You actually go to those things? Every time I get tickets I just throw them away...At a USA home game, you will see fans sporting UA, AU and LSU gear. No one says a word to them. No booing, no harassment.
You actually go to those things? Every time I get tickets I just throw them away...At a USA home game, you will see fans sporting UA, AU and LSU gear. No one says a word to them. No booing, no harassment.
Probably just members of the marching band, which I assume will be another casualty of the end of UAB football.here is a video from their protest today. As you can see their "fans" are out in full force
Scotty McCallum tells us what he thinks. And who he blames. (Do you need any hints what that will be?)
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/index.ssf/2014/12/former_uab_president_founder_o.html#incart_hbx
Broad range right there. I assume actual paid attendance is closer to 20 than 25,000."People want to go to football games in the fall . . . I thought we needed a football program and we went ahead and did it," he said. "When you have 20-25,000 people they're not all students. You're pulling together a lot of people in this community along with the students."
Paid attendance (off the top of my head) was under 21k last year (101st), and actual butt-in-seat attendance was under 11k. So yeah...Broad range right there. I assume actual paid attendance is closer to 20 than 25,000.
They still do, hence the above paid attendance of ~21k, and actual attendance of around ~11k. That's after they GIVE tickets away too...I think for awhile Birmingham/Jefferson County was buying some season tickets to try to help them stay as FBS. Like they have the extra money. I hope the University will do right by the kids who went there to play football and earn their degrees. But the bottom line is the bottom line and there just weren't enough bottoms in the seats.
And I agree with Earle, if it was just losing a bit of money with good attendance, you keep going for the free publicity, school spirit, chance it'll turn around, etc. Not when it's hemorrhaging money.
IIRC the NCAA changed the standards of attendance to "tickets sold" instead of "actual attendance" because not enough schools could keep eligibility under the old rules. I think it used to be you had to have 15,000-17,000 fans in attendance to keep D1 status. Not anymore.One more, then I will quit, but At one time, the NCAA had strict standards to achieve and maintain Div I status . These requirements were in place partly to protect universities from the huge money losses we see at schools like UAB. what happened to these requirements? There is no way UAB qualified under those standards.
I've posted it three or four times over the years, but they were in threads about programs like UAB so no one read them I guess...18 million dollar athletic department deficit?!? I had no idea. With the entire state of Alabama under a severe budget crisis....how can this allowed?
^^^ This ^^^. There is an article on al.com which states that the City of B'ham receives more than 5,000 season tickets due to the contract to use Legion Field. An additional 95 tickets are comps to "dignitaries". Here's the tell-tale information. The article states that the city also buys an additional 5,000 season tickets to distribute to city employees and sometimes school children. It's obvious in doing the math on the make-up of their paid attendance, yet they "deserve" a FBS program.Paid attendance (off the top of my head) was under 21k last year (101st), and actual butt-in-seat attendance was under 11k. So yeah...
They still do, hence the above paid attendance of ~21k, and actual attendance of around ~11k. That's after they GIVE tickets away too...
Wouldn't be able to speak on UAB or way or another, but that last statement is demonstrably false. Most FBS football programs make incredible amounts of money. It's a huge cash cow, and I can't think off-hand of a single FBS football program that actually loses money. If the UAB football program loses money, then they are very much the exception to the rule.I realize that monetarily it is a loser but so are 90% of the college football programs.
I don't think anyone here has ever seen that program as a threat. I stated way above that I wouldn't favor closing it, if it were at break even or even a modest deficit, but are you aware of the size of the annual deficit? What size annual deficit would you consider acceptable?For me, the athletic programs at UA were a big part of my college experience. I would have been deeply hurt if UA had discontinued football/basketball during my on campus years. For this reason, I feel sorry for the students at UAB. Not everything that is offered by a university makes money or is designed to do so. I hope UAB football will somehow survive. I often question to myself many who post on this and other forums expressing their joy that UAB is dropping their program. If you think UAB is a threat to UA football you are seriously living in a fantasy world.