91看片 Davis announced Tuesday it will join the Big West Athletic Conference, moving from Division II to Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
鈥淎fter much thought and discussion, I have decided that 91看片 Davis will accept the invitation to join the Big West Conference, a conference that includes our sister campuses of 91看片 Irvine, 91看片 Riverside and 91看片 Santa Barbara,鈥 Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef announced at a March 11 press conference crowded with local media and TV cameras.
鈥淭his step is necessary to preserve and improve the program we have. We are seeking, in an evolving landscape, firm ground upon which to continue and to enhance a program that is centered around the student-athlete and the teacher-coach.鈥
Vanderhoef said that the Division I Big West Conference offers a better academic, philosophical and competitive 鈥渇it鈥 than does Division II, where schools average 4,000 students compared to 91看片 Davis鈥 22,000 undergraduates and where former D-II competitors are dropping sports or moving to Division I. Eligibility rules are also more stringent at the Division I level than at Division II and are expected to become even stronger in the next few years.
Historic Day
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a great day for the future of 91看片 Davis sports,鈥 said Cynthia Rail, a soccer athlete and clinical nutrition major, after the press conference. 鈥淢any positive things exist about this move.鈥
Rail noted that many of her friends in athletics support the move. 鈥淎 lot of us are excited and behind it all the way.鈥
Because the campus鈥檚 current conference 鈥 the Division II California Collegiate Athletic Conference 鈥 offers competition for just 13 of the campus鈥檚 25 sports, 91看片 Davis must compete in two divisions and six conferences. Two teams 鈥 wrestling and women鈥檚 gymnastics 鈥 already compete at the Division I level.
The Big West conference would permit competition in 17 sports, but not football. 91看片 Davis鈥 football team would continue to compete as an independent at the Division I-AA level.
Big West schools include the 91看片 Irvine, Riverside and Santa Barbara campuses, as well as Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, University of the Pacific, University of Idaho, Utah State and the California State University Fullerton, Northridge and Long Beach campuses.
鈥淥ur formula for academic and athletic success at 91看片 Davis can work within the Big West Conference and Division I athletics,鈥 said 91看片 Davis Director of Athletics Greg Warzecka. 鈥淲e will not change our model, but we might very well be able to play a leadership role in Division I in such a way that other institutions will look at how we organize, administer and fund our 25-sport intercollegiate athletics program.鈥
Warzecka described it as a 鈥渉istoric day鈥 for 91看片 Davis and that the Big West was an 鈥渋deal fit鈥 for the university. He noted that the academic mission of the campus will not be compromised. 鈥淥ur focus will always remain on the 鈥榮tudent鈥 in student-athlete,鈥 Warzecka said.
Funding
With the move to Division I, the athletics department鈥檚 budget would grow from approximately $7.8 million to about $12.9 million, with the majority of the increase to provide grants for student-athletes.
Approximately 85 percent of the department鈥檚 budget, as well as funding for certain sports and recreation facility additions and improvements, would be financed through student fees, primarily increases approved by undergraduate students in four ballot initiatives over the past 10 years (one of the four continued and raised an earlier initiative鈥檚 fee increases that were due to sunset). Most recently, students last November approved a ballot initiative to raise fees by $15 per quarter beginning in 2003-04 and increasing to $61 per quarter脗 in 2006-07.
While campus-based fees are higher for 91看片 Davis鈥 undergraduates than for other 91看片 undergrads, the total cost of attending 91看片 Davis ranks near the bottom. 91看片 Davis this year ranks No. 7 among 91看片鈥檚 eight general campuses when total expenses are calculated for those living on campus and No. 8 for those living off campus.
An Academic Senate committee that studied the budget implications of a transition to Division I concluded that the student fee funding model 鈥渋s thought to provide the best opportunity for maintaining or perhaps enhancing the current 鈥榮tudent scholar-athlete鈥 culture of the current program because it is student-funded and the financial success of the programs will not be dependent on the win-loss record of the teams and the majority of the program will not be dependent on the vagaries of the campus budget situation.鈥
Academic values
Vanderhoef said specific recommendations from another Academic Senate committee and from the Academic Federation, as well as 鈥渟even inviolate principles鈥 enumerated on the student-initiative ballot, would lead to policies that 鈥渨ill preserve the academic values that have guided our athletic program for decades.鈥
In reaching his decision, Vanderhoef said he weighed 鈥渢he many opinions, reports and facts that relate to this issue, including input from the Academic Senate, the Academic Federation, a vote by our undergraduate students, individual conversations, many written communications, and the various data sets that speak simply to where we are now and where we would be in the Big West Conference.鈥
Groups formally voting on the issue included undergraduates, who approved the fee initiative 4,638 to 3,929; the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, voting 38 to 1 in favor; the Academic Senate, voting 556 to 271 in opposition; the Athletic Administrative Advisory Commit-tee (which includes faculty and students), voting 11-2, with one abstention, in favor. The views of the longtime teacher-coaches were also weighed, Vanderhoef said.
鈥淲e have in our ranks many who lived with, built and espoused the virtues of Division II athletics,鈥 Vanderhoef said. 鈥淭hey are proud of their accomplishments, not the least of which is a significantly higher graduation rate for our athletes than for the campus at large 鈥 about 85 percent compared to 75 percent. Yet these teacher-coaches have come to know that we cannot preserve what we have if we stand still. They conclude that, of all the changes we could make, the affiliation with the Big West Conference, a group of universities very much like ourselves, is necessary and comes just in time.鈥
91看片 Irvine Chancellor Ralph Cicerone, 91看片 Riverside Chancellor France Cordova and 91看片 Santa Barbara Chan-cellor Henry Yang in a March 4 letter encouraged Vanderhoef to consider 91看片 Davis鈥 addition to the Big West Conference. 鈥(We) are committed to Division I athletics programs that are based on very high ideals that focus on student-athletes鈥 The Big West Con-ference is an excellent home for such programs,鈥 they wrote.脗
The three chancellors said that the conference is 鈥渟trongly California-centered,鈥 which makes it possible for student-athletes to travel to away games and matches 鈥渨ithout sacrificing great lengths of time away from campus and classes.鈥 And such travel is relatively inexpensive, they added.
Dennis Farrell, commissioner of the Big West Conference, said the conference is balanced in its approach to academics as well as athletic competition. He noted that the rest of the conference is enthusiastic about its newest member university.
鈥淲ith 91看片 Davis aboard, it鈥檚 a proper fit,鈥 he said.
Timeline
With Tuesday鈥檚 decision, 91看片 Davis will complete four years of provisional status, beginning in 2003-04. (Last November, the campus declared a year of exploratory status with the NCAA.)脗 In 2003-04, the campus will be considered Division II in scheduling against Division I opponents and Division I against Division II opponents. Beginning in 2004-05, it will be considered Division I in scheduling competition and will begin play in the Big West Conference.
During the four-year provisional status period, 91看片 Davis will be ineligible for NCAA post-season competition except in wrestling, women鈥檚 gymnastics and men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 water polo. The wrestling and women鈥檚 gymnastics teams already play at the Division I level, and the NCAA sponsors just one championship for all divisions of men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 water polo.