Northeastern ends football after 74 seasons

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BOSTON (AP)—Northeastern University is ending its football program after 74 seasons because the investment required to make it competitive was too high.

The school announced the decision Monday after president Joseph Aoun and the board of trustees endorsed on Friday the recommendation by athletic director Peter Roby after a two-year review of the Boston school’s sports programs.

Roby said an investment of “tens of millions of dollars” to replace or upgrade spartan Parsons Field would be required to help make the football program competitive with others in the Colonial Athletic Association.

“I think everybody in higher education is faced with the dilemma of competing priorities and investments,” Roby said in an interview with The Associated Press. “So this wasn’t about what we were already spending. This was about what we were going to really need to spend going forward if we were really going to be fair about allowing people to compete equally.

“The status quo was not an option.”

The school spends more than $4 million annually on the football program while an average of 1,500 to 2,000 people attend home games, Roby said, but the size of the crowds was not a factor in the decision.

The program’s 87 players and 10 coaches learned the news Sunday night at a meeting on campus with Roby, a day after the Football Championship Subdivision team won its final game 33-27 at Rhode Island. The Huskies won their last two games to finish 3-8, their sixth consecutive losing season.

Northeastern began playing football in 1933 and took three years off from 1943-45 because of World War II. Its all-time record was 289-364-17.

The Huskies began their sixth season under coach Rocky Hager with a 54-0 loss to Boston College that started a six-game losing streak.

“Northeastern has always been guided by the principle that we should focus on our opportunities for leadership,” Aoun said in a statement. “This approach ultimately leads to difficult choices, but leadership requires that we make these choices. This decision allows us to focus on our existing athletic programs.”

Several outstanding NFL players, including defensive ends Sean Jones and Keith Willis and tight end Dan Ross, played at Northeastern.

Jones, drafted by the Los Angeles Raiders in the second round in 1984, had 113 sacks in 13 seasons. Willis, signed as a free agent by the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1982, had 59 sacks in 11 seasons. Ross, a second-round pick by the Cincinnati Bengals in 1979, had 290 catches for 19 touchdowns in seven NFL seasons.

The university said players will keep their athletic scholarships through graduation if they obtain their degrees at Northeastern.

Roby was head basketball coach at Harvard from 1985 to 1991 and served as co-captain of Dartmouth’s basketball team in the late ’70s.

“As emotional as this decision is and was,” he said, “and as much as it was impacting so many wonderful people, coaches and athletes, you have to try to think about the big picture and do what you think is right. So that’s what I tried to do.”

Updated Nov 23, 6:56 pm EST
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51 Comments

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    Episcopalian Keith Thu Dec 03, 2009 06:43 pm PST Report Abuse
    I agree with Anthony. This is what I said about Hofstra.

    "Good. They are following in NEastern's steps. School is a place for study. These boys were there only to play and not learn. The good days of college athletics are long over. Years ago, a man went to college on a scholarship and got an education-not anymore. The majority of these boys were black from the 'hood, only providing entertainment for the white man.

    I want to see more of this, not less.
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    Lawrence Tue Nov 24, 2009 01:07 pm PST Report Abuse
    Holy (rap! Who's rick z going to pull for now? He'll probably try to sell all his gear on e-Bay in about twenty years, then retire.
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    FLEMDOG Tue Nov 24, 2009 12:13 pm PST Report Abuse
    OH NO!! If this trend were to keep up, there might be no more "cupcakes" for the University of Florida to pad their schedule with. What wil THEY DO!! Oh My!!!
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    Anthony Tue Nov 24, 2009 12:04 pm PST Report Abuse
    I think this is the first of many football and athletic programs pulling the plug. It makes better sense to focus on academics over athletics. All we need to do is look at the economic shape of our country. What we need are more academically gifted students entering college than talented athletes.
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    phil f Tue Nov 24, 2009 11:12 am PST Report Abuse
    hey 22, I think you might be on to something. My alma mater was the first NCAA school to drop sports entirely. I think you are better off running the team as a club than not fielding one at all. But thats just from an alumni point of view.
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    Lou B Tue Nov 24, 2009 10:43 am PST Report Abuse
    new mexico state university should consider dropping football. they have not been to a bowl game in 50 years , have the worse recored in ncaa history, they had no $ to feed the players as the head coach makes $400.000 a year.
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    Tue Nov 24, 2009 10:18 am PST Report Abuse
    #44-
    It says in the article that the students with athletic scholarships will get to keep them.
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    Joal82 Tue Nov 24, 2009 10:12 am PST Report Abuse
    i have a question, what does this mean for the players with athletic scholarships? do they lose them? or will they finish out? it understand a school ending a program that's not benefitting them but it would seem unfair to the students, since it's not their fault.
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    james Tue Nov 24, 2009 08:29 am PST Report Abuse
    #40

    You said "Most of us bring in more money to the university than we will ever receive". Well I don't know why this is so hard to grasp. If you are an employee then you will always make more for the company than you will receive. If by chance your getting paid more than you are bring in, then the company will soon release you from your duties or the company itself will be bankrupt.
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    dennis Tue Nov 24, 2009 07:54 am PST Report Abuse
    Damn! Rodriguez was on hold with their coach trying to schedule them three times next year when the announcement was made!!! Not to worry though "Big Blue' fans,.....he's got Delaware St. on speed-dial........
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    Cory Tue Nov 24, 2009 03:31 am PST Report Abuse
    #41.....A 200% pay cut? Apparently not to teach mathematics. A 100% cut would mean you'd be down to $0 in pay. 200%? Not sure what that would mean.

    Back to football....If about 2,000 people come to the games that involve a team of 87 players and 10 coaches, that's barely 20 fans per player/coach. Apparently the Northeastern "fan base" won't miss the program all that much. And at $4 million to run it, sounds like a solid financial decision. We could use more of that with our state and national government. No one wants to ever cut anything for fear of backlash from some group or another. Kudos to Northeastern's president and athletic director for deciding the cost of future investments into the program/stadium wasn't worth it.
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    P Tue Nov 24, 2009 01:18 am PST Report Abuse
    Hey Jesse,
    I’m a college professor so maybe I can shed some light on the professor gig. I took a 200% pay cut to be a professor. Pay is pretty bad for the amount of work we do, but people do the job because we really like it. I love teaching and research, but it is a boat load of work, much more work than an normal 50-60 hours a week job. The typically minimum teaching load is a 2-2- four classes a year for major university, unless you buy out of your courses. In this case, the professor raises money to do that. About 70% of the job is not teaching though, it is research and grant writing. Most of us bring in more money to the university than we will ever receive. For instance one of my grants was 1.1 million and every university gets a cut from the granting institution; this is typically at a rate of 48-70%. Yep, that’s right. So for every $100,000 I bring in for my research the university gets a $50,000 kickback. So, the university received about $700,000 from my last grant. Free cash money. As professors we get evaluated on publications and research and grant writing, and only a small fraction on teaching- this is at a major university. If you attend a liberal arts college then it’s the reverse and much much more focus on teaching. So, no it’s not the tenured professors dude. Not being able to afford a football program is more a combination of costs, market value; title IX, competition, and a zillion others things. Professors? I don't think so. Our football coach gets paid more than the combined salary of my entire department, and we’re totally glad to see it as the program brings in a decent amount of cash for the school. But Northeastern’s fan base is 2000 people or so? You just can’t support a program of that size. Sad, but true.
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    Harry Tue Nov 24, 2009 12:59 am PST Report Abuse
    You Nick are too much,

    A little self centered as well as a spoiled little fly. Your appreciation of others is zero and the spirit you have for your college and the community that surrounds it, is in the minus column. Maybe a couple years in Iraq will wake you up.
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Laura Michelle Mon Nov 23, 2009 11:36 pm PST Report Abuse
    Jesse S: The main problem with college is tenured professors? Wow, here I thought going to college was about getting an education, not playing a game. Thanks for clearing that up.
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    Jessy S Mon Nov 23, 2009 09:28 pm PST Report Abuse
    28

    The main problem in college is tenured professors. They cost millions of dollars per year, per university, to fund and that isn't even enough for them. It is these professors that cause massive trouble for all of us because they likely teach one class a week and are so much in favor of Cap and Trade energy reform, Health Care reform, and wallet reform (buying a bigger wallet to outgrow the one they currently have.) Meanwhile Joe six pack is a college student with dreams of being a big time money maker. However, at most universities and colleges, his tuition is through the roof and that only helps to support the tenured professors. For the person that says that coaching is through the roof in terms of cash, that isn't right. I am betting that most coaches make $100,000 per year and they earn every penny because they have to have their own staff and go on recruiting trips to see players that they want to sign. Yes they can cut scholarships, but I am betting the team is being cut so the tenured professors can have even more money.

    For the record, tenured professors have paid staff that help them with their work. That paid staff puts together lectures, corrects papers and the final, and pretty much everything that he wouldn't touch with a 25 foot ruler. I am guessing a member of the paid staff makes about $7.50 per hour and is Joe-six pack who has class in the morning and that job only begins to cover the tuition that he owes the school. After he does his four years, he will have loans up the wazoo while working at a dead end job with no job security at all. About two and a half years into that position, he will be in a forced lay-off so that upper management can move his job overseas and he will be forced to take a lower paying job flipping burgers making his college degree completely worthless while tenured professors are living the high life.
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    steve Mon Nov 23, 2009 08:45 pm PST Report Abuse
    I like the suggestion to drop to division II
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Nick P Mon Nov 23, 2009 07:27 pm PST Report Abuse
    As an NU student, I'm perfectly fine with this.

    Aside from the fact that no one goes to football games and our 'stadium' is a joke, most students are perfectly okay with this move.

    I find the degree of coverage NU football is getting today to be hilarious though. Front page of the Globe, back page of the Herald, ESPN.com, ESPN, Yahoo!

    Hell, part of me believes this is just an elaborate PR stunt. Heh.
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    I HATE SPAM! Mon Nov 23, 2009 07:18 pm PST Report Abuse
    'Ginger' the SPAMMER is a SCAM! Site is full of MAL-WARE to steal info....The accts & pics used here are hacked....5th username in 2 days!! Help report these THIEVES!!
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    GaOwl Mon Nov 23, 2009 06:38 pm PST Report Abuse
    Hey Spartan, your attitude of "who cares" regarding a school shutting down it's football program is EXACTLY the problem!

    Since you are "with" a school of the big six AQ conferences, nobody else matters to you. Beleive me, if you were a supporter or fan of one of the well over 200 other schools, you might look at things a little differently. Especially if the news today was that the Spartan's program was shutting down!

    Don't worry though, the system as is has you covered. Hell, you can even go 6-6 and have a losing record in conference and still go to a bowl game and the program make a few more million!
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Sleepy Head Mon Nov 23, 2009 06:23 pm PST Report Abuse
    If you divide the program cost by the attendance, it comes to about 400 bucks a head a game. or 120 full scholarships.
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    K- DAWG Mon Nov 23, 2009 06:01 pm PST Report Abuse
    Who really cares?
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    Maureen M Mon Nov 23, 2009 05:49 pm PST Report Abuse
    I played with Dan Ross (The Greatest Tight End in the history of New England Football) and he must be turning over in his grave! How could the largest private university in the USA cancell football?
    They just spent million of dollars on Matthews Arena were the men's hockey team and men's basketball team and the women's hockey team and the women's basketball team play before
    tiny crowds of fans. I used to give money to NU every year since my graduation (1977) but no more.
    Peter Roby and President Auon should be ashamed of themselves. There were other options
    (less scholarships, a lower division etc.) Bentley College and Tufts Univ. have football teams for
    heavens sake! Football is a college tradition that everyone from players to students to alumni look
    forward to ever Saturday in the fall. Shame on you. I no longer am proud to say that I went to
    Northeastern University.
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    Christopher A Mon Nov 23, 2009 05:48 pm PST Report Abuse
    Whether you like them or not. They are right big schools put them down. If this keeps up I guess teams like Florida will have to play real teams not just 2 a year. It is sad to see a program go after 74 seasons RIP.
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    always yodeling Mon Nov 23, 2009 05:48 pm PST Report Abuse
    I wish the NCAA could limit all coaches compensation to what the top professor at the school makes. Maybe without multi-million dollar contracts and high paid assistants more schools could afford the sport. If student athletes can't be paid why should coaches get multi year multi million contracts. Take the "pro" coach out of college ball. This of course would help teams like Notre Dame, Michigan, etc. get rid of poor coaching decisions.
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    dgr Mon Nov 23, 2009 05:39 pm PST Report Abuse
    I believe in you 100% DIMITRIOS (post#5). However, how formally educated to use the word "TGHEY" in sentence 3?

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