With athletic budgets severally impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, several programs have eliminated sports, including schools in the Mid-American Conference although Bowling Green announced this week that it would bring back baseball.
Softball had been spared and it was hoped that with Title IX protecting women’s scholarship numbers that softball might be more insulated. Up until yesterday, no softball program had been cut.
That changed, however, on Wednesday when Wright State located in Dayton, Ohio, announced that three sports would be eliminated–softball, men’s and women’s tennis–with six coaches and 39 athletes being impacted.
The Raiders play in the Horizon League at the DI level.
Wright State head coach Laura Mathews was understandingly in shock at the news and posted the following on Twitter:
Words cannot express how devastated I am, and I haven’t fully processed this yet. I am honored to have coached a group of tremendous women who exemplify everything student-athlete should be. They deserve better than this. Please reach out to me for questions about any of them. https://t.co/oEC2ZYKnvn
— Laura Matthews (@LauraMatthews12) June 3, 2020
Logan Mueller, a 2020 outfielder who signed with Wright State last fall, posted on Twitter today her contact information to make other college programs aware she was available:
Due to the removal of the Wright State softball program, I am now looking for a new home to begin my collegiate career. Please contact @OHHawks18uGold @Whutch16 @LauraMatthews12 with any questions. You can also reach me at [email protected]
— Logan Mueller (@LoganMueller13) June 4, 2020
Perhaps the Raider softball and tennis programs can be resurrected with private support as happened with Bowling Green, but, for now, softball at the college level has shown that it is in jeopardy just as many non-Olympic sports may be.
— Brentt Eads, Extra Inning Softball
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Wright State Athletics Announces Program Changes
From a website post June 3, 2020 on the Wright State Raiders website
Wright State University announced Wednesday it is reducing the number of its intercollegiate athletic programs by three, effective immediately.
The action is being taken as part of the university’s overall budget restructuring efforts. Wright State is implementing a multiyear plan that will stabilize operations in the midst of lower projected enrollments and declining state support. The current COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the need for all areas of the university to reduce expenditures. Today’s announcement is part of a plan for a $2 million reduction in the operating budget of the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Affected programs are softball, men’s tennis and women’s tennis. The move affects 39 student-athletes and six coaches. Wright State will now have 11 sports (six women’s, five men’s). In addition to the elimination of sports, several other measures will be taken to reduce athletics spending.
“This is extremely difficult because of our strong belief that athletics is an integral part of the educational work we do at Wright State — the education of the whole person,” Wright State Director of Athletics Bob Grant said. “This affects the lives of students who make up a group of some of the highest achievers on this campus. A group that is achieving at record levels academically, giving back to the community, and is strongly engaged with the university. Our main focus now is supporting the students and coaches impacted by this decision.”
NCAA Division I member institutions are required to sponsor at least seven sports for men and seven for women (or six for men and eight for women) with two team sports for each gender. Wright State has been in contact with the NCAA and will pursue a waiver to remain in compliance.
“These events are devastating in that they impact the lives of both our students and staff in a very negative way and cut deep into the fabric of supporting our students for success,” said Wright State University President Sue Edwards. “These circumstances we find ourselves in are ones that all universities across the country find themselves facing. We are sadly going to have to make more decisions moving forward that will be difficult, but the long-term sustainability of the organization is key. I am personally very disappointed. Our students are the whole reason we are here, and our employees are the fabric of our institution, and this is truly painful to our Wright State family.”
The university will honor all scholarships of affected student-athletes who want to continue studying at Wright State. Under NCAA transfer rules, students are immediately eligible for competition when the students’ original institution discontinues the sport in which the students practiced or competed.
Wright State Athletics and university staff are committed to providing support to these student-athletes through the transition process. Members of the athletics compliance staff, academic staff and leadership team are available to discuss scholarship, transfer information, academic advisement and counseling resources.