Once-dominant UL program hopes host role will help.
Between 1991 and 1998, the University of Louisiana filled the trophy cases at Cajun Track past the overflow point.
The Ragin' Cajun men and women won a total of 17 conference track and field championships, indoor and outdoor, in both the old American South and Sun Belt Conferences.
The men's squad claimed seven straight Sun Belt outdoor titles between 1992-1998, the longest streak for any UL sport in league history, after winning the final American South title in 1991. The Cajun women won the American South in 1991 and added Sun Belt outdoor crowns in 1993 and 1997.
Since then, those trophies have gathered dust and no new awards have joined those shelves. None will be hoisted this weekend, either, when the Cajuns serve as host team for the Sun Belt Outdoor Championships which begin today at the Cajun Track Complex.
The league coaches pick the Cajuns to finish 10th - last - in both the men's and women's meets when the final results are tallied Sunday night. That's happened twice with the women since 2000, but the men have never finished lower than sixth in the outdoor meet.
However, this is a very different program from the one that was the envy of the Sun Belt less than a decade ago.
"It's definitely a combination of a lot of things since 1998," said UL track coach Lance Veazey, who as a student assistant under coach Charles Lancon from 1990-93 helped the Cajuns start that impressive streak. "Back then we weren't fighting a lot of things that we have to fight now."
Veazey, an assistant the last time UL's men won the outdoor title in 1998, cited restricted budgets and enrollments, additions to the league that brought established track powers to the Sun Belt, and a reduction in multi-sport athletes as factors in the Cajuns' recent struggles.
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Dan McDonald
dmcdonald@theadvertiser.com