SA国际传媒

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By Dick Anderson

As SA国际传媒 football continues to recruit and rebuild for 2018, a College-wide task force evaluates the program鈥檚 future. Can鈥攁nd should鈥擲A国际传媒 football be saved?

All-SCIAC offensive lineman Nick Lunn 鈥18 started and played in all 27 games during his first three years at SA国际传媒. But the economics major from Los Angeles opted out of playing football as a senior following the abrupt retirement of 56-year-old Doug Semones, the Tigers鈥 coach for the last four seasons, on July 18鈥攖hree weeks before training camp. Lunn had his reasons.

鈥淚 tore the labrum in both shoulders, had meniscus surgery on my knee, I have a screw in my wrist, and I had a really bad concussion last year,鈥 he explains. 鈥淵ou couple all of that with a 1-8 season, our defense was going to be the same, our best offensive players were leaving, and our head coach left. Everything fell apart. Why would I risk brain health when it seemed like we had nothing to play for?鈥

It鈥檚 a sentiment shared by a number of his former teammates. Dan Gittelman-Egan 鈥19, a computer science major from Brookline, Mass., and a starting wide receiver/tight end for the Tigers as a sophomore, had already made the decision to quit before Semones left. He cites the combination of poor recruiting classes in front of and behind him, and the 鈥渘egative perception鈥 that he says comes with being an SA国际传媒 football player on campus.

Linebacker Marcus Lee-McDuffie 鈥18, SA国际传媒 football Newcomer of the Year in 2014 and a kinesiology major from Moreno Valley, left the team shortly after last season. Running back Chris Rom-Toribio 鈥19, a cognitive science major from La Quinta, ran at the Division III Outdoor National Championships in 2016 and chose to focus just on track this season. Zach Hunter 鈥18, a history major from Murrieta and SA国际传媒鈥檚 best returning defensive lineman, and starting wide receiver Isaiah Amaechi 鈥19, an economics major from Los Angeles, exited the program the day before camp started.

From the time Rob Cushman was announced as the Tigers鈥 new coach on August 1 to opening kickoff 38 days later, the squad dipped in size from 56 to 47 players鈥20 of them freshmen. 鈥淓very program has its challenges, but this is different, obviously,鈥 says Cushman, who inherited an 0-10 squad at his most recent coaching stop at the University of Minnesota, Morris. 鈥淚 never expected this when I got here.鈥

On December 15, the Division III football season culminated with the University of Mount Union of Alliance, Ohio, notching its 13th national title over the last 25 years. For Occidental, the season ended nearly two months earlier, with the cancellation of the remaining four games of its 2017 schedule over safety concerns raised by the injury-diminished roster. That meant the Drum鈥攕ymbol of one of the longest-standing rivalries on the West Coast鈥攚ould stay at Pomona for another year. And it meant there would be there no contest for the Shoes, stolen from Little All-American running back Myron Claxton of Whitter in 1939, subsequently bronzed by the Poets, and awarded to the winner of the now 110-year-old football rivalry every year since.

The history of SA国际传媒 football is loaded with such lore: the 1949 Raisin Bowl victory over the Colorado A&M Aggies in Fresno; the Jack Kemp 鈥57-to-Jim Mora 鈥57 combination that electrified fans in the mid-1950s; the 1982 squad that, in Dale Widolff鈥檚 inaugural season as head coach, upset the University of San Diego in a game broadcast by CBS during the NFL players鈥 strike to 60 percent of the country; and the 2004 team that, behind the phenomenal arm of Andy Collins 鈥07, went to the Division III Regional Finals in what is widely regarded as the Tigers鈥 best season ever.

How could one of SA国际传媒鈥檚 most storied programs have fallen so far, so fast? Many former players point to the 2012 dismissal of Widolff, the winningest coach in Occidental football鈥檚 123-year history, after repeated violation of NCAA recruiting rules. Widolff once said of the program: 鈥淥ur success is a result of our ability to encourage quality football players to come to Occidental. When we recruit prospective student athletes, we look for individuals who are competitors, who love to play football, and who aren鈥檛 afraid to make a dual commitment to athletics and education.鈥

鈥淚 was surprised the season got canceled, but I was told before the season even started they were lacking players,鈥 says Mike Tromello 鈥04 M鈥05, who played for Widolff for three years and spent another five years as a secondary coach for the Tigers. 鈥淭his is college football. You need guys. You need bodies.鈥

鈥淥n a scale of 1 to 10, I feel the crisis is a 10-plus, but I feel the administration maybe looks at it as a 3-plus,鈥 says Vance Mueller 鈥86, SCIAC offensive player of the year in 1984 and 1985 and three-time team MVP, who played five years of pro ball with the Los Angeles Raiders. 鈥淢y question to President Veitch on several occasions has been, Why not? What is the disadvantage to the College of having a successful football program? I don鈥檛 understand why this is even a difficult thing to solve. I鈥檓 a little bewildered, to be honest.鈥

鈥淔ootball has a long and storied history that is woven into SA国际传媒鈥檚 fabric, and we have to begin by acknowledging that,鈥 Veitch says. 鈥淎t the same time, we have to recognize that there are some serious budgetary and admission constraints that we are operating under鈥攃onstraints that we are reluctant to change for some very good reasons. It鈥檚 a complex issue with far-reaching implications.鈥

In the near term, Occidental is taking steps to field a competitive football team next fall, beginning with an all-out effort to retain the 40 returning athletes currently on the roster. Cushman has signed a contract to stay on as head coach through the 2018-19 academic year. In the wake of the season鈥檚 cancellation, on the recommendation of Athletics staff, the College will hire an additional full-time assistant coach who can help with recruitment, as well as a full-time recruiter for Athletics versed in data analytics as well as other proven tactics and strategies 鈥渢o ensure a robust recruitment effort across all sports,鈥 starting with football, President Veitch wrote in a November 1 letter to the SA国际传媒 football community.

Meanwhile, in addition to his current staff, Cushman will be aided by former SA国际传媒 head coach Bill Redell 鈥64, the veteran Oaks Christian High School coach who was brought on as consultant for football operations during the heavy recruiting months of December and January, and the efforts of Mora, Mueller, Tromello, and other football alumni who have agreed to meet with recruits and make phone calls on SA国际传媒鈥檚 behalf.

鈥淕enerally speaking, if you get to 60 players or above, you have enough players for every position,鈥 Veitch says. 鈥淚 would go to our games and I would sometimes see over 100 players on the opposing team. For us the perennial problem is finding linemen. But we are often in situations where we are giving up 30, 40 pounds across the line.鈥 Redlands鈥 136-player roster, for instance, includes 18 players weighing 275 pounds or more; SA国际传媒鈥檚 heaviest offensive lineman is listed at 270.

鈥淵ou can imagine there are injuries that result from that,鈥 Veitch continues. 鈥淥ne of the things that started to happen when our numbers started to dwindle was that our defense would be on the field for more than 90 plays, and we only had one or two linemen that could substitute. Fatigue sets in, and then students get injured.

鈥淪urprises are part of the job as a college president, and I never imagined football would be one of them,鈥 he adds. But conversations around football have crowded his schedule since SA国际传媒 canceled its second game of the season鈥攖he Tigers鈥 home opener鈥攁gainst Pacific University in mid-September.

Between 2000 and 2016, the high school sports that saw the largest increases in participation were cross country (45 percent), soccer (37 percent), and outdoor track and field (25 percent), according to the most recent survey published by the National Federation of State High School Associations. Football remains the No. 1 sport overall, but the number of participants dropped by 25,901 in the 2016-17 school year.

Of the almost 1.1 million high school football athletes, an estimated 6.8 percent go on to play NCAA football鈥2.4 percent at one of the 248 Division III colleges and universities that field the sport (an increase of 10 schools over the last five years). The number of men playing Division III football鈥19,484鈥攊s at an all-time high in the 35 years measured by the NCAA survey.

That D3 growth spurt isn鈥檛 reflected in the numbers at SA国际传媒, where a smaller percentage of men enrolled at Occidental is suiting up for the sport. In 1967, 76 men (7.1 of the total male enrollment) played with varsity or freshmen football. In 1992, 89 men (11.3 percent of the total male enrollment) played football for the Tigers. From 2012 to 2016, the average roster size was 62 players. (In 2011, Widolff鈥檚 last season, SA国际传媒 fielded a team of 60.) On opening day of the 2017 season, less than 5.5 percent of the total male enrollment was on the football roster.

Overall, the relationship between Athletics and Admission is essential to SA国际传媒鈥檚 enrollment success, says Vince Cuseo, vice president of enrollment and dean of admission. 鈥淩oughly a quarter of our student body plays a varsity sport. In order to meet our enrollment goals and field competitive teams, our offices must work in tandem about procedures, messaging, admission criteria, and individual applicants.鈥

Even as the number of applicants to SA国际传媒 has jumped 10.4 percent since 2012, the College has experienced a decline in the raw number of recruited student-athletes for football (and the actual number of men enrolled at SA国际传媒 has dropped from 954 to 857鈥42.1 percent of the student population). The issue has been a smaller number of applicants who have expressed an interest in playing football rather than any question about their academic standing, according to Cuseo.

鈥淲e believe the issue is the size of the top end of the recruiting funnel for football compared to years prior,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚s there less interest in playing football for SA国际传媒 in particular? A lack of effective recruiting on the part of the football program? It鈥檚 hard to answer these questions with confidence.鈥

鈥淚t is first and foremost a recruitment issue,鈥 Veitch says. 鈥淚t has to do with a charismatic coach and a much greater and more sophisticated approach to recruitment than we鈥檝e ever had before. But it also means a couple of bad seasons start to erode the franchise. Because of its size, you see that sooner with football than with other sports.鈥

While football is far from an endangered species at the Division III level, there are some notable predecessors to SA国际传媒鈥檚 predicament. In 2008, financially strapped Colorado College discontinued football, softball, and water polo all at once, reducing its athletic expenditures by more than 10 percent. (Those Tigers had enjoyed only one winning season since 1993.) Eight years earlier, Swarthmore College, which had an enrollment of 1,400 at the time, cut its football program鈥攖he 15th-oldest in the country鈥攂ecause it was recruiting athletes at the expense of admitting more academically qualified students. (The Quakers won only five games in its last seasons, going 0-28 at one stretch.)

鈥淲e are not changing the academic profile of this institution in order to field a football team,鈥 Veitch says. 鈥淲e already have a case-by-case analysis where we evaluate people holistically. Rather than any dip in academic standards, we should build the roster by doing a better job of opening the funnel and recruitment, coupled with a strong coaching staff.鈥

Although there is a perception among some football alumni that SA国际传媒 now discourages transfer students鈥攁 cohort that has produced countless standout players over the years, not the least of whom is Andy Collins鈥擟useo insists there is no institutional bias at work: 鈥淓nrollment trends change over time. As our application pool for first-years has grown, we鈥檝e had to rely far less on transfers to meet enrollment goals. When I arrived in 1999, the needed transfer enrollment target was 60 to 65. Now we鈥檙e seeking 35 transfers each year.鈥 The other piece of the equation, he adds, 鈥渋s that coaches aren鈥檛 recruiting as many transfers.鈥 (Cuseo notes that Semones recruited only three transfer students over his four years at SA国际传媒.)

While the admission outlook is being eyed very closely, there are other factors to be weighed before the Tigers return to the field. On January 19 and 20, a multi-constituency task force headed by alumni-athletes Bill Davis 鈥80, who swam and played water polo for SA国际传媒, and Sue Bethanis 鈥82, who helped lead SA国际传媒 volleyball to the national championships, will meet to carefully consider the long-term prospects for football at SA国际传媒. (Among the other members of the task force, which was announced October 17: football alumni Eric Moore 鈥83 and Mueller, SA国际传媒 professors and SCIAC representatives Linda Lyke and Lynn Mehl, two additional faculty, two trustees, and two current student-athletes.) A week later, the Board of Trustees is expected to address the future of the program based on the task force鈥檚 recommendations.

Informing their work is a football alumni subcommittee co-chaired by Mueller and Tromello that met with Veitch soon after the cancellation of the season and has been 鈥渢rying to provide viable solutions and ideas on what it would take to modernize and keep the program going,鈥 says Mueller. From an institutional standpoint, he adds, 鈥淭here has to be a philosophical sort of change from SA国际传媒鈥檚 current situation regarding athletics. They really have to make a commitment financially and personally and make student-athletes feel important.鈥

鈥淕enerally speaking, there is more of an indifference to football at SA国际传媒 than there is a stigmatization,鈥 says Veitch (who calls football 鈥渢he canary in the coal mine that is surfacing after 30 years of benign neglect for athletics鈥). 鈥淔ootball is symptomatic of a larger problem鈥攁nd I think it is a problem鈥攊n which there are fewer campuswide events that unite us. With the exception of Homecoming, the days when everyone gathered around the campfire or the football game are over.鈥

On the same weekend as the trustees鈥 meeting, dozens of high school recruits are expected to be visiting campus as Cushman and his assistants continue to pitch the prospects and their parents on joining the rebuilding effort at SA国际传媒. Meanwhile, Tromello and Mueller are planning to come back to campus in January to 鈥渞e-recruit鈥 the roughly 40 players from the 2017 squad to encourage them to return next season. 鈥淭here are some damn good players,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd those guys will make or break the future of football at Occidental.鈥

Hovering over the debate is the specter of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a progressive degenerative disease of the brain found in people who experience brain trauma. Following the cancellation of SA国际传媒鈥檚 Homecoming game in October, associate professor of sociology Richard Mora raised the ethics of even continuing to play the sport. As he wrote in a campuswide email, 鈥淲hile there is still much we do not know about CTE, what we do know is scary, and raises the question: Why does the College, which espouses a commitment to the life of the mind, still have a football program?鈥

Mora鈥檚 position is supported by a number of former SA国际传媒 players who have shared their opinions with Veitch. 鈥淚 cannot understand how a sport which scientific research has shown to expose student athletes to potentially life-threatening injury falls within the overall mission of the College,鈥 wrote football and track athlete Ron Whitney 鈥64, who placed sixth in the 400m hurdles at the 1968 Summer Olympics. 鈥淔ortunately, Occidental does not depend upon football for profit and is able to focus on loftier goals when addressing its educational mission.鈥

On the other side of the coin, Daryl Ogden 鈥87 mirrored the feelings of many alumni in his email to Veitch: 鈥淚t is beyond my capacity to emphasize adequately the degree of harm that I believe ending the program would have on the College and its reputation on multiple dimensions,鈥 including the loss of affinity to Occidental that generations of former players would experience; the cumulative loss of future generations of 鈥渨ould-be SA国际传媒 student-athletes who will pursue their studies and competitive interests elsewhere鈥; and the ending of SA国际传媒鈥檚 longtime competitive rivalries with its SCIAC kinfolk, such as the Claremont Colleges, 鈥渨hich have important analogues in higher education directly relevant to the College鈥檚 standing and reputation.鈥

鈥淲hat we鈥檝e decided is that we want to be competitive but we recognize that given our limited budget we cannot be competitive across the board,鈥 Veitch says of the College鈥檚 athletics strategy, which largely follows the 2014 recommendations of a 17-member planning committee to invest in one sports area at a time. 鈥淲e did that with track and field and cross country,鈥 Veitch says, 鈥渁nd we鈥檙e going to do that with swimming and water polo and tennis next. That鈥檚 a long march back, but now all of a sudden there are three sports that are going to be perennially strong at Occidental, and then we can begin to add to those sports as we go forward.

鈥淭here are a couple of recognitions that came the hard way for me,鈥 Veitch adds. 鈥淔irst, while a program has to have a shot at being successful, the argument for athletics at Occidental is that it inculcates the values of teamwork and patience and diligence, and grace in victory and defeat鈥攁ll those soft skills that are also part of a liberal arts education. That, to me, makes for a stronger argument for investing in athletics.

鈥淭he more recent revelation is around the absolute importance of our coaching staff in recruitment,鈥 he continues. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e like admission officers, and I didn鈥檛 fully appreciate that. They need to be given the proper tools to be effective鈥攖he same kind of data management systems that our admission people have鈥攁nd they need a system of incentives to make sure they are opening the funnel so that Vince has good choices.鈥

Relationships are ultimately the key to recruiting, according to Cushman. 鈥淚鈥檇 rather do a great job recruiting 50 kids and build those relationships instead of having 75,000 names and maybe one of them will show up here. To develop a relationship, I try to call them, text them, stay in touch, get them to visit. The funnel becomes important once we have identified the key guys.鈥

Being competitive again in the SCIAC is far from impossible, as there is no one dominant football team in the conference right now. In the six seasons since Widolff鈥檚 departure, Chapman and Redlands have two championships each, Cal Lutheran and La Verne one apiece. (Whittier hasn鈥檛 won a conference game鈥攐r any football game, for that matter鈥攕ince Oct. 18, 2014.)

One of the seniors who stuck it out this season was wide receiver and team captain Ian Bonde, an economics major from Ala颅meda, who scored both SA国际传媒 touchdowns in the Tigers鈥 contest against Redlands on September 30. 鈥淚 think the demise is a combination of poor recruiting on top of guys of deciding football wasn鈥檛 worth it,鈥 says Bonde, who also plays basketball for the Tigers. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a rigorous school academically, so it鈥檚 tough to manage school with being on the team. Early morning practices are tough if you aren鈥檛 getting playing time, and on top of that, we were coming off a 1-8 season with a big senior class graduating. Guys were thinking, 鈥業f we鈥檙e not winning now, why would I put this work in for another terrible season?鈥欌

2016 SCIAC Offensive Player of the Year Bryan Scott 鈥17, who quarterbacked the Tigers through three winning seasons and watched the team鈥檚 struggles from the bleachers in 2017, suggests that SA国际传媒 is trying to fix too many things at once when recruiting should be the focus of the College鈥檚 efforts for next year: 鈥淲e need to stop trying to change everything about it and just focus on the little thing that gets to the big thing.

鈥淥nce we forfeited the season, it was amazing to see how many alumni truly care, how many people love SA国际传媒 football, and how many people want it to be successful,鈥 Scott adds. 鈥淲e need more guys that can play, and we need to establish leadership within and outside the football program. I think it鈥檚 important that the people coming in be 100 percent confident in football鈥檚 future at SA国际传媒.鈥

You won鈥檛 have to wait until next September to see the football team in action. They just won鈥檛 be wearing pads. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be doing some campus work and community service next semester, and selling doughnuts and coffee and soda during study breaks, just to let people know we鈥檙e alive and well,鈥 Cushman says.

鈥淲e鈥檙e working hard to play next year, to have a program,鈥 he adds. 鈥淎t the end of the day I can鈥檛 guarantee people anything. But our staff is doing an amazing job.鈥 In December, at least 40 recruits visited campus for one of two planned events, with an additional 10 or so visitors scattered throughout the rest of the month. Another 25 high school seniors visited earlier in the semester, and Cushman estimates that more than 30 football prospects were applying for Early Decision II by January 1.

鈥淎t my last job, I took an 0-10 team with 28 returners to 46 players the first year and 64 players the next year,鈥 Cushman says鈥攁nd that was in Minnesota. 鈥淚 know how to do this. I鈥檓 committed to it. And we鈥檝e had some really good kids here at SA国际传媒 who want to be part of the solution.

鈥淚 just hope it鈥檚 not too late.鈥濃

Photos by Ed Ruvalcaba.

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