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(402)467-2221 ARMY BE ALL YOU CAN BE.* www.goarmy.com NU gymnastics faces mortality GYMNASTICS from page 1 including Nebraska’s, remain. “And I’d say realistically there is only 10 teams year in and year out that have a chance to win anything,” Allen said. “There just isn’t enough resources and support anymore in college athletics for men’s gymnas tics.” For proof of the sport’s potential death, one needs only to consider the fate of Brigham Young University, one of the top six programs in the country. /✓ —--— The team is one of six contending for the national title this weekend, and is having what BYU 13-year Coach Mako Sakamoto calls arguably its finest season. It is a pro gram on the rise. On April Fool’s Day this year, the team was practic ing in the middle of the day, gearing up for the NCAA West Regional, which they would be hosting in Provo, Utah, in nine days. Into the gym walked BYU Athletic Director Rondo Fehlberg, along with his assistants and the vice president of the university. “We got really excited,” said BYU All-American Guard Young, one of the nation’s top gymnasts. “We thought they were coming to congratulate us on our season and wish us luck for the regional. “They told us they were dropping the program after next season. They didn’t give us any solid answers.” “It was just a shock,” Sakamoto said. “We had a strong program *-• going. Financially, the school isn’t suffering. We just couldn’t figure out why. We still can’t.” Unfortunately, it was no April Fool’s joke. “You look at the whole scope of things, and they were right in the thick of it,” Allen said. “They were moving up from the sixth best team in the country to the fifth best to fourth, and so on. It’s a crime what happened to them.” Somebody has to go It is a trend that doesn’t seem to stop, and the answers why aren’t hard to find. “I think Title IX has a lot to do with (the decline),” Allen said. Title IX is a piece of federal leg islation enacted in 1972 requiring gender equity within athletic depart The reason why this is such a great sport and great event is that pound for pound, gymnasts are the best athletes we have.” Bill Byrne NU athletic director ments. Essentially, it demands more scholarships for female athletic pro grams and more female sports, meaning some male scholarships, and inevitably teams, must be dropped. As a result, many of the 100 men’s gymnastic programs that existed in the late 1970s have been cut. Somebody has to go on the chop ping blocks for athletic departments to make ends meet financially, because most can’t - support the 24 men’s and women’s sports teams like NU can. That “somebody” has primarily been wrestling and men’s gymnastics. Penn State has been a powerhouse, winning nine national champi onships in the sport. Head Coach Randy Jepson knows all about being at the short end of the stick. Before he came to Penn State, he coached at the University of Oregon’s program. It was discontin ued in 1981 because of Title IX. “What was intended and what we have seen is more parity in college athletics at the expense of men’s pro grams,” Jepson said. “We have a lot of dedicated ath letes in the sport who deserve the same opportunities as the bigger sports do,” said Stanford Head Coach Sado Hamara, who has seen it all in his 27 years of coaching. “A 5-foot-1 gymnast should get just as much opportunity to perform as a 7-foot-1 basketball player. I felt kind of sad when I heard about (BYU). When you read the NCAA manual, one of the first things it talks about is the equal opportunity it gives all athletes of both genders in all sports to compete. I’m not sure if it’s doing that for everybody. The minor sports are hurting.” Nebraska Athletic Director Bill Byrne finds this situation to be a tragedy. Much like his predecessor Bob Devaney, Byrne Has been a staunch supporter of gymnastics, as evidenced by his commitment to bringing the NCAAs back to Lincoln. “The reason why this is such a great sport and great event is that pound for pound, gymnasts are the best athletes we have,” Byrne said. “Gymnasts best exemplify what the word student-athlete is all about. They always have the best academic record and always work just as hard as the other programs. We need to support gymnastics and hold the meet here because we’re not going to let the sport die.” Not letting go United States Olympic Committee Executive Director Dick Schultz, who was the keynote speak er at Wednesday’s NCAA Nissen Awards banquet, which honored the top gymnasts and coaches in the nation, remembered when the sport almost hit rock bottom. It was 1997. The sport was about to take a fatal blow because of a 1994 NCAA rule that required a sport to have a minimum of 40 member insti tutions in order to hold an NCAA Championship. Men s gym nastics was well below that number. It was at about 27 said Schultz. “The USOC created an $8 million fund that would go to the athletic confer ences over a four year period. It was a lever to lobby col lege presidents to pass legislation to guarantee that col lege gymnastics would be saved.” It worked. The NCAA adopted at its 1997 convention an Olympic exception,” which exempted Olympic sports, such as gymnastics, from meeting the minimum institu tional requirement. But although the sport was saved, not all of its programs were. BYU is evidence of that. So is the University of New Mexico, which recently announced it will drop its program after this season. Allen believes only the “biggies,” whose athletic department’s pockets are deep enough to fund the sport, will ever get a chance to compete in the event that has converged in Lincoln. “We’ve gone around and talked, to some of the more powerful schools about what they’re going to do,” Allen said. “Schools like NU, Oklahoma and Ohio State are going to fight to the bitter end to save this sport.” Survival of the fittest So what keeps the schools that are still going strong, the lucky few, from falling off the deep end? Byrne, 44 Schools like NU, Oklahoma and Ohio State are going to fight to the bitter end to save this sport ” Francis Allen NU gymnastics who knows very well the economics of college athletic departments, had a very direct answer. “They fill football stadiums,” Byrne said. “Look at the six teams here: Nebraska, Michigan, Penn State, Ohio State, Stanford, BYU. All top football teams. They’re able to benefit from their football teams’ profits. It’s all they can do.” One of those schools, Ohio State, has remained strong, ranking No. 2 in the nation this season and winning the title in 1996. It’s hard to imagine that athletes in a “minor” sport could “amaze” someone like Archie Griffin, the only man ever to win college foot ball’s Heisman Trophy twice - in 1974 and 1975. But that’s exactly what OSU’s gymnasts have always done for Griffin - since he played football there, himself, and especially when he became the Associate Athletic Director for mar keting and fund raising in 1987. Griffin is now the associate ath letic director at OSU, overlooking 17 sports - includ ing men’s gymnas tics - and serves as a member of the NCAA Men’s Gymnastics r nmmittpp “We are not in the mode of drop ping sports at Ohio State,” Griffin said. “We think adding these minor sports is healthy. It’s a big university. We feel we should have big pro grams. “(Gymnastics) is a sport that we’re proud of. Gymnasts are proto type student-athletes. They do things I’d never attempt to do out there. You’re watching outstanding, well tuned athletes.” - And in the end, if programs such as Ohio State and Nebraska fail to fight off extinction, it’s those ath letes, the ones who dedicate their lives to their sport whp will lose the most. ■ * “You look at what happened in Colorado the last couple days and wonder where those kids would be if they had opportunities that being a student-athlete can provide,” Jepson said. “These gymnasts are future hus bands, fathers, leaders of this nation. The more opportunities we lose for people like them, the more things like that will happen in this country.” na ing. economic miracle a warm climate, beaches, Chinese. Eaelrsemester 3 credits in teaching !000, ■$y: \ - /• X ' •. . Jjpxf. .i 'Hi‘1-; Your children are a real credit to you. $400 each , mm mmmmmsm m ym g ji Subtract up to S400 right off your federal income tax, for • each qualifying child under 17. Who qualifies? See your 1998 tax booklet. 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