Sounds like Billy Tubbs and the gang are about to make a go of it.
Is Lamar University ready to revive football program?
By: PERRYN KEYS, The Enterprise
11/21/2007
Updated 11/21/2007 11:38:52 AM CST
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BEAUMONT - Students at Lamar University could vote as soon as January to approve a fee that would help reinstate the school's football program, President Jimmy Simmons said this week. In separate interviews Monday and Tuesday, Simmons made it clear the return of football still has quite a few hurdles. To help cover the costs of renovating facilities and funding the athletics department, the university would need: Private donations; Students to pass the referendum, allowing the university to charge an athletic fee; and Approval from the Texas State University System Board of Regents. If that happens, football might return to the school for the first time since 1989. "Bottom line: We think we would attract several thousand more students to the university," Simmons said. "We would add a marching band and a drill team, and we just think adding football would be a great gateway for the rest of our university." Last summer, the state Legislature passed a measure giving schools within the Texas State University System permission to charge students an athletic fee, with a maximum of $8.75 per credit-hour. The fee can differ from school to school and from project to project. Simmons said the university is currently getting additional information, or a cost analysis, from an engineering firm on renovating the football stadium and Higgins Field House. The firm, Simmons said, will provide the university a total cost estimate for renovating those facilities. "This would be a viable plan - provided that the final cost-analysis is in range with our student-fee income and the private donations we believe we can raise for the program," Simmons said. "Hopefully, we'll have that (analysis) within the next four weeks. That should put the finishing touches on our financial analysis."
Thanks to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, $1.5 million is already earmarked for rebuilding the Cardinal Stadium press box, which was blown to pieces by Hurricane Rita. In February, the Board of Regents approved $6.5 million toward improving other parts of the stadium and $3.6 million toward improving Higgins Field House. At their last meeting, however, the Board of Regents upped the number on Higgins Field House from $3.6 million to $5 million. But Lamar must find the funds on its own.The main hurdle for Lamar has always been Texas law, which prohibits state money from going directly to athletics. In other words, while the university has the initial go-ahead to raise money toward making the improvements, it won't get a single dollar from the state. A large chunk of the total bill for starting football would have to come from private donations, Simmons said. But the student fee would help with construction costs and day-to-day operations for the athletics department. The fee would go not only toward football, Simmons said, but also toward adding a soccer field and another women's sport in the future, thereby staying in compliance with Title IX. "At the end of January, if everything comes to pass, we would go to the students and ask them to vote on a referendum," Simmons said. The referendum would require a simple majority from the students. If the student body votes yes, Lamar would then seek permission from the Board of Regents to institute the fee, and to bring back football, at the board's February meeting. "We would pledge a certain amount from that (student athletic-fee) income toward seeking bonded funding for the renovations," Simmons said. Given permission, Simmons said, the university would set about looking for a football coach "immediately." Hopefully, Simmons said, facility renovations and recruiting would begin in 2008. n 2009, the coach would bring in his first round of recruits and "redshirt" them - a common policy in college athletics, meaning the players practice for one season without playing in games. That fall, the team would possibly play a handful of exhibitions. Finally, Simmons said, the team could begin playing a conference schedule as early as 2010. The school's Board of Regents killed football after the 1989 season, citing high costs of running the program and low levels of success and support. The Cardinals posted a 31-77-1 record through the 1980s. According to Enterprise archives, Lamar lost some $4.3 million in football over the program's final 10 years, including $523,925 in 1989 alone. Advertisement "What I think many people forget about is the enrollment-management side of football," Simmons said. "You add players, cheerleaders and band members - and there are many other students who won't go to a school that doesn't have football. "We think (adding football) would bring about 2,000 students to the university, and that improves academic funding. There's a reason they have football at Sul Ross State, Angelo State, Sam Houston and all those other places." Simmons and athletics director Billy Tubbs have long been supportive of returning football to the university, but have never revealed a plan or a timeline for bringing the sport back. Both men were at the university when football was still a part of its culture. Simmons' career at Lamar started in 1970, when he began as a faculty member and director of the school's marching band. Tubbs played basketball at the school from 1955-57; then spent his first stint as the school's head basketball coach from 1976-80.
Updated 11/21/2007 11:38:52 AM CST
©The Beaumont Enterprise 2007
Is Lamar University ready to revive football program?
By: PERRYN KEYS, The Enterprise
11/21/2007
Updated 11/21/2007 11:38:52 AM CST
Email to a friendPost a CommentPrinter-friendly
BEAUMONT - Students at Lamar University could vote as soon as January to approve a fee that would help reinstate the school's football program, President Jimmy Simmons said this week. In separate interviews Monday and Tuesday, Simmons made it clear the return of football still has quite a few hurdles. To help cover the costs of renovating facilities and funding the athletics department, the university would need: Private donations; Students to pass the referendum, allowing the university to charge an athletic fee; and Approval from the Texas State University System Board of Regents. If that happens, football might return to the school for the first time since 1989. "Bottom line: We think we would attract several thousand more students to the university," Simmons said. "We would add a marching band and a drill team, and we just think adding football would be a great gateway for the rest of our university." Last summer, the state Legislature passed a measure giving schools within the Texas State University System permission to charge students an athletic fee, with a maximum of $8.75 per credit-hour. The fee can differ from school to school and from project to project. Simmons said the university is currently getting additional information, or a cost analysis, from an engineering firm on renovating the football stadium and Higgins Field House. The firm, Simmons said, will provide the university a total cost estimate for renovating those facilities. "This would be a viable plan - provided that the final cost-analysis is in range with our student-fee income and the private donations we believe we can raise for the program," Simmons said. "Hopefully, we'll have that (analysis) within the next four weeks. That should put the finishing touches on our financial analysis."
Thanks to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, $1.5 million is already earmarked for rebuilding the Cardinal Stadium press box, which was blown to pieces by Hurricane Rita. In February, the Board of Regents approved $6.5 million toward improving other parts of the stadium and $3.6 million toward improving Higgins Field House. At their last meeting, however, the Board of Regents upped the number on Higgins Field House from $3.6 million to $5 million. But Lamar must find the funds on its own.The main hurdle for Lamar has always been Texas law, which prohibits state money from going directly to athletics. In other words, while the university has the initial go-ahead to raise money toward making the improvements, it won't get a single dollar from the state. A large chunk of the total bill for starting football would have to come from private donations, Simmons said. But the student fee would help with construction costs and day-to-day operations for the athletics department. The fee would go not only toward football, Simmons said, but also toward adding a soccer field and another women's sport in the future, thereby staying in compliance with Title IX. "At the end of January, if everything comes to pass, we would go to the students and ask them to vote on a referendum," Simmons said. The referendum would require a simple majority from the students. If the student body votes yes, Lamar would then seek permission from the Board of Regents to institute the fee, and to bring back football, at the board's February meeting. "We would pledge a certain amount from that (student athletic-fee) income toward seeking bonded funding for the renovations," Simmons said. Given permission, Simmons said, the university would set about looking for a football coach "immediately." Hopefully, Simmons said, facility renovations and recruiting would begin in 2008. n 2009, the coach would bring in his first round of recruits and "redshirt" them - a common policy in college athletics, meaning the players practice for one season without playing in games. That fall, the team would possibly play a handful of exhibitions. Finally, Simmons said, the team could begin playing a conference schedule as early as 2010. The school's Board of Regents killed football after the 1989 season, citing high costs of running the program and low levels of success and support. The Cardinals posted a 31-77-1 record through the 1980s. According to Enterprise archives, Lamar lost some $4.3 million in football over the program's final 10 years, including $523,925 in 1989 alone. Advertisement "What I think many people forget about is the enrollment-management side of football," Simmons said. "You add players, cheerleaders and band members - and there are many other students who won't go to a school that doesn't have football. "We think (adding football) would bring about 2,000 students to the university, and that improves academic funding. There's a reason they have football at Sul Ross State, Angelo State, Sam Houston and all those other places." Simmons and athletics director Billy Tubbs have long been supportive of returning football to the university, but have never revealed a plan or a timeline for bringing the sport back. Both men were at the university when football was still a part of its culture. Simmons' career at Lamar started in 1970, when he began as a faculty member and director of the school's marching band. Tubbs played basketball at the school from 1955-57; then spent his first stint as the school's head basketball coach from 1976-80.
Updated 11/21/2007 11:38:52 AM CST
©The Beaumont Enterprise 2007
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