John Paul wrote:I only know that if you want your team to become what the top programs are, you have to find a coach who can do it and wants to do it and give him the power to get it done.
As for a level playing field - that's what our eligibility rules are for. The playing field is as level as it can be. What do we do to level it more? Take away school support from teams that have it? Make admissions tougher at schools where it's easy to get in? Disallow sponsorships? Put a cap on budgets? Disallow full time coaches? Does any of that serve the game or the kids who are playing it? Alex is right - you want to play in the MCLA and compete at the highest levels, make it happen.
There isn't parity in the MCLA, plain and simple- but that doesn't mean that there can't be. Central Washington has been a club for five years (this being the fifth). JP just said that he has been coaching at UM for twice that amount of time, and God knows how long there has been a club team at Michigan before he showed up. There is no way that CWU could roll into Ann Arbor and give Michigan a game- but in five more years, who knows? All teams can do more to achieve success. Save for some (since there are always exceptions to everything), every club in the MCLA could do more to recruit and attract new, fresh, talent. Every club could do more fundraising, more promoting, more EVERYTHING! It comes from desire and dedication. Things currently aren't equal. It's just that the Haves have raised the money, contacted donors, sweated the practice hours and done the things necessary to be competitive amongst the nations upper echelon. The Have Nots aren't there yet. In time, they might.
To UNM and any other first-year program, having a coach is the first major step toward success. Keeping that coach is the second. At CWU, we have been through four coaches in as many years. When we lost a coach, all the work that was put into the club went with him. All of the recruits he was bringing in went with him. If you have a coach, hang on to him. Give him the authority to make your program viable. In time, your team's hard work and perseverance will pay off.