Originally Posted by
CajunFun
First, name a small regional university that let its coaches raise their own funds... and later emerged a a major academic institution. It won't happen, it doesn't work that way.
Second, you don't turn anyone loose to do their own fundraising, because they will immediately call the same half-dozen big university donors— the ones you have been gently courting for years so that they might someday fund something on the academic side— and the donors will become disgusted and slam the door on everyone.
Third, what you are asking for is basically what was happening right before Ray became president. People complain about the politics during 'Lights Out at Blackham,' and I have heard the same accusations for years. (When I was an undergrad, one time I was actually bold enough to ask Ray about whether he was involved with shutting down the team. He said that he'd heard that before, and denied it. Of course, that doesn't prove anything.)
What you don't hear are the stories I heard from the administrators and faculty back then, that before the Death Penalty landed, donors, coaches, and players were going wild. Money was flying around, crazy stuff was happening, and USL had lost control over all of it.
But overlook all of that for the moment. Did the Top 25 basketball teams of the early '70's accomplish any of the things that many people here believe that big-time sports will accomplish? Did it bring in donors for academics? No. Did it bring in better students? No. Did it grow research and graduate programs? No.
And the most important one: Did it get us political support and increase our state funding, so that we might expand?
The exact opposite happened. The Legislature wanted us shut down. As for our reputation within Louisiana, I was in HS when we had those teams. USL's reputation was that we were just a party school. In those days, if you were serious about education, you chose LSU or Tech.
We had big-time athletics back then. But it didn't produce a big-time university.
That isn't the only example. Go back through the history. Turbine has told us about our teams from earlier decades that succeeded, and attracted the ire of the other schools and the legislators. We were actually stripped of money that our own programs generated.
In 1954, we became the first school in the South to desegregate. That wasn't sports, although it would pave the way for the big basketball teams of the '70's. But it was a bold, visionary move... and the rest of the state came after us loaded for bear.
In 1960, we became a university, the state's 3rd public university after Southern and LSU. It brought in a lot of political sabotage.
The hoops teams of the '70's (and the football bowl team at the same time) got us a new football stadium, but did not do good things for the University otherwise. In fact, the rest of Louisiana conspired to strangle us... and we struggled.
In 1982, Ray decided to move up to 1A. The rest of the state tried to put a dirk in our back. (Beating Rice in the first game bought us some breathing room, but no increase in resources.)
When we went for the name change in 1984, we all know what happened. The rest of the state came after us.
Over and over, every time SLI/USL/UL tried to move forward in bold, dramatic ways— particularly by building out our athletics— with the belief that it would help us build our institution, it did the opposite. It didn't do the things that many people here assume it will do.
But during that time, Ray started building a university. We expanded research and graduate programs, we built 5 research parks, we brought in national research centers, we worked to build the community college system so that we might raise admissions standards, and we developed the Foundation, the UL Press, the University Art Museum, UL Abroad, the Library, and many other programs, the sort of things a real university does. Ray put academics first.
And the result?
In 2020 & 2021, we had top 25 football teams, and although the other schools muttered, nobody came after us. In 2021, we reached R1. Other schools in the state would never admit it, but they grudgingly admired it, even envied it.
And now we're exploding, and nobody screws with us anymore. We don't go before the Legislature or the Board of Regents, and watch it all go off like a booby trap. When we recruit faculty, and students, and yes, even coaches and athletes, they are aware we are a rapidly-emerging national university.
You don't build a real university by winning games. You don't develop your academics by turning the coaches loose. You don't move your mission forward, by putting another mission ahead of it.
I don't know the real story about what happened to those Top 25 basketball teams, but I do know this: If the unchecked wildness back then had continued, if the passion for winning sports had continued to dominate our University and our national image, we wouldn't be where we are today. UL would not be the exciting University it has become.
That's why Ray didn't let the coaches go out and raise their own money.