success in football beyond college? if so, that's delusional at a whole new level. if not, what are they wasting their time and OUR money for? school spirit? great job there fellas! 70+ full scholarships for these clowns? good riddance. don't let the door hit you on your way out.

just stating the obvious
Mon Nov 23 2009 06:19
We had a football team? Assuming the money doesn't go towards another 25% raise for Aoun, step in the right direction!
matthew who?
Mon Nov 23 2009 03:28
hey dickhead the fottball team was #1 in the country in 2003. they played at parsons field in front of 5,000 people with no resources. get your facts straight and get over it you got cut from jv football in 10th grade its ok man. let it go
Matthew Strax-Haber
Mon Nov 23 2009 02:49
IT'S ABOUT TIME! We were always a hockey school anyway.
P Kosak
Mon Nov 23 2009 02:22
A reply to Matthew D. Soleyn
To excel at a sport, one does not require a stadium. A stadium is an expensive reward for an exceptional team. A mediocre team will not excel simply because they have a fancy field.
Is it practical to have more funding to help you get a better education, co-op, and ultimately job or to be able to say your school beat another in a football game?

This raises the question: where is this money actually going now?

no one
Mon Nov 23 2009 01:18
Who cares.
Matthew D. Soleyn
Sun Nov 22 2009 23:50
Football could not excel without the creation of an on-campus stadium, which is something that Northeastern never really focused on despite students contributing funding to it since 2004.






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