Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Dec 9, 2021 13:00:10 GMT -5
In 2019-20, HC spent $6,643,000 on men's scollies; $5,182,000 on women's scollies.
The Title IX reports do not break out # of scollies by sport; the NCAA revenue and expense report does provide this break-out, but as I have noted, HC's NCAA submission is as unavailable as any book on the Index.
Assuming a $70,000 cost for a full scollie, and applying ADMB's declaration that football, M/W hoops, and M/W ice hockey are the only HC sports at the NCAA scollie caps -- N .B. ADMB said football was at the PL cap of 60, not the NCAA cap of 63, and that women's ice hockey was not yet at the cap -- one can crudely estimate how many scollies are available for men's sports.
60 (football) + 13 (hoops) + 18 (hockey) = 91. 91 x $70,000 = $6,370,000, leaving about $275,000 for all other men's sports, or FOUR full scollies.
For the ladies, $5,182,000 / 70,000 = 74 scollies. Assuming 2019-20 was the second year of scollie ramp-up for women's ice hockey, and nine scollies, and with 13 scollies for women's hoops, that leaves 52 scollies for the other women's sports.
I am fairly certain that the scollie cuts were confined to the class that entered HC in the fall of 2019, and that all existing scollies (sophs, juniors, seniors) were fully funded.
In 2019-20, Colgate (which also has women's ice hockey) funded about 92 scollies for the ladies, Lehigh 89, Bucknell 118, and Lafayette 71. (Lafayette has no women's ice hockey team, and is rapidly ramping up spending on athletics, about $1 million more in scollies in 2019-20 than the Leopards spent in 2018-19.)
Boston University funded about 152 women's scollies in 2019-20, and BostU must be at or very near the NCAA cap for all of its women's sports.
The Title IX reports do not break out # of scollies by sport; the NCAA revenue and expense report does provide this break-out, but as I have noted, HC's NCAA submission is as unavailable as any book on the Index.
Assuming a $70,000 cost for a full scollie, and applying ADMB's declaration that football, M/W hoops, and M/W ice hockey are the only HC sports at the NCAA scollie caps -- N .B. ADMB said football was at the PL cap of 60, not the NCAA cap of 63, and that women's ice hockey was not yet at the cap -- one can crudely estimate how many scollies are available for men's sports.
60 (football) + 13 (hoops) + 18 (hockey) = 91. 91 x $70,000 = $6,370,000, leaving about $275,000 for all other men's sports, or FOUR full scollies.
For the ladies, $5,182,000 / 70,000 = 74 scollies. Assuming 2019-20 was the second year of scollie ramp-up for women's ice hockey, and nine scollies, and with 13 scollies for women's hoops, that leaves 52 scollies for the other women's sports.
I am fairly certain that the scollie cuts were confined to the class that entered HC in the fall of 2019, and that all existing scollies (sophs, juniors, seniors) were fully funded.
In 2019-20, Colgate (which also has women's ice hockey) funded about 92 scollies for the ladies, Lehigh 89, Bucknell 118, and Lafayette 71. (Lafayette has no women's ice hockey team, and is rapidly ramping up spending on athletics, about $1 million more in scollies in 2019-20 than the Leopards spent in 2018-19.)
Boston University funded about 152 women's scollies in 2019-20, and BostU must be at or very near the NCAA cap for all of its women's sports.