Simone Fraser just announced they are cutting their program, another crippling blow for the GNAC teams.
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Simon Fraser to cut football program.
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ESPN article:
https://www.espn.com/college-footbal...otball-program
Seems this was the only way they could stay in the NCAA.
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I dont know if we have anybody from up north in here, but if you're SFU why not jump over to U Sports at this point? Much of the rest of Canada plays by their own 12 man rules, meanwhile Simon Fraser played 11 and I think they're the only college/university in Canada playing on 11 rules and not 12.
Heck, even crosstown University of British Columbia played Canadian 12 rules and UBC competes under the NAIA Cascade Collegiate Conference for some sports and U Sports (Canada's version of NCAA) for others, of which football is one of.
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Originally posted by AlexTheHAMMER View PostI dont know if we have anybody from up north in here, but if you're SFU why not jump over to U Sports at this point? Much of the rest of Canada plays by their own 12 man rules, meanwhile Simon Fraser played 11 and I think they're the only college/university in Canada playing on 11 rules and not 12.
Heck, even crosstown University of British Columbia played Canadian 12 rules and UBC competes under the NAIA Cascade Collegiate Conference for some sports and U Sports (Canada's version of NCAA) for others, of which football is one of.
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Originally posted by AlexTheHAMMER View PostI dont know if we have anybody from up north in here, but if you're SFU why not jump over to U Sports at this point? Much of the rest of Canada plays by their own 12 man rules, meanwhile Simon Fraser played 11 and I think they're the only college/university in Canada playing on 11 rules and not 12.
Heck, even crosstown University of British Columbia played Canadian 12 rules and UBC competes under the NAIA Cascade Collegiate Conference for some sports and U Sports (Canada's version of NCAA) for others, of which football is one of.
I do agree, NAIA might have been a fit. They were there before.
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Originally posted by Buffalo/Islander Alum View PostOof. I hate that for them but very few opportunities out there. Would rather see them go NAIA before dropping the program.
That will be an annoying trivia question. Who was the last team Simon Fraser beat before dropping the program?
But their last win is over WT which is nice.
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Twenty years in, I'm not sure the D2 move was good for WOU. I won't speak for CWU, it was pretty good for them, especially in the football playoff era. The good for WOU was a hoop team that reached No. in the nation and got to a D2 Final 4. There was some national class distance runners, one who could beat Univ. of Oregon guys regularly, but not many follow that. Women's hoop just finished its 10th straight losing season, making league playoffs only once in that decade. In football WOU has had two NFL guys who stayed in the league for awhile, but there hasn't been a D2 playoff in two decades plus of D2, and from what I've heard the school is still stuck around 13 to 15 football scholarships.
The ill-conceived move was based on what WWU and CWU were doing, according to what was told to me by a WOU admin. We didn't make that move on our own, didn't have a fund raising mechanism in place for scholarships, facilities for football are still very sub-standard, and now men's hoop isn't good.
NAIA would've kept WOU playing SOU and EOU in all sports, especially football. The league still would've been tough for travel, but not as bad as going to Texas. I hope they can keep the sport, the dumb thing would be to cut it because you can't go to Texas to play the sport. The latest president (that's at least 5 in a decade) comes from a D2 in Colorado, not sure where he stands. I just hope they don't do something stupid like cut football like Simon Fraser, when 99.9% of people who even follow SFU don't care that they're NCAA.
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This is a tough blow. SFU was really invested in their program, even renovating their stadium (of course soccer also plays there too). But the landscape and the situation was just impossible if they really want to stay in NCAA for all their other sports. And I guess playing as an independent (like Lincoln of Oakland) wasn't feasible either.
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