Dan Wishengrad wrote:PNWLaxer wrote:New teams are generally short on numbers and the league should place the team where they are going to be somewhat competitive with the majority of the teams.
The divisional split is NOT supposed to be based on competitive level. The notion of dumping big schools into DII for purely competitive reasons is antiquated thinking.
Yes, if the MCLA sticks with DI football/no DI football as the dividing line, then of course a school like PSU would qualify in DII, even with the largest student body of any college in the Pacific Northwest.
But please let's everyone stop this "old" thinking that DI is for competitive lacrosse and DII is for crappy teams.
Exactly, Dan, great post. The problem with having D2 be probationary or "developmental" for large schools is there is no protocol for determining when they are "ready" to go to D1, if ever. There is no proverbial meat thermometer stuck in the team measuring when they are just the right temperature to move up to not get blown out anymore.
ACTUAL NUMBERS
Everybody please look at these numbers, and you can find them and information on all undergraduate and graduate enrollments for any university at
www.uscollegesearch.org
Portland State University 2004-2007 average enrollment for undergrads was
13,625.
Far less than the 26,000 being thrown around,
HOWEVER it is 2,000 more than Western Washington University, a team that has continually excelled at the D2 level since their move down. By comparison, a new D1 team last year, WSU has 16,839 students. Very comparable numbers to PSU. If they are forced to enter D1 and "get crushed" then why would we use different criteria with PSU?? Like Mark Brown already said,
Portland is a far greater hotbed for lacrosse than Pullman I can't say for certain, but it is highly likely once the team is in place that students will flow in simply by osmosis.
As a league regarding divisional split, we cannot continue to be hypocritical and place teams where they would like to be. This is detrimental both to individual team development, and by extension the development of the league and the MCLA as a whole. I have been a broken record for the past year, but I'll keep going:
We MUST institute a divisional split criterion of 10,000 undergraduate students. There is no team currently in the league within 1,000 of this marker, so it CANNOT affect any one team adversely.
For the record, Gonzaga only has 3,019 undergraduates and competes every year at D1. And San Jose State is STILL at the D2 level and is being punished every year by being ineligible for the post-season because they are supposed to be in D1.