Author:
Bengal
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Date Posted: 15:00:42 03/24/26 Tue
I had wanted to ask this question of some of our coaches, it took a while, and basically got back the answer I believe has been a consistent explanation for decades: The university gives equal treatment/support to all of the varsity teams. Success in all sports was the goal with as much even handedness as could generally be mustered. Back in the day, this was symbolized (and it was purely symbolism) by the website keeping every story visible for the same amount of time -- an NCAA basketball win was featured no more and no longer than a blowout loss in another sport. The website no longer does this equal time treatment (losses are usually harder to find, for example).
There is a lot of nuance to this over time, and exceptions. Much too much to cover even for me, lol, and I am speaking in broad generalities. One consequence of this approach is that some of our varsity programs at various times were disadvantaged against programs of other Ivies who seem to focus on some sports more than others. And, of course, circumstances change over time, and less successful teams at some schools reverse their fortunes.
Among the nuances, briefly: admissions supports all varsity sports (again, an exception here and there at one time or another). But it has often been a mixed bag in terms of its decision making. The Administration provides support, but has cut the number of recruits and with rare exceptions does not admit athletic transfers.
Within a few years things could change:
In the portal era, we will lose enrolled athletes while gaining few to none with our Administration's attitude toward athletic transfers. You can look at football and basketball teams (M & W) in our league alone and see their impact.
The Administration will not take as many athletes as we are entitled to under the League formula.
We have used NIL to some extent, but if we are not as aggressive as competitors might be that will be detrimental to our competitiveness.
Admissions, right down to the current recruiting year, is almost certainly a continuing mixed bag.
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