OAKS wrote:*snip snip*
Below the D1 level, where most of the issue is Title IX, I think club lacrosse can be looked at one of two ways by athletic directors:
1) Oh, we have a strong, well-organized club team. We don't need a varsity team to draw students.
2) Oh, we have a very popular, well-organized club team. Let's make it a varsity sport to draw more students of that caliber.
I think that for whatever reason, NCAA status has an unexplainable allure to it for student-athletes, regardless of the reality. Because in reality, many club teams, especially at the A level, are playing at a much higher level and are much better organized than many NCAA teams at the Division 3 level, despite the perception of NCAA lacrosse as more "legitimate." But students chose to go to schools with clubs for reasons other than lacrosse.
But it is a fact that varsity lacrosse will draw a lot of students who otherwise wouldn't even look at the school. I'm not going to name names, but one college I'm looking at that's in a less than totally desirable location is drawing prospects from California to Jersey, and plenty of places in between who are all drawn by the lacrosse program. It's a good school academically as well, but most of those students wouldn't look twice at it if it wasn't for lacrosse.
For further example, right now my top two choices for school are the aforementioned school and another small, liberal-arts school with a strong MCLA-affiliated club team. Hypothetically, with all things being equal(including opportunity for playing time), I would probably choose the D3 team over the club team; and this would mostly be because other than the free gear and access to nice facilities, playing varsity lacrosse is seen as more legit and would open up more lacrosse opportunities in other areas (coaching at lacrosse camps, for example).
In summary, there is still the false perception that club lacrosse is on a lower level than varsity lacrosse. Until this is remedied, people will still clamor for varsity lacrosse. Did all that make sense?