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Date: | Thu, 2 Apr 2009 18:19:27 -0400 |
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At 4-2-2009 11:32 AM, Mark Lewin wrote:
>Splitting the ECAC into an Ivy and non-Ivy conference has been discussed
>before. I think that the Ivy league considers itself an elite organization
>and is closed to the rest of us mortals. The Ivy league also puts
>restrictions on its member schools such as prohibition of athletic
>scholarships and a limit (lower than NCAA) on the number of games allowed.
>Not sure if other schools would be willing to submit themselves to those
>restrictions.
I seem to recall that at one point Colgate may have been a candidate
for the Ivy League, which stripped of its mythos is just an athletic
conference. But (and memory dims after a while), I also STR that one
of the issues was (lack of) a football stadium of sufficient capacity.
>There was the old saying back in the 70's and 80's that the Ivy League
>wouldn't condescend to paying athletic scholarships but gave money based
>only on "need". But, if Bill Cleary (then Harvard coach) "needed" a
>goalie.....
Kinda like Union. No athletic scholarships - mostly D-III, so can't;
they decided that even D-I hockey would get no money. But, wonder of
wonders, they have a pot of money for campus diversity. Seems that
there's a shortage on campus of Francophones with left-handed slapshots...
Joe
--
Joe Makowiec can be reached at:
http://makowiec.org/contact/?Joe
http://makowiec.org/
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