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Akron extends three more offers

Monday, May 28th, 2007

Football

I can’t remember the last time Akron went after a player in Michigan.

First, the talent isn’t all that great up there, compared to Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida. Second, there’s about a bajillion colleges that will fight the Zips on each one.

Anyhow, here are three new scholarship offers, including one from Michigan.

    Caulton Ray, running back, Birmingham, Mich.
    Height: 5-foot-9
    Weight: 195
    Speed: 4.49
    Offers: Akron, Cincinnati, Bowling Green, Central Michigan and Eastern Michigan
    Notes: Ray tested very well at a combine in Columbus. There are several decent running backs in Michigan this year, so he’s not getting a ton of attention. Ray has designs on playing under the spotlight as a Miami Hurricane. The ‘Canes are talking to him, but it will take a few rejections from better running backs for Miami to have a scholarship open up. He also likes Michigan State and Nebraska.
    Likelihood: Of course, Ray has offers from none of these schools. It may come down to a battle of the mid-majors.

    Dalonte Wallace, defensive end, Greenbelt, Md.
    Height: 6-0
    Weight: 206
    Speed: 4.8
    Offers: Akron, Buffalo, Eastern Michigan and James Madison
    Notes: Wallace is looking for a school that has a good academic support system, a decent business school and outstanding football facilities. Sounds like Akron to me.
    Likelihood: Despite that, Wallace did not mention Akron when Rivals.com interviewed him, except saying the Zips offered a scholie. It’s possible Akron’s coaching staff is arriving late in Wallace’s recruitment, so that could improve. Wallace said he thinks Syracuse and N.C. State could offer soon.

    Ausar Walcott, safety, Hackensack, N.J.
    Height: 6-5
    Weight: 200
    Speed: 4.5
    Offers: Akron, Maryland, Michigan State, Minnesota, Rutgers, Syracuse, Virginia and Wisconsin.
    Notes: A 6-5, 200-pound safety who runs a 4.5??? Yeah. Pretty bizarre. Scout.com gives conflicting stats (6-1, 175), but Rivals.com is a much better and more complete information source, so I’m not sure what’s right.
    Likelihood: Walcott grew up watching Rutgers and Maryland, so those schools have an advantage. Virginia is his leader, however. That puts Akron way down on the list. (No matter where Walcott winds up, I’d love to watch him play. A safety who is that tall and skinny is the equivalent to me of having a 7-foot point guard.)

Golf

It looks like Tom Porten reeled in a superb recruiting class this year.

That class includes Doug Underwood, who took Stow golf by storm the year after I graduated from the team. The Bulldogs reached the state tournament last fall.

I really don’t think the Zips’ success this year will be an anomaly. Akron’s roster is deeply stacked with talent and a competitve rivalry with Kent State has formed.

Sako earns at-large berth to nationals

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

Track

In a regional meet that saw near misses, weird rulings and injuries, one bright point is that high jumper Natalie Sako earned an at-large invitation to nationals.

With Stevi Large (hammer throw) and Auston Papay (shot put and discus), that makes three athletes representing Akron in four events in the NCAA Championships — the team’s smallest group of national qualifiers since 2002.

“Even though we had our largest contingency ever and one of the larger groups in the region, unfortunately we came away with our worse showings ever at this meet,” head coach Dennis Mitchell said.

There were some odd happenings that prevented Akron from having more national qualifiers. Crystal Goldsmith, for example, sat in a three-way tie for fourth after the pole vault finals. She injured herself, however, and the Zips coaches tried to stall a little to let her recouperate. No one complained — not the official or the other coaches. A meet referee, however, stepped in an disqualified Goldsmith.

“That event was crazy,” said Mitchell, who protested the call and tried to have it overturned.

The Zips performed well in the 4×400 relay, but were disqualified for a lane violation. It was a violation that officials announced along with the event’s results, so the coaching staff had no chance to protest.

Further, Cadeau Kelley had a great leap in the long jump, but it was called a fault, despite video evidence to the contrary.

“That was a tough one to swallow,” Mitchell said. “It was one of those types of meets.”

Mitchell said he still is confident Akron will have a strong performance at nationals, despite the smaller contingency.

“The three we have going to nationals should do a great job,” he said. “They are all veterans of the meet.”

Golf

Tom Gaffney wrote a season synopsis of the Zips’ rise to prominence.

If you haven’t kept up on the team, you should read it.

Zips give up lead

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Golf

Akron is suffering from a late-tournament collapse.

The Zips are now two strokes behind Eastern Michigan. Kent State might even catch up. The Flashes are two behind Akron.

Akron’s lead is one

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Golf

The Zips are only ahead one stroke heading into the final holes at the MAC Tournament.

You can follow it live at Golfstat.com.

Zips drop a stroke on front nine

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Golf

Eastern Michigan picked up a stroke on the front nine to narrow the gap to four heading into the final nine holes of the MAC Tournament.

The Eagles are 6-under on the day. Akron is 5-under, as is Kent State, who sits in third, 10 strokes off the lead.

You can follow the tournament on Golfstat.com.

Akron’s lead falls to five

Friday, May 4th, 2007

Golf

Eastern Michigan cut the Zips’ 10-stroke lead to five in the third round of the MAC Tournament.

Ryan Culbertson’s score of 5-under was the day’s lowest card.

The tournament will conclude with one round Saturday morning. You can follow it live at Golfstat.com.

Zips poised to win MAC

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

Golf

Akron leads by 10 after the first two rounds of the MAC Tournament.

Four of the Zips’ five golfers are in the tournament’s top six, individually.

Leading the whole thing is Brad Wright, who is 6-under. Colin Clemente (3-under), Ryan Culbertson (2-under) and Blake Sattler (2-under) are close behind.

Ten strokes back, Ball State is in second place, followed by Kent State (11 behind Akron), Eastern Michigan (12 behind) and Ohio (14 behind).

The nine-team field will play a round Friday and a round Saturday to determine the conference champ. If Akron can close it out, it will be the first secondary sport that actually followed through on a promising nonconference performance to win the MAC (track and soccer not included).

The final ride

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

Miscellaneous

I have written about 150 columns in the Buchtelite to go with my about 300 straight news or sports stories.

Since I’m graduating in two weeks, here is my final column, summing up the four years of Zips sports I witnessed…

This is my last week before graduation.

In this final installment of “Rasor’s Edge,” I will be your guide as we reminisce through the roller coaster’s hills and valleys of the past four years in University of Akron sports.

The ride noisily creaks to a start.

“Who’s got the WD-40?” asks a smart-aleck Dru Joyce from the back.

To your left, you will see the building of a great foundation for the men’s soccer, men’s basketball and football teams. There is J.D. Brookhart and Keith Dambrot. They are signing contracts to become head coaches at UA. On the other side of the train is Ken Lolla, recruiting Sinisa Ubiparipovic and Ross McKenzie.

Riders begin to sense the train is about to descend.

“Holy cow!” former athletic director Mike Thomas shouts. “Is the coaster seriously going down there?”

(Heh. You have no idea where this thing is going, I think to myself.)

In Brookhart’s first year, and Charlie Frye’s last, Akron will be the only bowl-eligible team not to play in the postseason.

“Dang. That hurt my groin just seeing it,” Dambrot jokes to assistant coach Jeff Boals.

Don’t get too comfortable, coaches. This ride shifts quickly. As a matter of a fact, the men’s basketball team will miss out on the NIT in Dambrot’s first year as head coach, despite an RPI that almost qualified the Zips for the Big Dance.

But please nurse your bruises quickly, gentlemen. We are preparing for a steep incline. This is the fall of 2005. The men’s soccer team will reach the ultimate regular season pinnacle: a No. 1 national ranking. The football team will shock the Mid-American Conference by coming back to score two touchdowns in the final minutes to win the title over Northern Illinois. Yep, that’s right. Wee-little Akron is on SportsCenter and getting national publicity. There’s Chris Berman, calling the Zips the athletic department of the week.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” a bitter Buckeyes fan says from the back of the train. “The only school in Ohio is The Ohio State University.”

Jay Rohr and John Mackey, the most intense football players you’ll meet, begin to growl. Concerned about self-preservation, the OSU fan buttons up.

Don’t get too excited Zips fans. This won’t last. As you’ll learn, one of the themes of this ride is that the powers-that-be won’t let this roller coaster reach too high. And so begins our descent. The NCAA gave the soccer team a nine-seed for the national tournament, despite Akron losing only one game. The courageous Zips will fight to the Elite Eight, but lose in a shootout against Maryland, the eventual national champions.

Thomas and Lolla unlatch their harnesses.

Sirs, I don’t recommend…

Thomas and Lolla leap off the train. Their parachutes open to reveal logos for the universities of Cincinnati and Louisville, respectively.

Ladies and gentleman, we just lost two talented men, but the coaster will continue as planned. Actually, we’re heading up. Welcome to the ride, Mack Rhoades and Caleb Porter.

On your left, you can see Dambrot leading the Zips to a 23-win season in 2006. This team actually got an NIT berth and beat Temple on the road in the first round, thus ending the career of the legendary coach John Chaney.

All of a sudden, riders on the train begin to stir. They anticipate the football team has a chance to be special in 2006.

I hate to disappoint you, but this team is going nowhere. Look to your left as the offensive line won’t protect quarterback Luke Getsy. The kickers will miss extra points. Players will squabble. No leaders will emerge.

“So what’s the damage?” asks Rhoades, the new athletic director.

(Gulp.) Five and seven, including a blowout at the hands of Kent State.

But please remain in your seats. Don’t follow your colleagues off the rollercoaster. Joyce and Romeo Travis are about to take this train to new heights. How does 26 wins sound?

The riders erupt into a chorus of cheers.

“Obviously, this means we’re going to the Big Dance,” a giddy Cedrick Middleton says with a giant grin consuming his face.

Ced, you’re not going to like this. But take a look to your right. That is you clanking a free throw with 6.6 seconds left in the MAC Championship. After Miami’s Doug Penno banks in a 3-pointer, the Zips’ two-point lead will turn into the most disastrous defeat in tournament history. And no, Cedrick, the NCAA Tournament did not invite Akron. (Gulp.) … Neither did the NIT.

“That’s utter bull—-,” Dambrot says as he loosens his harness.

I know, I know. Try to sit tight, coach.

The other riders slip out of their seatbelts, too.

People, please!

Rather than taking the plunge, the riders crawl across the train to console Middleton, Dambrot and the team.

Dozens of fans write letters to the selection committees and the MAC, decrying the injustice. About 700 fans plan to meet for a postseason pep rally to give the Zips a proper sendoff.

Rhoades leans over to Dambrot and pulls out his university checkbook. “You mean so much to us,” he says, as he rewrites the coach’s contract.

Fans alternate chanting, “Rom-e-ooooooh!” and “Let’s go Zips!” The school’s spirit is higher than ever.

I hate to stop the party, but you must return to your seats. This train is going up again.

You’ll never believe the view.

Golf

As you might expect to hear from a coach who lost a tournament by one stroke, Tom Porten blamed putting for Akron’s second-place finish at the FirstEnergy Intercollegiate.

The team is still going strong heading into the MAC Tournament, which begins Wednesday in Westerville, Ohio.

Track

The Buchtelite’s Tony Bosma wrote an interesting feature about coach Dennis Mitchell, who built up a rotten program to one of the nation’s elite during his 11 years at the helm.

Football

The Buchtelite’s Vincent Dorsey wrote about Andy Alleman’s reaction to being drafted by the Saints.

On Sportscenter, Mel Kiper Jr. just said Alleman could be a factor on New Orleans’ offensive line soon.

    MACReportOnline.com is keeping a running list of MAC players who have latched on with NFL teams. Of those players, I like Ohio linebacker Matt Muncy the most.

    The ABJ’s David Lee Morgan wrote about Getsy landing with the 49ers. He mentions how the MAC set a new high for players taken in the draft’s first three rounds with five. Brookhart says the lack of respect for the MAC in football is more with the public, not insiders and professionals.

A look inside the Zips’ finances

Wednesday, April 25th, 2007

Miscellaneous

I did some snooping this semester about where the athletic department – and the university as a whole — spend their money.

There might be some stuff in the story you might not know.

I’ll post that story below. If you’re interested, here’s the link to the main story, which focuses on the whole university.

Mack Rhoades stood over his desk, placed his hand on his jaw and sighed.

“We have to get a football stadium built,” said the University of Akron’s athletic director.

“The Rubber Bowl prohibits us with attendance - especially with students,” he continued. “The lack of amenities, the deteriorating seats, et cetera. It prohibits us from maximizing revenue.”

Having the $54 million on-campus stadium ready for 2009 is a goal held by many at the university, but especially by the fans.

An entirely different contingency among the university community is asking, “Why bother?”

UA subsidized its athletic department $13.1 million last year. That is $13.1 million that could have gone to improve academic programs, they say.

The football program alone lost more than $3 million. No sport came even close to breaking even (see chart on A2).

Also, coaches spent $500,000 last year in recruiting. In layman’s terms, the university is paying $500,000 to coax high school students to accept a full-ride scholarship at UA. It’s a double whammy.

Rhoades offers several defenses against these points.

Although Akron sports don’t come close to paying for themselves, only a handful of the teams at the 119 Division IA schools do.

The national standard is that a university subsidizes athletics with about 5 percent of its total budget. The $13.1 million subsidy is just less than 4 percent of UA’s $345 million budget.

Some sports also help by attracting paying students. The track team, which awards only a small fraction of its 90 athletes with scholarships, increases tuition by attracting students to UA, who normally would go elsewhere. That figure could reach $1 million for the track team alone.

“We are, by far, a great bargain with what we bring in and provide,” track coach Dennis Mitchell said.

About 200 athletes on campus are without a full scholarship, Rhoades said. Those students pay tuition, but that money is not calculated as athletics revenue.

Rhoades also points to the publicity sports garner for a university. The football team will play twice on ESPN next season. Ninety million homes receive that network, and each of the viewers, conceivably, could walk away from the television set with a higher level of respect for UA.

“For most universities, the greatest marketing window is athletics,” Rhoades said. “It can lead people to investigate the academics, which is most important.”

Another intangible benefit is the cohesion that university athletics offer.

“It can be a focal point of celebration,” Rhoades said. “If you’re winning, it brings a sense of school spirit to the campus.”

Still, Rhoades said his department must improve upon the $3 million in total revenue it generated last year.

The department has improved already since Rhoades arrived in January 2006. Football ticket sales brought in $349,000 last season, which is double the total from 2005 when Akron won the Mid-American Conference Championship. With Keith Dambrot’s Zips winning 26 men’s basketball games, attendance income jumped 15 percent to $270,000, and that’s even with a massive blizzard wiping out attendance for the game against Ohio University which was expected to be a big money maker.

Women’s basketball is considered the third-largest collegiate sport. Akron’s team brought in only $25,800 last year. That is a figure with perhaps the highest potential to grow, Rhoades said.

“It hasn’t been a successful program,” Rhoades said. “People want to see a quality product. Before we can think about making money, we have to have a better product.”

That illustrates the importance of winning to a financially successful institution. Take Ohio State University, for example. The Buckeyes were national runners-up in men’s basketball and football. OSU’s budget of $98 million reflects that. It is the highest of any department in the nation.

Merchandise sales at Ohio State also boost revenue significantly. It’s hard to walk anywhere without seeing a Buckeyes shirt or baseball cap, even on UA’s campus.

UA’s merchandising is not so lucrative. The university hires Licensing Resource Group, Inc. to protect its brand and logo. LRG collected about $50,000 last year from manufacturers, such as Nike or New Era, who sold Zips merchandise in retail stores or over the Internet. Of course, the university sells merchandise itself at the team stores at Rhodes Arena and the Rubber Bowl. Those ventures earned UA $168,000 in 2006.

Although the football team loses millions of dollars, it recoups plenty through “buy games,” which are road games the university plays against bigger schools for a large paycheck.

The going rate is about $600,000 that a large school, such as the University of Michigan, will pay an institution from a mid-major conference, such as Akron, to travel to Ann Arbor, Mich., for just one game.

With travel expenses rarely reaching higher than $80,000, this can become somewhat of a welfare system to the smaller schools. Akron will play two such away games next season: at Ohio State and Connecticut.

These revenue enhancing methods are nice, but the truth is, UA’s athletic budget sits at $16 million - which is in the lowest third of the teams in the MAC.

Rhoades believes the new stadium can help boost revenue, and thus, increase the budget from which he can draw.

“We have to increase the amount of revenue we generate,” Rhoades said. “That is our focus.”

Baseball

The Buchtelite’s Josh Volchko profiled Akron’s new three hitter, Doug McNulty.

The team got rained out today against Cleveland State. They will play Buffalo this weekend.

Golf

The Buchtelite’s Jeff Thomas wrote about Brad Wright, who quietly has become the anchor of the Zips’ successful season and perhaps the MAC’s best golfer.

The Zips will host the FirstEnergy Intercollegiate this weekend at Firestone Country Club.

Miscellaneous, Pt. II

Do you remember our epic debate about Paul Rodgers versus Freddie Mercury as Queen’s lead singer?

I read something on the Internet that proves me right.

Zips best Flashes, RedHawks

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Golf

Akron resoundingly beat conference rivals Miami and Kent State by 21 strokes in a tri-match this week.

Colin Clemente was the medalist with scores of 69 and 72 at Windmill Lakes Golf Club and Firestone Country Club, respectively.

This should be a huge confidence boost heading into the MAC Tournament in two weeks. This weekend, the Zips will try to win their own First Energy Intercollegiate.

Baseball

Charlie Frye and Joshua Cribbs will throw out the ceremonial first pitches before tonight’s Akron-Kent State game at Canal Park, which begins at 6 p.m. and will benefit Akron Children’s Hospital.