Current:Home > MarketsIvy League football coaches praise conference’s stability (and wish they weren’t so alone) -WealthTrack
Ivy League football coaches praise conference’s stability (and wish they weren’t so alone)
View
Date:2025-04-24 17:50:17
BOSTON (AP) — There’s one college football conference sitting out the reshuffling going on among its big-money brethren: The Ivy League will start the season with the same eight members it has had since it formed in 1956.
“It’s lunacy going on nationally right now,” Brown coach James Perry said on the Ivy League Media Day Zoom on Monday. “This league has always put the student-athlete first, his interests first, making him the best ballplayer he can be while still being a student. … In the changing landscape of college athletics, that’s how you do things right over a very, very long period of time.”
Conference realignment has been going on for decades, but the pace accelerated this year with moves that bulldozed longtime league affiliations and the regional rivalries they fostered. By next season, the traditional Midwestern power Big Ten will have 18 members from UCLA and Southern California on the West Coast to Rutgers and Maryland in the East.
The root of the problem: An influx of TV money for the top programs that pressures rivals to trade up if they want to compete.
“The financial aspect of it has just taken it right off the rails,” Harvard coach Tim Murphy said. “I think it will get better. But it’s never coming back to the way it was, which is such a shame.”
Although “Ivy League” was previously used as an unofficial designation of eight private liberal arts schools in the Northeast known for elite academics and ivy-covered halls, the group became a formal athletic conference in 1956 with the same eight members it has today: Brown, Cornell, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton and Yale.
The “Ancient Eight” — Harvard and Yale predate the rise of college sports by centuries — don’t offer athletic scholarships, and the institutions also agree to restrictions on admission and eligibility designed to keep the focus on schoolwork rather than sports. Executive Director Robin Harris praised the league’s “model of sustained success” and positioned it as the antidote to the dollar-chasing that has destroyed longtime conference affiliations and many of the regional rivalries that go with them.
“During this time when there is so much uncertainty in college athletics, with realignment and many questioning the path college football and college sports will take,” she said, “I invite you to … take notice of a conference that is rooted in collegiate stability and principle with incredibly talented student-athletes on and off the field.”
While the transfer portal and the NFL draft has made four-year players less common at major college programs, they were the norm in the Ivies. Part of the allure is the degree that comes from one of the top academic institutions in the nation.
And with compact travel, a shorter season and limits on practice (along with restrictions on tackling when they’re there), the Ivy players have a chance to get the education they were promised.
“We’re playing the game the way it was supposed to be played,” said Murphy, who counted three transfers in the 30 years he has been at Harvard. “That speaks to what the Ivy League is all about: being able to be a Division I athlete and get arguably the best education on the planet. So it hasn’t affected us, but there will be a trickle down.”
Murphy said that big college football would actually improve if there was an acknowledgement that it had become a professional sport. At least the NFL has salary caps and a draft to ensure that the best teams don’t just pull farther away from the competition.
“If we were actually operating the way the NFL does, it might be manageable,” he said. “But the way it is right now, the rich are going to get richer.”
Like the Ivy League schools it is consistently ranked among, Stanford promises a top tier academics experience to go with one of the most successful athletic departments in the nation. But it has been left behind by the conference reshuffling in a Pac-12 that is now down to four teams.
Any chance of the Ancient Eight turning into the Newfangled Nine?
“I don’t think that would be in the best interest of Stanford, in all honesty, when you consider the history,” Murphy said. “But we must make sure somehow that we don’t just decimate and leave in our wake schools with that great history, schools that are renowned across the globe, all of a sudden with really no place to go.
“There’s got to be a better way to do it.”
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll
veryGood! (7562)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- A 911 call claiming transportation chief was driving erratically was ‘not truthful,” police say
- Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after Wall Street slips lower and bitcoin bounces higher
- From balmy to brrr: Wisconsin cities see a nearly 60-degree temperature swing in under 24 hours
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Ghana’s parliament passed an anti-LGBTQ+ bill that could imprison people for more than a decade
- Curb Your Enthusiasm Actor Richard Lewis Dead at 76
- Bill allowing permitless concealed carry in Louisiana heads to the governor’s desk for signature
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Kansas City Chiefs superfan 'ChiefsAholic' pleads guilty to bank robberies
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- In two days, the Smokehouse Creek Fire has grown to be the second-largest in Texas history
- Advice to their younger selves: 10 of our Women of the Year honorees share what they've learned
- Washington state lawmakers consider police pursuit and parents’ rights initiatives
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Norwegian Dawn cruise ship allowed to dock in Mauritius after cholera scare
- North Carolina’s 5 open congressional seats drawing candidates in droves
- A California county ditched its vote counting machines. Now a supporter faces a recall election
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Missing teen with autism found in New Mexico, about 200 miles away from his Arizona home
Parent company of Outback Steakhouse, other popular restaurants plans to close 41 locations
Horoscopes Today, February 28, 2024
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Odysseus lunar mission: See the best pictures from the lander's historic moon landing
It's Horse Girl Spring: Here's How to Ride the Coastal Cowgirl Trend That's Back & Better Than Ever
Are NBA teams taking too many 3-pointers? Yes, according to two Syracuse professors