I have elsewhere asked, if winning solves everything, then why is it that the more we win the smaller our crowds get?
People often comment that athletics are the 'front porch' of the University. Judging from some of the monomaniacs here, it's also the living room, the dining room, the kitchen, the bedrooms...
...and the loo.
In contrast, the more our academic stature rises, the more our enrollments grow.
A comparison is helpful. If a person buys top-tier season tickets to all UL sports, with RCAF fees, I estimate it comes to about $2700 per year. Not bad.
But when a freshman enrolls, their in-state tuition is over $11K (out of state, $25K), and they spend $10-$20K on room and board. Per year.
For four years.
Over those four years, a top-tier ticket holder contributes a little over $10K to the university and local economy, while each student contributes more like $100K.
But the differences don't stop there, because after graduation, a lot of our students will stay in Acadiana, occupying high-paying jobs, starting new businesses, involving themselves in churches and civic organizations, and growing both our economy & quality of life. And many of them will donate to UL.
Many people claim that 'government should be run like a business.' Well, this is a government-owned university. You do the math.
Mind you, I'm not saying to get rid of athletics, nor even to diminish them.
I'm just pointing out that many of the schools in our state, and in our conference, have skewed priorities. They think with their reproductive organs, rather than their reflective ones.
So let's aim higher.
Higher goals.
Higher priorities.
Higher organs...