Perhaps the worst part of this announcement is that the majority of players found out via Twitter after their practice or while at the Women's World Championship in Plymouth, Michigan. Honestly, I'm not sure there's a worse way to deliver the news to 25-or-so women who were giving their all for the school than for them to find out via Twitter from newspaper reporters and news outlets. The fallout from this public relations nightmare won't be good.
I take no credit in posting any of these tweets below, so full credit goes to the writers who composed them. I am simply posting the timeline so you can see how some players found out. Note the times on the tweets.
The looming athletic cuts, expected today, have made UND athletic dept dysfunctional. Everyone for themselves. Lots of backstabbing.
— Brad E. Schlossman (@SchlossmanGF) March 29, 2017
UND athletics cuts to be announced at 3:30 p.m. today.
— Brad E. Schlossman (@SchlossmanGF) March 29, 2017
For all the tweets about UND getting cut. No they do not know because they are still on the ice preparing for the upcoming season pic.twitter.com/TLEsYtnao1
— Gracen Hirschy (@ghirschy06) March 29, 2017
Women's hockey team has been called to meet with AD Brian Faison at 2:45 p.m. Hearing that swimming staff also will be at the meeting.
— Brad E. Schlossman (@SchlossmanGF) March 29, 2017
BREAKING: UND cuts women's hockey https://t.co/cOfd8inTeG pic.twitter.com/RvAyfgDzTS
— Grand Forks Herald (@gfherald) March 29, 2017
North Dakota spent more time trying to keep its nickname than women's hockey. Nothing "hockey school" at all.
— Nate Wells (@gopherstate) March 29, 2017
The UND women's hockey team has a recruit on an official visit right now. Landed at 12:30 p.m.
— Brad E. Schlossman (@SchlossmanGF) March 29, 2017
Headline in the Grand Forks Herald, yet we are all still sitting here waiting to be told that it is official. Awesome job @UNDsports https://t.co/URTrb5rHsr
— Amy Menke (@AmyMenke) March 29, 2017
@UNDwhockey was #4 in the nation for attendance this past season but @myUND decides that they are the team on the chopping block.
— MªᎿᎿ ᏰᏋᏝᏝ (@MattyB928) March 29, 2017
And it doesn't stop there. What do recruits who expected a scholarship do? It's not like there are unlimited budgets at other D1 schools for them to accept. Their futures might be most at-risk when it comes to post-secondary education and, perhaps one day, playing for their country. One such player? Emilie Harley from Jamesville, NY.
Worst part about cutting UND women's hockey is never being a part of that hockey family. Gotta find a new future.
— Emilie Harley (@emharley22) March 30, 2017
Have been told that within an hour of the press conference, players and families were being contacted by other schools.
— Brad E. Schlossman (@SchlossmanGF) March 30, 2017
That recruit visiting North Dakota women's hockey while the program learned they were cut? She's from Lynnfield, MA. https://t.co/4TH2KGVpNP
— Kat Cornetta (@KatCornetta) March 30, 2017
"I had multiple Division I offers, but made my decision on UND because of its Olympic and professional hockey history," Hennessey told Inforum's Ross Torgerson. And it only got worse.
And then, the news came.And...
After watching the UND women's team practice, Hennessey was asked to meet and talk with the coaching staff. That is when head coach Brian Idalski informed Hennessey that the UND women's hockey program was getting cut from the athletic department. The dream was no longer a reality.
"My parents and I were in complete shock," Hennessey said. "It all took a while to sink in before we realized what was truly happening."
"I rejected a lot of Division I offers to come to UND," Hennessey said.Look, I understand that budget cuts to any program are going to result in some tough decisions to be made. UND was told by the state of North Dakota to axe some $32 million from its budget this year after projected shortfalls were much worse than expected. As a state-funded institution, UND's budget was on the chopping block when it came to minimize the projected deficit.
With a majority of Division I women's hockey programs already locking in their commitments for this year and the year's ahead, Hennessey is now worried that her hockey career might be coming to an abrupt end.
"This puts me in a very tough situation," Hennessey said. "My dream of playing Division I hockey is now slim-to-none."
Sports, including women's hockey and both the men's and women's swimming programs, weren't the only departments to be affected by the cuts. The University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences was forced to cut $4.9 million from its clinical departments. The women's hockey program, in comparison, will save the campus approximately $1.5 million annually. Yes, that's a big number for an athletics program, but it's hard to argue with the results when nine women currently playing at the Women's World Championship represent the University of North Dakota. For all the free marketing the program gets when mentioned on the broadcasts of these games, it's all for naught now as the university starts pinching pennies.
"I am worried about my academic opportunities because I'm not ready to graduate yet," senior Antonia Kalal told Liz Kacher of Dakota Student. "I am worried about professional programs, like the law school, since we have the only law school in the state."
In that same article, it was reported that, "Athletics has been asked to now find ways to reduce its budget by $1.3 million," an amount that is less than the UND women's hockey program's costs. The swimming program's cuts appear to be due to North Dakota's impending move to the Summit League in 2018-19 and the costs it will incur if they can't find the funding to continue the program which Miss Kacher outlined below.
Members of the Summit League are required to pay the league a penalty amount of $150,000 for each Summit-sponsored program that is eliminated during the first eight years of membership. Being that UND won't enter the Summit League until the 2018-19, it is uncertain whether or not this will affect UND's future.It seems as though the swimming programs were doomed from the start. UND, based on this knowledge, most likely cut the swimming teams as they looked ahead at a future $300,000 hit if the state and school were to continue cutting the athletic department's budget. This evidence leads me to believe that the only cut that the school was going to make at today's announcement was women's hockey based on the information above and the tweet that Brad Schlossman sent out about how swimming staff were to also be at the scheduled meeting with the women's hockey staff.
Ultimately, UND ruined the lives of many men and women today because of the state's shortfall in its budget. What bothers me is that they seemingly identified the $1.3 million budget cut by focusing in on the one program that costs them $1.5 million annually despite the recognition that program brings the school. It's why women from Massachusetts and New York were interested in playing in North Dakota rather than staying closer to home with schools in the northeast. It's why you have nine women playing at the Women's World Championships right now.
More deserve to live this dream. #SiouxForever pic.twitter.com/Hiyh0HgG9K
— Shannon Kaiser (@shannonk11) March 30, 2017
Until next time, keep your sticks on the ice!
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