KevFu
Registered User
What KevFu means, and that I also agree with, is that the ever-increasing arms race in football will crowd out revenue streams for the other sports.
Hockey will still exist of course but the amount of money the schools will direct towards it will be reduced as more and more revenue streams will flow towards football and, to a lesser extent basketball.
Correct. Kinda. I'd say "Budget" more than revenue streams.
The biggest deciding factors in "What sports schools sponsor" are the facilities cost and Title IX.
Everyone has to have men's and women's basketball. So ALMOST everyone has women's volleyball because they don't need their own venue, they can play in the basketball arena. One facility, three sports.
Hardly anyone has men's volleyball because if you have football, you've got to get like 85 scholarships and 110 roster spots to women on top of every sport that has a M/W equivalency. That's why a ton of P5 schools don't have men's soccer.
And in some sports, the same kids can double-count: Beach Volleyball is growing massively. The athletes are the same kids as the indoor volleyball team. They just compete in the spring in a pit of sand (a really cheap facility). So you pay for 15 kids to go to school and they count as 30 women for Title IX.
Running is the same way. Tons of schools have cross country (no facility needed) and those 10 kids are also the indoor track team and the outdoor track team; and they only do distance events in track. That's 10 kids counting as 30 athletes and zero facilities.
College Hockey's biggest challenge is that a hockey arena costs a lot more than any other non-football facility, and the only other team who could use it would be a women's hockey team.
It's hockey first, baseball second in terms of cutting programs.