Exactly correct.
And the other part is, the sport alone doesn’t tell the entire story. If you’re looking to expand your brand as a business, you cultivate new markets. You also want to make relationships with institutions that will raise your profile. You also want to compete in a top tier league with a chance to win a Natty.
This opportunity checks all of those boxes. Look at where SB started..
Your point concerning demographics makes sense when trying to project if soccer can be successful and a revenue sport at UL, which is extremely unlikely. From the arguments being used here, using a model like FAU is questionable at best. Why, because the demographics in population show South Florida has a much larger Latino population than the state of Louisiana. The interest in the game is culturally significantly different than South Louisiana and that certainly helps when building a new program.
Building a winning culture is entirely different than finding revenue sources to pay for scholarships, and other internal cost associated with a college sports program. The claim that it can be a revenue neutral, or even add revenue to the athletic program is speculative at best and not a fact-based argument. Why, because there is not s single revenue neutral sport currently in UL Athletic program. In fact, the last two years have seen significant reduction in budgets across the board, and transfers from the UL Foundation to be paid back by RCAF and other sources.
While there seems to be a love for the sport, especially in the younger demographics in this board, the suggestions that dropping basketball would be a path in financing a soccer program, are comical at best and idiotic. Regardless of the current status of the Ragin' Cajun program, college basketball still brings in the second highest amount of viewership and television revenue in college sports after football. If someone can show me what kind of television revenue college soccer is generating today, and if it's greater than baseball or softball, I might be willing to listen.
If by "working on this" you mean finding ways to fill in the gaps of our current budget concerns and raising money for the stadium renovation, then I completely agree with your statement. That's what he told a group of people and myself last week. There was no mention of adding additional programs to the athletic department.
Well, all of this is speculative at this point, no matter what side you fall on.
While we’ve run a deficit the last two years (mainly impacted by covid and staffing costs), softball and baseball have been net neutral over the last 15 or so years. If not neutral, pretty close.
Is winning a “natty” worth anything at all if nobody cares?
I’m as big a sports fan as anyone and I couldn’t tell you who won any college soccer national title in the history of the world. Am I’m far from alone.
And as for soccer being the fastest growing sport, or however its being hyped now (the same thing has been being said for the last 2 decades), its a sport in America for little kids. It doesn’t move the needle whatsoever after about 13 years old in this country.
And this is from someone who played soccer spring and fall from the time I was 6 years old until I was 13…and then the major American sports took over full time.
You can check the last two state audits, nothing I said about our budget is speculative. You can Google college sports television revenue and viewership, and nothing I stated about college basketball is speculative. Everything else is speculative, but a few things are more projectable in concerns of revenue streams historically.
I like your posts mostly, but this is just wrong. Soccer has over taken youth sports for the last 15 years. And this is coming from someone that never played a lick of soccer. Winning a national title in the fastest growing sport in the country would be a huge deal, in fact. Lots of people would care.
In the case of adding a sport, a unique fanbase is essential.
Spreading old money on a bigger slice of bread won't work and (quite frankly) is the only reason some of the shortsighted are saying UL can't afford it.
Soccer is the one sport that can bring in its own fanbase, it's own money.
This is the one sport that can attract international students.
This is the one sport that can bring in money from existing international alumni. Of which there are many thousands, and they only love one sport. Futbol
https://www.bing.com/search?q=Fastes...823076B3BB70CE
Not much soccer in "The fastest gowing sports in US" search
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