Bluevelvet wrote:MIT came out to play UCSB every year until last year. They got their heads handed to them so often that they dropped UCSB from their California schedule last year. Many of those games were extremely lopsided (even the closer ones were blowouts until UCSB went to the bench). After one game, I heard an MIT player tell his parents that "they were just too big and fast for us."
BTW, MIT was a .500 team those years against NCAA D3 competition.
On the surface, this statement is at best misleading, at worst only part of the story. Furthermore, the subtext here is that MIT cried "uncle", never to return for want of not losing to a club team. In reality, when SB and MIT last met in '04, SB had already played 10 games; for MIT it was their first game and only their 2nd week of outdoor work. In 2003, they didn't play. In 2002, MIT lost by one goal to SB, 8-7 in only their 4th game of the season while SB was in their 10th. In 2001, they didn't play. How Bluevelvet equates this to an annual beheading is idiotic.
Having coached both D3 and club-ball, I can vouch-say that the majority of D3 programs see no shame or lost-face value in losing to a club program. MIT chose to go west coast over spring break during those years because, in the words of their coach, the school has an enormous alumni base in CA which happily boards their players during their stay at no cost.
Finally, in a perfect world it would fun to turn the situation around and have, say SB, come east and play an MIT (or similiar) when at mid-season form with 2 months of outdoor work under their belts.