- April 10th, 2006, 4:28 pm
#10865
i agree wih chris on this, but who knows at this point, and it is fun to speculate. here is a piece from SI..com on the campbell situation. it sounds like they are firm on non-scholarship football.
Campbell plans to resume football
Posted: Friday April 7, 2006 5:23PM; Updated: Friday April 7, 2006 5:23PM
BUIES CREEK, N.C. (AP) -- Campbell plans to resume football for the 2008 season, the first time in more than a half-century it will field a team.
The Camels will compete in the NCAA Division I-AA, non-scholarship level, similar to programs such as Davidson and Jacksonville. Both currently play in the Pioneer Football League along with Butler, Dayton, Drake, Morehead State, San Diego and Valparaiso.
Campbell plans to apply for membership as well.
"College football is one of the most exciting events in our country," athletic director Stan Williamson said. "The atmosphere that on-campus intercollegiate football brings to a campus is exhilarating. The addition of football at Campbell will certainly enhance the student life aspect of Buies Creek."
Football began at the school in 1925 and continued for 25 years, except for a six-year hiatus during World War II. Campbell dropped football in the early 1950s in part because of the Korean War, according to the school's Web site.
Campbell joined Division I in 1977 and became a member of the Atlantic Sun Conference in 1994.
The A-Sun doesn't have football among its 17 sports.
Campbell still must build football facilities, including a stadium, practice field and locker room. Expected costs are $2 million.
Jim Harbaugh, who played quarterback in the NFL for 15 seasons, coaches San Diego and led the Toreros to a school-best 11-1 record last season. They won their first Pioneer Football League title last season while also claiming the Sports Network Cup after finishing ranked No. 1 in the I-AA Mid-Major poll.
"For the school, it's not nearly the financial burden," he said in a phone interview. "You don't need to have the scholarships generated not only for the football program, but for the female sports, as well, because of gender equity. You have football without a lot of the costs."