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New ECAC, Big East conferences change the lacrosse landscape

Within the last two months, the Big East started a lacrosse conference and the East Coast Athletic Conference expanded into the Midwest where the Great Western Lacrosse League once stood. The GWLL is dust in the winds of change. Before we get to my take on the big changes to the college lacrosse configuration, here’s how the new conferences will look in 2010.

The seven schools that will participate in the newly formed Big East Conference are Georgetown, Notre Dame, Providence, Rutgers, St. John’s, Syracuse and Villanova. The teams will play each other once in the regular season. The conference hopes to receive an automatic bid to the 16-team NCAA tournament field.

The new ECAC Lacrosse League will include former GWLL members Air Force, Bellarmine, Denver, Ohio State and Quinnipiac and existing ECAC schools Fairfield, Hobart and Loyola. The conference already has an automatic bid.

The new Big East and ECAC are two strong lacrosse conferences that deserve an automatic bid and will likely place at-large teams in the tournament as well. I have no criticism of the new alignments and in the case of the Big East, all is finally right.

Anyone who saw the news in June about the formation of the new Big East conference must have noted that the conference raided the ECAC for its members. Georgetown, Rutgers and St. John’s were gone in a flash. That left the ECAC scrambling for new teams to keep the conference going and it left the Great Western Lacrosse League without its marquis team, Notre Dame.

Now the Big East can’t be blamed for going after the lacrosse teams from schools that are established as traditional conference teams in most sports. It can be blamed for taking so damn long to do it. Some blame the Atlantic Coast Conference for starting a conference, prematurely, with only four teams. But those teams have an identity that matches the other teams at their schools and that the fans can relate to. And while they don’t have enough teams for an automatic bid, they respect the sport and claim their teams. Players in the ACC are proud of it and the ACC is proud of its lacrosse.

The Big East’s argument might be that it was appropriate to wait for the proper number of playing members. Actually, the proper number of willing members is important too. Ten-time NCAA champion Syracuse brings unequaled clout and immediate standing to the conference, and I would be surprised if they weren't compensated in some way. Maybe I’m cynical but that’s how I perceive Syracuse athletics -- money first, kids next. It’s not the lacrosse people, who are some of my favorite people in the world. It’s the athletic department, which are not lacrosse people.

The ECAC has been a make-shift conference of ever-changing definition for years. This new configuration may last a few years but the conference is still a temporary entity as long as they rely on eventual Big Ten teams for their numbers. The Big Ten, like the Big East, will eventually have enough teams and form its own lacrosse conference, leaving the ECAC again with some recruiting to do. By then, more colleges may play and that shift of Big Ten teams may leave a perfect scenario for others to participate in the conference system, like in this case. It really is perfect for now.

The GWLL was perhaps the easiest conference ever to raid. They had an automatic bid to the tournament and only lost one team – Notre Dame. They had University of Detroit-Mercy coming in for 2009 and would have been just fine, as far as I can see. They would have had Air Force, Bellarmine, Denver, Ohio State, Quinnipiac and Detroit. But the GWLL was a "made-up conference," born from necessity, with no big financial structure and no staff that would fight for its very existence. The conference was just extra work for the teams and schools in it. It was a bloodless battle. It’s like they outsourced to the ECAC, as mercenary a conference as there ever was.

The only “victim” I see from all of this shifting is Detroit, which had a terrific path ahead of it with a GWLL schedule as a brand new college team. Now they will play one season of all away games, including GWLL teams, and then we’ll see. I use the word victim lightly. These guys will be fine and knew what was coming like all of us did. They embraced it just the same in Detroit. They even hosted the 2008 GWLL Tournament, seen exclusively on E-Lacrosse.

The GWLL was a misnamed conference anyway with the Rockies as its western barrier. It’s like in U.S. history when the “western frontier” was Ohio, then Missouri, and so on. One day we may get a "Great Western Lacrosse League" revival. Hopefully the teams assembling that conference will be real western teams on the Pacific Coast. History will repeat itself, as this will likely be a precursor to the Pac 10 and Big West lacrosse conferences, but it will not be soon. And by then, after so many iterations, the ECAC may be that far west, still seeking teams.

One more thing: Nobody ever thinks, when something ends, that it had a great purpose or that it was as necessary as it really was. But for those who had the vision of the GWLL and made it happen, all of lacrosse owes you a huge debt. The growth of our game was in your hands for a few years there and you carried it well. Three GWLL teams -- Denver, Ohio State and Notre Dame -- made the tournament field last year as a symbol of that success and growth. The league will be forgotten soon, but hopefully not its great and historic accomplishments.

Comments

I thought Quinnipiac was joining the NEC league???

Somerset, NJ — Northeast Conference (NEC) Commissioner Brenda Weare is pleased to announce the establishment of the NEC Men's Lacrosse League. With its inaugural season of 2010-11 on the horizon, the newly-forming men's lacrosse conference will encompass six schools, five of which are core members of the Northeast Conference currently competing in other Division I men's lacrosse leagues with the other being new NEC member Bryant, which will officially join the lacrosse league in 2010-11.


"This will allow the NEC to take part in one of the nation's fastest-growing sports while increasing opportunity for our student-athletes," said Weare, who is currently in her second year as Commissioner.


Mount St. Mary's (MAAC), Quinnipiac (GWLL), Robert Morris (CAA), Sacred Heart (CAA), and Wagner (MAAC) will end their current affiliations to join Bryant University in their home conference.


The addition of Bryant to the NEC's core membership made possible the creation of the men's lacrosse league. Transitioning into the NEC from the Division II ranks, Bryant is currently in the midst of the NCAA-mandated reclassification period that will bring the Rhode Island-based institution to full Division I membership in time for the 2012-13 academic year. Bryant's choice to utilize the NCAA's Fast Track Reclassification program for the sport of men's lacrosse will allow the conference's newest member to become a full-fledged Division I participant in the sport in time for the start of the 2010-11 season.


Having sponsored women's lacrosse since 1998, the NEC will make men's Lacrosse its 22nd sport of sponsorship. Now in its 27th season, the Northeast Conference is an NCAA Division I collegiate athletic association consisting of 11 institutions of higher learning located throughout five states. Media coverage of the NEC extends to four of the largest markets in the United States - New York (#1), Pittsburgh (#22), Baltimore (#24), and Hartford/New Haven (#29). Founded in 1981 as the basketball-only ECAC Metro Conference, the NEC has grown to sponsor 21 championship sports for men and women and now enjoys automatic or play-in access to 13 different NCAA Championships. NEC member institutions include Central Connecticut State, Fairleigh Dickinson, Long Island, Monmouth, Mount St. Mary's, Quinnipiac, Robert Morris, Sacred Heart, St. Francis (NY), Saint Francis (PA) and Wagner. Bryant University will become a core member of the conference in 2012 upon completion of the five-year NCAA Division I reclassification period

Excellent break-down of the situation.

Go BU Knights!

I assume the later release is correct and that Quinnipiac changed its mind or something. The ECAC is claiming Quinnipiac, as well. Little known Quinnipiac fact: It's a terrific political studies school and is also one of the leading political polling entities for the Presidential election and others. Just listen for the name on any cable news politics show. My wife is way tired af me saying "That's a lacrosse school" every time we hear it.

The ACC needs to get to seven teams or drop that lame conference tournament. Here's hoping Virginia Tech, Boston College and Wake can be enticed to start programs.

From the Quinnipiac website:

HAMDEN, Conn. – ECAC Commissioner Rudy Keeling today announced the addition of five new members, including the Quinnipiac University men’s lacrosse team, to the ECAC Lacrosse League for the 2009-10 season. The Bobcats make the move along with fellow Great Western Lacrosse League members Air Force, Bellarmine, Denver and Ohio State, joining current ECAC members Fairfield, Hobart and Loyola (Md.) to form an eight-team league.

The Bobcats are scheduled to play in the GWLL’s final season of 2008-09 before moving to the ECAC in 2009-10. Following its one campaign in the ECAC, Quinnipiac will then permanently move to the newly established Northeast Conference Men’s Lacrosse League in 2010-11, as announced on May 16. The Quinnipiac University women’s lacrosse team is already a current member of the NEC.

Unfortunately, the Big Ten will never have a men's lacrosse league. Title IX and funding issues will not allow it to happen. It is a shame because we had PSU, OSU & MSU until the Michigan State program was cut in the 90's.

Unless there is drastic changes to title ix, i have to agree with Michael that there isn't a great chance at a Big Ten conference.

Only two teams in the conference play DI men's lax - OSU and PSU. Michigan St dropped their team in the early 90's. The UM club coach appears on laxpower every year and makes the statement that UM is nowhere close to moving up.

As for the ACC, BC dropped their program about 6-7 years ago so I doubt we will see a big surge to add them back. (Same goes for NCSt dropped in 80's.

I think you will see small schools that don't have a football program continue to add DI lacrosse teams. If those schools get to a level of momentum that the non-lax BCS schools have to add teams. But that is way in the future - 20+ years in my mind.

Title IX - I am not against it per se but I think it does a disservice to men's program and the answer to Title iX complaince should be cutting one program but finding a way to keep men's programs and add women's programs.

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About John Weaver
John Weaver has been the editor and publisher of
E-Lacrosse.com for 11 years, covering all levels of lacrosse all over the world. He grew up in Cockeysville. He was also the founding coach at Georgetown Prep in Bethesda and Georgetown Day School in Washington, D.C., while still in college.
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