Mike Burns works in a world of razor-thin margins, one in which the tiniest of fractions separates a victory from a loss. But the stakes usually aren't as high as they were Friday, when the Gophers men's gymnastics coach waited to see whether the U's Board of Regents would vote to eliminate his sport.
It did, by the smallest degree possible. In a 7-5 decision, the regents approved an amended resolution to cut men's gymnastics, men's tennis and men's indoor track at the end of the school year. The new resolution, given to the regents moments before the meeting began, spared men's outdoor track from the list of sports to be dropped.
A 6-6 tie would have prevented the resolution from passing, and a motion to postpone the decision was rejected, also by a 7-5 margin. Though Burns is used to dealing with close losses, this one left him gutted.
"All we needed was one more vote," said Burns, the Gophers' coach since 2004. "You take these three programs, and you rip them out of the flesh of the athletic department, and it leaves a gaping wound. It will eventually heal, but there will be a scar for the rest of eternity."
Athletic director Mark Coyle announced Sept. 10 that the department would drop the sports because of a budget deficit magnified by the pandemic, and to address Title IX compliance concerns. That deficit was projected Friday at $45 to $65 million.
Cutting all four programs would have saved $2.7 million per year, but Coyle said retaining outdoor track will reduce that amount to $1.6 million.
Coyle called the cuts "heartbreaking," but he said there would be "a significant impact" if they were not approved Friday. It's uncertain how much football revenue will be impacted by COVID-19, he explained, and athletic department costs are increasing. Though supporters had begun fundraising efforts — with track boosters pledging $1.8 million in less than a week — Coyle said "fundraising is an unrealistic option."
"We fully recognize this decision caused a lot of pain," Coyle said in a news conference after the vote. "We are in uncharted waters with this pandemic. It's difficult. It's a hard day for a lot of our student-athletes, our staff, et cetera."