by davewiley on Thu Apr 26, 2007 11:19 am
As I recall, the NCAA pushed to get schools completely within a division a few years ago, with a few grandfather-clause cases (Johns Hopkins could stay at D3 overall, but keep their already existing D1 lacrosse programs, if I'm remembering correctly). Such a policy keeps a school from loading up on athletes in one season as D1, and then unleashing them at the D3 level in another season...say, theoretically what one might/did do at Dayton in the 80's, having their "D3" football players throw a shot put once or twice in the spring for the D1 track team on scholarship...the jerks!
So, Missouri, Kansas, Illinois, et al can't come in at the D3 level for lacrosse, they'd have to go at the D1 level, and the bigger budget that goes with it. Next, of the smaller schools, certainly the NCAA D3 ones could go D3 varsity (good explanations of why they don't listed in previous posts), but the NAIA ones are stuck since the NAIA doesn't currently sanction lacrosse (maybe that will change some day). I don't know the affiliations of all the ones you've listed, but MoBap and Lindenwood are NAIA institutions. I do think Fontbonne going D3 this year will help speed things up for NCAA lacrosse in the region, but speeding things up is a relative thing. When I played against Lake Forest's D3 team in the 80's, I couldn't have imagined the state of Illinois wouldn't have a single varsity team in 2007 (or that Michigan State would dump their D1 program...that one still has me scratching my head). Every year the regional lacrosse scene gets bigger (better and more competitive and organized), so who knows what 2012 will hold.
As a side note, my observation out in Kansas is that schools fall into NCAA D2 or NAIA, not D3...not sure why, but certainly not the most conducive arrangement for getting a varsity lacrosse toehold in the state.