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Eastern Michigan Swimming Cut Hits Harder than Most

Of the run of swimming & diving programs to be cut over the last decade, Tuesday’s announcement that Eastern Michigan would drop their men’s swimming & diving team is one of the most stunning and perplexing yet. The program is one of the school’s most successful, having won 34 MAC conference titles, including 3 of the last 4. While every cut program leads to an outpouring of emotions ranging from anger and frustration to sympathy and support for those who lost their teams, the latest cut seems to have hit a special chord with swim fans across the country. The emotion seems to be hinged upon the realization that no level of competitive success appears to be enough to save a program, not even if that program is the most successful one on campus. For coaches, that means that being good at your job isn’t enough. For athletes, that means choosing a school that’s a good fit for you, giving all of yourself to that school, and excelling in the classroom and the pool isn’t enough.

While the Clemson and Maryland cuts earlier this decade might have drawn a similar outcry because of the prominence of the schools at large, those cuts came in the infancy of social media (and of SwimSwam, where I reported the news for a predecessor site, The Swimmers’ Circle, that many of you have probably never heard of).

Below, see the Tweets that have flooded our timeline in the hour-or-so since we reported the news. The flood of responses has come at an unprecedented rate, even compared to other recent Division I cuts like Wright State and Buffalo. Take note: efforts to change the course of Eastern Michigan’s decision have already begun, and we will be calling on the same emotion that has prompted today’s reaction on social media and in the comments section in the coming months to support that effort in concrete ways. We know our audience won’t go quiet when that times come, much as they didn’t when the swimming community rauised $85,000 last year to stave off Wright State’s cut.

Included among the respondents is Michelle Swift, mother of Carter Swift, the 2018 MAC Freshman of the Year who moved from Australia to swim at Eastern Michigan. The disgust also rang from local and national competitors, showing that saving our sport is above rivalry. Messages also came from people like Joey Puglessi, who currently swims at Cincinnati, and was a member of the Buffalo men’s team that was cut last year. A high school program in Michigan, South Lyon High, was also deeply impacted – 2 of the team’s coaches and 4 of the school’s alumni swam or dove at EMU. Even Sarah Dunleavy, assistant coach with one of the most successful programs of this generation the Cal women, spoke out, calling it “heartbreaking to see.”

See those and more relevant Tweets below:

https://twitter.com/shaw_barney/status/976088951256764416

 

https://twitter.com/Its_Halpining/status/976096516506050560

https://twitter.com/hayden_dup2015/status/976094065388343296

https://twitter.com/jasonmbryant/status/976094473120829440

https://twitter.com/Coach_Dunleavy/status/976085731851501568

https://twitter.com/jpuglessi98/status/976084758756282368

 

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Sportfan
6 years ago

Absolutely ridiculous! The tuition money they take in from the mens swim team FAR out weighs the cost of the program. The board did this to satisfy an out cry for over spending on sports ie unsuccessful sports…so the response was to cut the most successful program on campus. Prez and board should be replaced!!!

SwimMom2021
6 years ago

As a parent of a college swimmer (elsewhere), this story breaks my heart. I know how much work, both in and out of the pool, it took for my daughter to get to where she is. She’s a freshman in college and not only loves her coaches and teammates, but she’s come to find a home at her university with academics, her honors program, other clubs and organizations, and friends outside of swimming. She would want to continue to swim, but if she were in this situation, she’d have to transfer to do that, and uproot her entire life that she’s built this year. These kids at EMU are no doubt looking at the same decision, and I feel for… Read more »

Water is life
6 years ago

Truly disgusting. Summer swim lessons at a college can make a good amount of money.

Rob Lawrence
6 years ago

This is a sad announcement – they have seemingly abandoned the core principle of student athlete development. Focus should really be at how Michigan has effectively defunded higher education which exacerbates budget pressures. In the end it’s the students (and here the student athletes) that lose out.

Swim Mom
6 years ago

Is there any value to a college in supporting a program that draws students to apply, creates lifelong boosters and financial supporters of the school, that creates goodwill, enthusiasm and good PR for the school? My swimmer would not be going to his college and paying tuition there if he was not drawn in by the swim program. Personally, I would not be such an enthusiastic financial supporter if my child was not swimming there, and I know my student-athlete has created such a connection to the school that he will continue to support the program and the school for years to come. EMU sounds like the type of program that would create these benefits for the school. Perhaps eliminate… Read more »

Swim Parent
Reply to  Swim Mom
6 years ago

This. My rower (HS senior just finished with application season) wouldn’t consider a school without an active boathouse, even though she has no intention of rowing varsity in college. Activities shape campus culture, and many schools seem to hire ADs with “football culture” as their goal. Cutting programs affects many more students (and prospective students) than ‘just’ the athletes directly representing the school.

NickB
6 years ago

” when it comes down to it, swimming doesn’t make many places any money at the college level”

Holy crap what is wrong with this country?! This is a college! They’re not supposed to be selling the talents of the kids there! Do they not make money off the papers of anthropology majors? Is the math department not in the black this year with school profits? Did the psychic department have bad marketing this year and now they’ve gotta re-coup the losses by firing Freud?

Colleges and the NCAA have WARPED our perception on what a school should be with the commercialization of their football and basketball programs. The highest paid public employee in most states is a college… Read more »

The Screaming Viking!
Reply to  NickB
6 years ago

Spot on. WARPED

meeeeee
6 years ago
TheMan
6 years ago

EMU being cut brings about an interesting question for the remaining men’s programs in the MAC: Will the conference even continue to sponsor Men’s Swimming and Diving now that there are more affiliate members than full members participating? If I remember, the conference had a tough time putting together a championship a handful of years ago and held a joint championship with the Sun Belt. Then they added Evansville, SIU and Mizzou State and began conducting a separate championship again. I’m concerned for the guys at the remaining 5 schools in the conference. Is this the beginning of the end for their programs?

dmswim
Reply to  TheMan
6 years ago

It’s Missouri State. Mizzou specifically refers to University of Missouri. No one calls the state of Missouri Mizzou. Besides that, I agree with your point. The other schools in the conference are even more at risk.

midmajorD1 Dad
Reply to  dmswim
6 years ago

There’s the CCSA that has a bunch of swim programs whose conferences don’t have swim that is an option.

dmswim
Reply to  midmajorD1 Dad
6 years ago

Yes, but one factor schools who have cut teams consider is the sport’s membership in the school’s primary conference.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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