Kyle Berggren wrote:If these independent teams are playing "required schedules" who do you require them to play? I don't want to travel to them, give them one of our weekends, & a part of our budget & not have it count toward playoffs.
My proposal doesn't
require any MCLA team to play an independent, non-MCLA team Kyle. On the contrary, it simply suggests that new start-up teams should not be voted in as new MCLA members until they can demonstrate the organizational, administrative and competitive level to sustain admittance to our organization. And it states that IF they do find teams to schedule and play, that they should pay for the privilege of having MCLA-sanctioned officials work these games. I think most people here believe one of the problems with our national organization is we have grown too fast and admitted too many teams which either are not truly ready to be full members or are not able to sustain this level over time. Membership in the MCLA should be earned, not automatically granted as a right just because a new school start a lax club.
On the other issue, we agree philosphically on what MCLA D2 should be -- a small school division so colleges like yours can compete with other small schools and not against the big public universities. Your issue with my proposal, as I see it, is only regarding how the NCAA Division II type schools fit in, and this was definitely the issue I wrestled with the most. JP notes the inherent problems with using undergrad enrollment as a "hard-and-fast" dividing line. I concur with this analysis. So if we use the NCAA I, II and III model -- with all DI teams playing in MCLA D1 and all NCAA DIII schools playing in MCLA D2, we can modify, perhaps, how and where the "medium-sized" schools would fit. UVSC is a great example, I would say that on a case-by-case basis they would definitely be assigned to MCLA D1, based on huge enrollment and demonstrated success of their lacrosse program over the recent past in the RMLC. Granted, they might be hostile to having to play BYU and CSU, but I would argue they have more in common with the Cougars and Rams than they do with Ft. Lewis College.
Jason makes a better counter argument to my proposal regarding a small DI school like St. Mary's. An even
better rebuttal to my proposal would be look at my own alma mater, UOP. Pacific ( which is DI in all sports) has struggled for years in the WCLL and the MCLA, failing to win a game even in D2 in recent memory. Perhaps the time has come for teams like the Tigers to either get serious about playing MCLA lacrosse or to not even be a part of our league. My proposal could well force the issue for this kind of team, one way or the other. I agree with Jason that the St. Mary's example is a tough one, and have no ready answer for this except to say that the Gaels have been in the WCLL upper division about as often as they have been in the lower division over the years anyway, and perhaps exceptions could be made in rare cases -- for very small NCAA Div I and/or II schools to play "down" if that's a permanent decision where they should be sited.
The D1 football model has proven to be no longer fair or reasonable -- it was simple and easy but just didn't create the "level playing field" for the small schools. If using undergrad enrollment is also too fraught with problems, then we need a different solution, and I still believe my proposal -- or some modified version of it -- could prove to be workable and fair, at least for the vast majority of current MCLA member teams. NO proposal will magically solve all the problems we face, but we need to try to come up with something which comes close, at least IMHO...