The Christian Century
 
Baptist schools  returning to gridiron
Apr  29, 2011 by _Norman Jameson_ 
(http://www.christiancentury.org/contributor/norman-jameson)  
 
RALEIGH, N.C. (ABP) -- Money and men are the two main reasons several 
Baptist  colleges are bringing football back to campus. 
Presidents of Baptist schools like Mercer, Oklahoma Baptist, Bluefield,  
Stetson and Campbell believe merging pigskins with sheepskins will create 
enough  magnetism to draw more men to their schools where enrollments often tip 
toward  60 percent female. They also believe the crowds, media attention and 
energy  attributed to football will improve enrollment, increase retention 
and add  vibrancy to campus. 
And, because none of the Baptist schools are going to play in the highest  
profile and costliest division of college football -- the NCAA Division I 
BCS or  Bowl Championship Series -- they believe income from football will 
exceed  expenses. 
The Baptist schools will play in limited scholarship or non-scholarship  
divisions. So, unlike 317 of the 347 universities in NCAA Division 1 whose  
athletic programs lost money last year, these schools intend to end up in the  
black. 
They all believe high school men not yet ready to give up the competition 
and  camaraderie of what is steadily becoming America’s favorite pastime will 
pay to  play the sport in college. 
It worked for Shenandoah University in Winchester, Va., which started  
football 11 years ago. “Absolutely. There’s no way it couldn’t work,” said  
Shenandoah Athletic Director Wayne Edwards, a graduate of Wake Forest  
University. “Faculty that protested the decision at the time just didn’t  
understand it.” 
“The football program has contributed greatly to the growth of this  
institution, in terms of enrollment, tuition and awareness,” Edwards said. 
Despite the cache of campus T-shirts that say things like: “OBU Football:  
Undefeated since 1940,” a growing impulse on campuses yearns to risk those  
records to bring back a reason to hang around campus for the weekend. 
Campbell’s program three years old 
Campbell University in Buies Creek, N.C., has three years’ experience in 
the  football trial. It won seven games in those three years -- losing four 
times  this year on the last play of the game -- and winning eventually is 
important to  university leadership. 
President Jerry Wallace, who won a football scholarship himself to East  
Carolina University, has said it’s hard to have a proper homecoming without a  
football game. 
Dennis Bazemore, Campbell’s vice president for student life and interim  
athletics director, said renewing the Campbell football tradition already has  
accomplished many of the goals, including offering five to six weekends of  
“great campus life experience that we did not have prior to football.” 
Six thousand people attended the inaugural contest and games typically draw 
 2,500-3,000 to the rural campus. Campbell plays football in the Pioneer 
Football  League and is rejoining the Big South Conference for its other major 
sports.  Stetson University and Mercer are petitioning the Pioneer League 
to join  Campbell. 
The Pioneer League is one of three leagues in NCAA Division 1 that are  
non-scholarship, the others being the Ivy and Patriot leagues.  Athletes  are 
eligible for whatever academic or need-based scholarships are available to  
other students, but no “talent” scholarships for football are offered. 
Bazemore estimated it would cost $6-8 million to start a program from  
scratch, as Campbell did, depending on available facilities. OBU, which won  
national NAIA championships this year in basketball and in women’s indoor 
track,  and is a perennial national contender in track, is placing its football 
field  inside the track. 
Current onsite facilities are limiting startup expenses to about $1.5  
million. An alumnus from the 1940 team contributed a million dollars that will  
be used toward those costs. 
Concerns about academic standards

Oklahoma Baptist’s  previous president considered bringing football back to 
what was once a regional  powerhouse, but backed off in the face of tepid 
support. New President David  Whitlock revisited the issue and held open 
forums for all constituents, some of  whom voiced reservations about academic 
standards and potential discipline  issues. 
Marty O’Quinn, OBU associate vice president for university communications,  
said even those who opposed bringing football back felt their concerns were 
 given appropriate hearing. 
While there was a “significant backlash” during the exploration stage from 
 faculty who feared adding a football program would lower OBU’s academic  
standards and put the school’s financial future at risk, Edwards from 
Shenandoah  said such fears are unfounded. 
“Student athletes are going to conduct themselves in the way athletic  
administration insists they conduct themselves.” Edwards said. “It all comes  
down to what you tell the kids and stick to it.” 
Some Bluefield College trustees voiced concerns that the character of the  
campus would change, that it would shift away from “a Christian based 
college  with shared values.” 
Change for the better 
President David Olive said his friend, Campbellsville President Mike 
Carter,  addressed the issue eloquently when he told Bluefield trustees their 
campus  would change, but “if you do it the right way, it’s going to change for 
the  better. You’re going have another opportunity to impact students for 
Christ that  you wouldn’t have had otherwise.” 
Bluefield is bringing back football after a 70-year hiatus to drive  
enrollment and to help fund the athletics budget. With an enrollment of under  
750 
the influx of 60-90 young men new coach Mike Gravier says will come is “
huge  for a school the size of Bluefield College,” Olive said. 
Bluefield will compete in the NAIA, (National Association of 
Intercollegiate  Athletics) an association of 300 smaller schools, as does OBU. 
Athletic  
scholarships are limited, so football “won’t be a drain on the financial  
budget,” Olive said. 
Although these young men are getting partial scholarships, they’re also  
bringing resources with them, he said. Olive anticipates football adding  
$300,000 net to the annual athletic budget. 
The 2011 season will be scrimmages and exhibitions only and Mid-South  
Conference play will begin in 2012. Baptist schools Georgetown, Campbellsville  
and Shorter are current conference members. 
The day Olive was elected president at Bluefield, his trustees adopted a 
task  force report calling for football’s return as soon as necessary funds 
were  raised. The process gained speed when a local high school closed and 
Bluefield  was offered use of the facility -- including athletic fields -- rent 
free for  five years. 
Attracting male students

OBU’s O’Guinn said  recruiters frequently heard that if OBU had football, 
a son, or nephew or “two  great guys in our church would beat your door down 
to come to  OBU.”
Campbell’s Bazemore concurs, saying, “Yes. We are getting young men at  
Campbell who otherwise would not have come.” 
Younger alums are more “revved up with football” than are older alumni,  O’
Guinn said. Larry Brumley, chief of staff at Mercer University, said there 
is  an element of skepticism in various constituencies, but he is convinced 
from  research that adding football will attract students, retain students, 
generate  alumni spirit and contribute to stronger communications with 
students and more  university visibility. 
OBU’s board chair said adding football gives OBU a chance to have an impact 
 on the lives of students who would not go to OBU otherwise. 
OBU is adding men’s and women’s swimming and women’s lacrosse at the same  
time it is adding football, which is tentatively set to begin in 2013. 
“Athletics play a great role on our campus. They add to our sense of  
community, provide a rallying point for students and alumni, and offer a point  
of connection for the local community. Our history of athletic success has  
contributed to the overall success of our mission in Christian higher  
education,” Whitlock said in a university publication. 
Administrators foresee revenue stream 
OBU Athletic Director Norris Russell estimated in the same story that the 
new  sports will add more than 170 student-athletes and generate more than 
$750,000  in net revenue. While OBU is a member of the Sooner Athletic 
Conference, OBU  will apply for membership in the Central States Football 
League, 
of which  Wayland Baptist in Texas also is a member. 
By bringing back football in 2013 Brumley said Mercer -- which had football 
 until 1941 -- offers young men a chance to stay in Georgia and play 
football.  Groundbreaking for a new stadium and field house will begin in the 
fall. Initial  size depends on fund raising.
He said because the program will be non-scholarship, it will generate 
revenue  once start-up costs are covered.  
A city commitment to improve the local stadium provided Stetson University  
the final piece it needed to reinstate football in DeLand, Fla., starting 
with a  “practice year” in 2012. A full Pioneer League schedule will begin 
in 2013. 
In announcing the return of football Stetson President Wendy Libby said the 
 goal was to “improve enrollment, increase retention and make this a more 
vibrant  campus.”   
DeLand Mayor Robert Apgar said the return of football to Stetson would have 
a  positive economic impact on the entire community and he looked forward 
to fall  Saturdays “when visitors and residents are spending money in 
downtown  DeLand.” 
Several Baptist schools already compete in the NCAA Division 1 Championship 
 Series, which is a full scholarship league, such as Gardner-Webb 
University and  Carson-Newman College. Baylor University in Texas competes in 
the top 
echelon of  collegiate football, the Big 12 Conference, with the likes of 
Texas and  Oklahoma.

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