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Tulane president plots assault on BCS

From staff and wire reports

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[ Originally posted 06.14.03. ]

NEW ORLEANS — Scott Cowen's university felt compelled to flirt with the idea of dropping or downgrading the sport that has been its flagship program for 110 years.

But Tulane — which only five years ago added an undefeated season to the Sugar Bowl and Rose Bowl appearances it lists in its tradition-steeped history — decided instead to lead an effort to change the latter-day equation which has threatened the football survival of a large proportion of the nation's I-A programs.

Cowen, the school's president, is looking for help dismantling the Bowl Championship Series. He wants the presidents of 52 universities excluded from the BCS to join his campaign to change or do away with the system that governs college football's postseason.

``We need system-wide changes in intercollegiate athletics,'' Cowen said in a statement released Friday. He called on other presidents to take action against the BCS's ``adverse effect on Division I-A athletics.''

Tulane's trustees voted unanimously Tuesday not to eliminate the football team, but told the school it must reduce the amount of money the athletic department loses each year.

Tulane's football program has had mixed results since leaving the Southeastern Conference in 1966. The Green Wave are now a member of Conference USA.

Cowen said the school would work to change some of the things he and the university's governing board perceive as problems. Foremost on that list was the BCS.

Cowen's mission takes on added significance as the college football landscape faces yet another potential upheaval. Current league alignments, including that of C-USA, are threatened by the aftershocks that would likely occur if the Atlantic Coast Conference succeeds in its controversial and ongoing ploy to lure Miami, Boston College and Syracuse from the Big East.

The Big East is one of the ACC's five cohorts in the BCS cartel. Ironically, if the three linchpin schools depart for the ACC, the Big East itself may be relegated to the non-BCS status which encumbers C-USA, the Mountain West Conference and other I-A leagues which have been excluded from the lucrative consortium.

Cowen said the BCS hurts nonmembers, not only by excluding them from the big-money bowls, but by damaging their ability to build a fan base.

The BCS has done what it was founded to do, according to Wally Renfro, a senior adviser to NCAA president Myles Brand.

``The BCS was created to provide a structure that would allow Division I-A schools to determine a champion in football,'' Renfro said. ``It has done that for institutions that are not interested in a playoff system.''

Cowen contends the BCS, which was formed in 1998 in an effort to match the top two teams in a national championship game, is unfair because it allows certain Division I-A schools access to winning a national title.

Cowen pointed to Tulane's 11-0 team in 1998, which failed to qualify for any of the four BCS bowls. Tulane played in the Liberty Bowl and received millions of dollars less than BCS qualifiers collected in bowls.

``The BCS is six conferences that sat down and said, `What can we do to make more money for our member institutions?' and they have done a pretty good job of it,'' Sun Belt Conference commissioner Wright Waters said. ``I think the big question is why haven't the rest of us sat down and said `What can we do to improve our lives by working together?''

The BCS contract expires after 2005 season.

Cowen will host a teleconference on July 22 to discuss strategy with other presidents.

``NCAA president Myles Brand has agreed to join us throughout our discussions and will try to join us for our inaugural teleconference as well,'' Cowen said.


Copyright 2003 Bonesville.net. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

02/23/2007 10:48:08 AM

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