
East Tennessee State University announced the discontinuation of its men's indoor track and field program in an effort to bring the athletic department into compliance with certain Title IX requirements.
According to a university statement, āmen have constituted a decreasing percentage of the ETSUās overall enrollment, a trend observed at universities nationwide.ā Therefore, a cut in menās sports was necessary, athletic director Richard Sanders told CBS/ABC affiliate WJHL in Johnson City.
āWould you like to do it? No, but sometimes you just have to make these hard decisions,ā Sander said in a Monday interview. āThe proportionality ratio that we have is really weighted toward men. We have to get it to a ratio equal to the undergraduate student enrollment.ā
In addition, the football and baseball programs will be asked to restrict the overall size of their rosters, but neither team will lose any of their allotted scholarships. LIkewise, athletes on the current indoor track roster will keep their scholarships, as reported by the Kingsport Times News.
Sander also said the affected track and field athletes may compete in indoor meets as unattached athletes. The football roster will be trimmed from more than 120 players to somewhere between 100 and 105. In baseball, the roster of nearly 50 that the team carried during the fall will be cut down to the NCAA-mandated 35 by spring.
āNobody is losing the ability to compete in Division I athletics,ā Sander said Tuesday afternoon, as reported by the Times News. āWhen we dropped menās indoor track, nobody loses scholarship dollars. No coach loses a job. As we tried to get these numbers to be compliant with Title IX, this was a lot better than dropping a sport where kids donāt get a chance to compete and coaches lose their jobs.ā
Sander said football head coach George Quarles and baseball head coach Joe Pennucci understand the situation. āThe reality of it is theyāre not naĆÆve to ⦠the responsibilities we as an athletic department and university have to be compliant to Title IX,ā he told WJHL.
The university will also look to expand opportunities in womenās sports ā on the womenās track and field and triathlon teams, in particular. Sander also hinted at the possibility of a new womenās program in "a year or two."