By Joedy McCreary
The
Associated Press
Reprinted
With Permission
BUIES CREEK, N.C. -- Campbell University's football team will spend
plenty of time in airports and on buses this season, with trips
scheduled to Iowa (Des Moines), upstate New York (Poughkeepsie) and
Indiana (Valparaiso).
And that's just its conference schedule.
Toss in a bus trip to nearby Davidson, and it all adds up to
roughly 2,700 miles on the road this season in league games alone
for the Camels. In just their second year of existence, they've
already learned that long trips are a fact of life in the
nonscholarship, under-the-radar Pioneer Football League.
The lower-tier conference in the Championship Subdivision of
Division I is made up of nine private schools and one public
institution in eight states. It stretches from California to
Florida to New York - an unusual geographic setup that creates
considerable transportation costs.
Yet its members insist that, compared to what it would cost to
fund scholarships at those private schools, it's a welcome bargain
in a time when the economy is still stressed.
"There is an investment in travel," league commissioner Patty
Viverito said, "but I think you'll find that in every other aspect
of the program, it's far less expensive than any other model."
The numbers seem to bear that out.
A full scholarship to Campbell - a private, Baptist school of
about 6,800 located an hour's drive south of Raleigh - is worth
roughly $24,000, which means that meeting the FCS standard of 63
scholarships would cost the school about $1.5 million, athletic
director Stan Williamson said. The Camels' football travel budget
is a fraction of that, ranging between $100,000 and $150,000, he
said.
"Travel is expensive, but you're only traveling five or six games
a year - compare that to the cost of a scholarship at a private
school. That's a whole lot cheaper," Williamson said. "A tenth of
($1.5 million) is certainly a lot cheaper, even if you have to fly
to San Diego or Drake or places like that, than it is traveling
shorter distances (in a scholarship league), which would save you
some money but not near the $1.5 million it would cost to fund the
scholarships to compete at that level."
Still, both the conference and its schools have gotten creative in
their efforts to pinch pennies on the road.
The St. Louis-based league allows visiting teams to bring only 55
players, and the schedule-makers don't give teams more than two
plane trips per season. When schools do fly, they generally don't
take private planes or chartered flights - they sit in coach class,
carry their own bags and sometimes take inventive routes to their
destinations.
For San Diego's trip to Morehead State in November, the Toreros
will save $200 per plane ticket by flying to Columbus, Ohio, and
then busing roughly 4 hours to eastern Kentucky. They did the same
thing last year before their game at Drake, flying to Kansas City
and busing three hours north to Des Moines, Iowa, to trim each $600
plane ticket to about $400.
"We're smart with our money," said Dan Yourg, San Diego's
associate athletic director for business and football supervisor.
He declined to get into specifics about his school's football
travel budget except to say, "it probably would be a lot less than
someone would think."
Indeed, saving money seemingly has been a fundamental mission of
the league ever since it formed in the early 1990s in response to
the NCAA's decision to require schools in Division I to field all
of their sports teams at that level. That ruling put schools like
Dayton in a bind. It was in Division III for football only and
jumped to the Pioneer Football League right from the start.
"Dropping football was not the preferred course, so they had to
jury-rig a conference, had to find like-minded schools," Viverito
said. "We've been the umbrella organization for any program at
Division I that wants to offer nonscholarship, low-cost football,
and we've not let geography be a deterrent to folks that want to
follow that model."
But forget downsizing. Instead, this far-flung league plans on
getting bigger.
This season, Marist will become its 10th member after its primary
league, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, folded its football
league in 2007-08.
Why expand? Getting to 12 teams would allow the league to split
into divisions and further reduce travel costs.