Scream wrote:
JCT wrote:
With 2 1/2 times the enrollment of Bradley or Drake, there's no reason why we should be so far behind on the athletics budget, especially since we're in the most costly market in the league with the highest tuition. The only explanation is for years we operated athletics on a comparative shoestring.
JCT, you seem to be saying that the reason the budget is inadequate is that the budget is inadequate. Why is it? As far as I know, there are complex reasons. There is some history that goes back to the Loyola financial crisis around 2000 and I don't blame Fr Garanzini for putting basketball on the back burner when he got here and the very survival of the university was up in the air. Partly related to that is losing and apparent disinterest by the administration over a longer period of time, all of which underlie the more immediate cause which is a lack of attendance/media attractiveness and financial support from alumni. Now it has to be a bootstrapping operation and an extremely difficult one. I don't know how bad things were at Bonaventure in 2007, but it seems that Watson had to deal with some of the same stuff. So I am also happy with this hire. It sure beats bringing in someone whose experience was in the Big Ten.
Operating on a below-appropriate budget is something that dates back way before the financial crisis. It's historic. Budget disparities were not as drastic in men's basketball before the early 1980s, when TV and Tournament money began to accelerate increasing financial separation between teams and conferences. The rise of the old Big East made several schools previously similar to Loyola (private, basketball-only, even some with lesser basketball pedigrees) into perennial NCAA contenders. Notably, Loyola has not reached postseason play of any kind (NCAA, NIT, CBI, CIT) since 1985, when it was done mostly with local players recruited from 1981-84.
Before the mid 80s, many larger schools considered basketball an afterthought. Florida made their first NCAA Tournament appearance in 1987. Between 1974 and 1989, Texas made only one appearance in the tournament. Arizona made only three NCAA appearances before 1985, and they've missed only one since.
The financial crisis didn't develop fully until Baumhart left and Piderit came in (1994), when the Medical Center was separated from the University budget. Unfortunately, that was just about the time frame where the old MCC was breaking up, and schools like Xavier, St. Louis, Marquette, Dayton, and Evansville were bailing out to conferences with higher average budgets and revenues. Loyola had to remain in the MCC/Horizon, where the athletic budget was almost always in the mid-lower range of the conference.
The financial problems of the late 90s/early 2000s surely stunted any attempts to catch up, and now that the university is financially healthy we need to make up for many years of sub-par marketing and three decades shut out of postseason play. You can't do it by winning alone-- even if we went 22-10 this year and reached the NIT, it wouldn't make much of a difference given the anemic season ticket base and being off the radar for years. Even if we can't produce an above .500 team this year, we can at least begin laying the groundwork in marketing, promotions, higher recruiting budgets, technology, facilities, etc.