With the Gophers athletic department facing $75 million in losses because of the coronavirus pandemic, three sports paid the ultimate price.
The Gophers announced Thursday they will no longer sponsor men's gymnastics, men's tennis and men's track and field (indoor and outdoor) — cutting their total from 25 programs to 21, pending Board of Regents approval after a presentation at Friday's meeting.
Athletic director Mark Coyle called it "a somber day" for his department. He spent 30 minutes on a video call with the 58 affected athletes, informing them the 2020-21 competition season — should the coronavirus not derail it — would be their last.
"Those young people have gone through a ton of uncertainty, just like each of us have. And they aren't easy conversations," Coyle said. " … We have special, special kids. And they're hurt. They're angry. They're confused. And I apologized to them. These are difficult, difficult decisions. And I really do feel for them."
Coyle said this decision was not only because of the COVID-19 financial strain but also for Title IX alignment. In the past three years, Coyle said, the female undergraduate population grew about 2-3%, so cutting the men's programs helps the athletics department mirror the student enrollment that is 54% female.
The pandemic, though, certainly forced the situation. When the Big Ten Conference postponed fall sports indefinitely on Aug. 11, it brought the Gophers' worst-case financial scenario to reality. Without ticket sales and media rights from football, college sports' biggest revenue-generator, the department faced a $75 million hit from a $130 million annual budget.
That budget is the eighth-biggest out of 14 Big Ten schools, but the Gophers had the fourth most sports programs in the conference, with 25.
Cutting sports will save the department an expected $2 million in fiscal year 2022, with an annual savings of $2.7 million once all the athletes in those sports have graduated. The Gophers said they will honor those existing athletics scholarships and allow affected athletes access to the same athletics services or help them transfer.