Sunday, February 13, 2011

“Cal to cut men's baseball, gymnastics” plus 1 more

“Cal to cut men's baseball, gymnastics” plus 1 more


Cal to cut men's baseball, gymnastics

Posted: 11 Feb 2011 09:14 PM PST

UC Berkeley announced Friday that its men's baseball and gymnastics programs will be eliminated at the end of 2010-11 school year but that men's rugby and women's gymnastics and lacrosse have been spared.

Vice Chancellor Frank Yeary said baseball did not come close to generating enough private funding to save the 119-year-old program.

"The challenge for baseball was bigger," he said. "They needed four to five to six times as much as they raised to have been in a position to be maintained."

However, Cal baseball coach David Esquer said he doesn't think the battle is over.

"I don't think you're going to be writing the obituary of Cal baseball at this point in time," he said. "This is obviously a huge setback. I believe at some point in time, maybe not in my time here at Cal, that there will be Cal baseball again. I believe that. I really do."

Bob Milano, who coached Cal baseball for 22 seasons before retiring in 1999, was highly critical of the university.

"I'm very sad that the University of California did not hold true to what they stated, that it was all or none," he said. "I believe they don't know what they're doing."

Yeary said of the $25 million targeted by Chancellor Robert Birgeneau to save the five sports for a period of seven to 10 years, baseball's costs required supporters to raise $10 million. He said their figure was in the range of $1.5 million to $2.5 million.

Yeary explained that supporters of

the five sports raised $12 million to $13 million, of which at least $8 million was without strings attached. The remaining amount came from donors whose money may have been earmarked for baseball or men's gymnastics.

The $8 million is sufficient to operate the three sports that were saved while they develop a plan for permanent self-sufficient status. The amount that baseball generated would have kept the program afloat for only two years, according to Cal officials.

"From the very beginning, we said we could not afford stopgap measures; we needed to move on to permanent solutions," Yeary said.

Doug Nickel, a former Cal baseball player who helped organize the Save Cal Sports group, argued that the amount of money raised in four months should have persuaded the university to show more patience.

"Is it not easily conceivable that with two years we could do what it takes to endow these two programs for life?" he said. "I don't think that's a stretch."

A's pitcher Tyson Ross, a Cal alum, said: "It's definitely disappointing to know the school decided to cut baseball and men's gymnastics. I do know Title IX played a part, and budget cuts were an issue. It's just too bad they couldn't work harder to find a solution, because in the end, I think they could have found a way to keep them. But I think they took the easy way out.

"It's a devastating day today."

The university had announced in September that all five sports would be eliminated after this school year to save the athletic department $4 million annually.

But a news release issued by the university Friday said the decision to drop baseball and men's gymnastics, and keeping the other three sports in question, has Cal athletics on track to operate under a cap of no more than $5 million annually from the general campus fund by 2014.

The two women's programs may have survived because Cal would have been in violation of federal Title IX gender-equity laws had they been cut. Doing so would have required the university to slice as many as 80 athletes from its men's teams while adding 50 women to its rosters to meet Title IX requirements for proportionality.

"When we originally decided to cut them, we knew there would be some Title IX roster management that would be required," Yeary said.

Those plans already were in the works. Travis Bickham, a member of the men's water polo team, told the New York Times that his team was told it would have lost 13 players next fall, going from 41 to 28.

Yeary said that neither baseball nor men's gymnastics will be on the 2011-12 athletic calendar. But athletic director Sandy Barbour said there may be an opportunity in the future to bring back baseball if it becomes privately endowed.

Of the 24 NCAA Division I level athletic programs in the state, Cal will be the only one without a baseball team.

"All of our programs at Cal have a rich history and tradition and meaningful opportunities for student-athletes," Barbour said. "To lose any of them is certainly a sad day for us."

Cal has fielded a baseball team since 1892, and it won national championships in 1947 and 1957. Ten former Cal baseball players will be on the rosters of major league teams when spring training begins next week, including the A's Ross.

The Bears open their 2011 season Feb. 18 at home against Utah.

"We're all mad," said second baseman Tony Renda, a graduate of Serra High in San Mateo and a freshman All-American last season. "Thirty-six of us stuck around, and we're going to give this thing a go. We're a dangerous team. We're really good. And we're playing for ourselves."

One source told the Bay Area News Group that the property where Evans Diamond sits is coveted by the university for nonathletic purposes, but Birgeneau said Friday that the school has no current plans for such use.

Men's gymnastics, which began competition at Cal in 1922, won four NCAA team titles from 1968 to 1998 and has had top-10 finishes in 13 of the past 14 seasons. However, the sport slowly has been squeezed from athletic agendas on the West Coast, with Stanford the only other Pac-10 school to field a team.

Friday's survivors didn't feel much like celebrating.

"I am thrilled for my ladies and future young gymnasts," Cal women's gymnastics coach Cari DuBois said from Tempe, Ariz., where the Bears were competing Friday night against Arizona State. "But I definitely have mixed emotions because I'm saddened for the men's teams that weren't reinstated. We train with the men every day."

Cal rugby coach Jack Clark, whose team was playing Friday at an event in Las Vegas, said he was grateful that his program was reinstated to varsity status, rather than demoted to a club sport.

"We always believed our place was in intercollegiate athletics, and I'm glad we were given an opportunity by the university to make our case," he said. "We're really humbled to be a part of intercollegiate athletics next season and beyond."

Rugby is UC Berkeley's most successful sports program, having won 25 national championships since 1980, including the 2010 title.

A nonscholarship varsity sport at Berkeley, rugby largely has been supported through private funding. Rugby will retain its varsity status but now must shoulder all direct and indirect costs, including coaches' salaries and use of Cal's training and sports medicine facilities.

The university said rugby contributions were sufficient to help support women's gymnastics and lacrosse.

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Athletics Community Reacts to Cuts of Baseball, Gymnastics

Posted: 13 Feb 2011 10:47 PM PST

David Esquer has his realtor on speed dial. The Cal baseball coach was half-joking, trying to lighten up the gravest news the program has ever faced, but it's clear he'll have to start looking elsewhere.

When the campus announced the reinstatement of rugby, lacrosse and women's gymnastics last Friday, it conversely sealed the elimination of baseball and men's gymnastics. The news was a surprise in at least one way: Teams had been under the impression that the possibility of saving themselves was an all-or-nothing proposition. They say they were never given an indication that there were individual goals set for each team, just the $25 million figure required as a grand sum for all five.

A CSN Bay Area report a day earlier that all five sports were set to return also provided false optimism.

"I sort of felt betrayed by the university, just because they said it was a sort of packaged deal," said men's gymnastics captain Daniel Geri. "They were either going to reinstate all five sports or reinstate none ... It was definitely a lot worse (than the initial announcement)."

Initially reaching out to donors back in June, the team had begun their efforts when the cuts were only a low murmur. Now, it will end its season just short of its 100-year anniversary. Gymnasts have applied to schools such as Michigan and Stanford to keep their options open, all while working to make their last season their best. The baseball team, in its 118th year, faces the same challenges.

Still, teams had hope as an official announcement neared in recent weeks.

"A lot of my colleagues have said, 'Well, we don't want to recruit your players,'" Esquer said. "'You're coming back. There's no way they're going to uphold this. We don't want a commitment from a player that's eventually going to stay at Cal.'"

The notification process appeared clouded as well. In September, members of the press heard news of the cuts before some of the players themselves. Last week, campus officials notified coaches in the morning, who subsequently relayed the message to their team.

"To make this kind of announcement again, (they are) not dealing with the kids directly on it," said Ann Flemer, one of the leaders of the Save Cal Sports campaign and mother of pitcher and first baseman Matt Flemer. "They again got an e-mail letter saying 'Oh, bittersweet result. Saving three of you. We're getting rid of two.' I don't think that's right."

The bright side, of course, is that some sports are still retained for the forseeable future, but even those teams feel some ambivalence.

"It is hard. I have such mixed emotions right now," said women's gymnastics coach Cari DuBois. I am so happy that there is the opportunity for future young girls to come to Cal and compete while attending one of the nation's top academic institutions. At the same time, it saddens me that all five programs are not coming back."

Evans Diamond still stands in the southwest corner of campus, and the administration does not have plans to dismantle the 78-year-old stadium. The potential restoration of the two sports in as quickly as two years also exists. That possibility appears grim for men's gymnastics - only Stanford will still maintain a program on the West Coast after the cuts - but baseball holds more promise.

Save Cal Sports is disputing the school's fundraising figures for baseball and appears ready to pursue further action. There also isn't a history of baseball programs folding, as there is for gymnastics, and Cal will be left as the only Pac-10 school without a squad.

"To be honest, I don't think you're going to be writing the obituary of Cal baseball at this time," Esquer said. "This is obviously a huge setback, but I continue to believe that at some point in time - maybe not in my time here at Cal - but there will be Cal baseball again. I believe that."


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