This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
(2) Carnegie Mellon (Pittsburgh). Would be a huge addition to D3, with many natural rivals in the immediate area (Penn/Ohio).
(3) Washington U - St. Louis. Another outstanding D3 school with plenty of midwest and southern competition nearby.
(4) Case Western Reserve (Cleveland). Rival to Carnegie Mellon. Great school and natural fit in the midwest.
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
(6) University of Chicago.
(7) Trinity University (San Antonio). Great school, big endowment, excellent athletics. SAA alignment and natural non-conference rival in Southwestern U.
(8) Emory University (Atlanta). Could compete with Wash U. and U. Chicago in UAA, and regional rivals in the SAA (Sewanee, Rhodes, Berry etc).
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
It looks as if #38 has not made it here yet, but he did mention that he had a son whose academics earned him a spot at CMU. He might have some insight on their appetite for adding Lax.
Be in their flowing cups freshly rememb'red.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Moving this to the D1 Forum with a shadow in the D3 Forum.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
#1 - Can't, Title IX.Chips O'Toole wrote:This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
{snip}
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
{snip}
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
#5 - Can't, Title IX
#9 - Won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
#10 - Probably can't, Title IX. Probably won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
All four play D-1 football. For D-1A NWern, that's an 85-scholarship hole for a majority female school. For the D-1AA others, it's 65 scholarships. The Citadel shouldn't have a Title IX problem, but probably doesn't have the money. In general, any school that already has a varsity WLax team is using it to get their Title IX numbers up and, therefore, can't add a MLax team.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Hmmm, Davidson: a liberal arts college with about 2,000 students and a pretty good academic reputation. Perhaps you'd ask "They don't already have mlax?" because Davidson brings to mind Denison and Washington & Lee, two schools with good men's lacrosse. But Denison and W&L are D3 with long lax histories and traditional lacrosse rivals located very nearby. Davidson is D1 with no lax history or tradition; apart from the Title IX issue, I don't think it would be competitive in D1 or willing/able to play in D3.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
UChi is going varsity D3 with women's lax in 2019 (not sure if '18-'19 or '19-'20). Guess this squashes men's lax potential. The have D3 football.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
I think the same, more or less, could have been said about either Richmond or Furman several years ago.FannOLax wrote:Hmmm, Davidson: a liberal arts college with about 2,000 students and a pretty good academic reputation. Perhaps you'd ask "They don't already have mlax?" because Davidson brings to mind Denison and Washington & Lee, two schools with good men's lacrosse. But Denison and W&L are D3 with long lax histories and traditional lacrosse rivals located very nearby. Davidson is D1 with no lax history or tradition; apart from the Title IX issue, I don't think it would be competitive in D1 or willing/able to play in D3.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
C'mon, Howie, that's nothing a 58-person rowing team can't fix, and N'western is right on the lake! https://texassports.com/roster.aspx?path=wrowHowieT3 wrote:#1 - Can't, Title IX.Chips O'Toole wrote:This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
{snip}
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
{snip}
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
#5 - Can't, Title IX
#9 - Won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
#10 - Probably can't, Title IX. Probably won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
All four play D-1 football. For D-1A NWern, that's an 85-scholarship hole for a majority female school. For the D-1AA others, it's 65 scholarships. The Citadel shouldn't have a Title IX problem, but probably doesn't have the money. In general, any school that already has a varsity WLax team is using it to get their Title IX numbers up and, therefore, can't add a MLax team.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
I might add Columbia to that list; only Ivy without a men's program, plenty of $, and a relatively new woman's rugby club side that could be turned into a varsity sport relatively quickly from a title IX perspective.
Last edited by Oldblue86 on Wed Oct 03, 2018 10:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Rugby isn't an official NCAA sport, so that wouldn't help from a Title IX perspective as far as I know.Oldblue86 wrote:I might add Columbia to that list; only Ivy without a men's program, plenty of $, and a relatively new woman's rugby club side that could be turned into a varsity sport relatively quickly from a title XI perspective.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
ManFeelings wrote:Rugby isn't an official NCAA sport, so that wouldn't help from a Title IX perspective as far as I know.Oldblue86 wrote:I might add Columbia to that list; only Ivy without a men's program, plenty of $, and a relatively new woman's rugby club side that could be turned into a varsity sport relatively quickly from a title XI perspective.
You might very well be correct, but I believe you are incorrect in that assertion:
https://www.vnews.com/Archives/2015/04/ ... -vn-040315
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Let me say it right now. UCONN!!!!
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
As I see things, Davidson would have more in common with Furman than with Richmond. It seems that a lot of the increase in college men's teams has come in D2, including schools that I didn't know existed before hearing about their lax teams... a pattern that makes me hesitant to predict the next colleges to add men's lax. For Denver, Air Force and Utah, it would certainly be good for more D1 schools in the Mountain Time Zone (or anywhere Western, I suppose) to add mlax. Not having a football team seems like a good thing (think Loyola, Denver, Quinnipiac and Fairfield in D1; Cabrini, Messiah and Bard in D3), perhaps related to Title IX.Chips O'Toole wrote:I think the same, more or less, could have been said about either Richmond or Furman several years ago.FannOLax wrote:Hmmm, Davidson: a liberal arts college with about 2,000 students and a pretty good academic reputation. Perhaps you'd ask "They don't already have mlax?" because Davidson brings to mind Denison and Washington & Lee, two schools with good men's lacrosse. But Denison and W&L are D3 with long lax histories and traditional lacrosse rivals located very nearby. Davidson is D1 with no lax history or tradition; apart from the Title IX issue, I don't think it would be competitive in D1 or willing/able to play in D3.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Presbyterian College in SC had a program from 2006-2011 and Jason Childs was their head coach who is now at DIII St. Mary's (MD). I would like to see them make a comeback and they would be a SoCon team.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Va Tech
Ga Tech
Wake Forest
Columbia
Purdue
Many of them being tech schools with a higher male population
Could see smaller midwest schools looking that don't have high level or scholarship football.. the Creightons, Drakes, Bradleys, St louis, Valpos of the world
Ga Tech
Wake Forest
Columbia
Purdue
Many of them being tech schools with a higher male population
Could see smaller midwest schools looking that don't have high level or scholarship football.. the Creightons, Drakes, Bradleys, St louis, Valpos of the world
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Glad to be proven wrong. Including emerging sports in the Title IX calculations can only be a good thing as far as adding more varsity lacrosse programs.Oldblue86 wrote:ManFeelings wrote:Rugby isn't an official NCAA sport, so that wouldn't help from a Title IX perspective as far as I know.Oldblue86 wrote:I might add Columbia to that list; only Ivy without a men's program, plenty of $, and a relatively new woman's rugby club side that could be turned into a varsity sport relatively quickly from a title XI perspective.
You might very well be correct, but I believe you are incorrect in that assertion:
https://www.vnews.com/Archives/2015/04/ ... -vn-040315
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Will say it again. NO college has been sued/litigated for adding a mens team. EVER.HowieT3 wrote:#1 - Can't, Title IX.Chips O'Toole wrote:This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
{snip}
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
{snip}
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
#5 - Can't, Title IX
#9 - Won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
#10 - Probably can't, Title IX. Probably won't without a Sugar Daddy to pay for it.
All four play D-1 football. For D-1A NWern, that's an 85-scholarship hole for a majority female school. For the D-1AA others, it's 65 scholarships. The Citadel shouldn't have a Title IX problem, but probably doesn't have the money. In general, any school that already has a varsity WLax team is using it to get their Title IX numbers up and, therefore, can't add a MLax team.
ILM...Independent Lives Matter
Pronouns: "we" and "suck"
Pronouns: "we" and "suck"
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
The question that too rarely gets asked in these discussions is, Why would the school administrations at these places do this? What's in it for them? Here you've got a list of schools, most of which can fill their freshman class several times over with qualified applicants, so there's no real question of adding the sport as an enrollment strategy. These are famous universities with extremely mature brands; the notion that playing a sport a statistically tiny number of people actually watch is going to move the needle much reputationally is a strange one.Chips O'Toole wrote:This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
(2) Carnegie Mellon (Pittsburgh). Would be a huge addition to D3, with many natural rivals in the immediate area (Penn/Ohio).
(3) Washington U - St. Louis. Another outstanding D3 school with plenty of midwest and southern competition nearby.
(4) Case Western Reserve (Cleveland). Rival to Carnegie Mellon. Great school and natural fit in the midwest.
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
(6) University of Chicago.
(7) Trinity University (San Antonio). Great school, big endowment, excellent athletics. SAA alignment and natural non-conference rival in Southwestern U.
(8) Emory University (Atlanta). Could compete with Wash U. and U. Chicago in UAA, and regional rivals in the SAA (Sewanee, Rhodes, Berry etc).
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
One thing adding 50 or so young men with the typical demographics of a D1/D3 lacrosse team WILL do is pull the school down in every ranking for socioeconomic diversity that every one of these places is currently consumed with keeping up with their peers in. I don't say this with any rancor towards anyone, I'm just saying, look at the realities for any of these places (or Columbia, etc) and tell me who, institutionally, is actually going to be pushing for mlax because it benefits them or their vision for the school in any concrete, tangible way.
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Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
Because student athletes have a much higher GPA, Graduation Rate, Retention Rate, better Alumni Relations, and Alumni give back substantially more than the average student body. Also it adds to the "student experience" that many schools are focusing on.Homer wrote:The question that too rarely gets asked in these discussions is, Why would the school administrations at these places do this? What's in it for them? Here you've got a list of schools, most of which can fill their freshman class several times over with qualified applicants, so there's no real question of adding the sport as an enrollment strategy. These are famous universities with extremely mature brands; the notion that playing a sport a statistically tiny number of people actually watch is going to move the needle much reputationally is a strange one.Chips O'Toole wrote:This is my list of high profile D1/D3 schools that should seriously consider adding Men's lacrosse, for a host of reason I won't go into, but I invite others to weigh in on why these may or may not work, other similar colleges to consider, Title 9 issues, etc. (Note: This is not intended to include pipe dreams from SEC/Big 12/Pac-12).
(1) Davidson (Charlotte area). Winner of the "They don't already have mlax?" award. Would fit nicely into D1 SoCon with Richmond and Furman.
(2) Carnegie Mellon (Pittsburgh). Would be a huge addition to D3, with many natural rivals in the immediate area (Penn/Ohio).
(3) Washington U - St. Louis. Another outstanding D3 school with plenty of midwest and southern competition nearby.
(4) Case Western Reserve (Cleveland). Rival to Carnegie Mellon. Great school and natural fit in the midwest.
(5) Northwestern. Come on, why not already?
(6) University of Chicago.
(7) Trinity University (San Antonio). Great school, big endowment, excellent athletics. SAA alignment and natural non-conference rival in Southwestern U.
(8) Emory University (Atlanta). Could compete with Wash U. and U. Chicago in UAA, and regional rivals in the SAA (Sewanee, Rhodes, Berry etc).
(9) Citadel (SC) -- VMI needs a rival. Natural fit in the SoCon.
(10) Wofford (SC) -- another D1 SoCon natural.
One thing adding 50 or so young men with the typical demographics of a D1/D3 lacrosse team WILL do is pull the school down in every ranking for socioeconomic diversity that every one of these places is currently consumed with keeping up with their peers in. I don't say this with any rancor towards anyone, I'm just saying, look at the realities for any of these places (or Columbia, etc) and tell me who, institutionally, is actually going to be pushing for mlax because it benefits them or their vision for the school in any concrete, tangible way.
Re: Colleges That Should Add Men's Lacrosse ASAP
It confuses me that boston college hasnt re added a mens team. Perennial success at womens LAX, perfect school profile for lax, great location, local talent (+BC high is a power in MA that turns out great recruits), plenty of money, a confrence that needs 1 more team, pretty much every comprable school has it, and they have a nationally sucessful club team to draw from. The club team regularly gets 120+ for tryouts, so the interest is there. Would be great to have another d1 team in boston as merrimack is being added.