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18 Months after Cutting Men’s Swimming, Eastern Michigan Adds Women’s Lacrosse

18 months after announcing the cut of it’s men’s swimming & diving program, Eastern Michigan University has announced that it will add a Division I women’s lacrosse program in the 2021-2022 academic year. The announcement coincides with the addition of the sport to its conference-sponsored offerings beginning that same season.

The new Eastern Michigan women’s lacrosse program will include the maximum-allowed 12 scholarships and a target roster of 35 athletes.

The men’s swimming & diving team was one of 4 that the university announced that it would drop after the 2017-2018 academic season, along with softball, women’s tennis, and wrestling. The men’s swimming & diving program was the most successful of those having won 34 MAC conference championships in its history. That decision impacted 58 male student-athletes and 24 female student-athletes and was estimated by the school to bring a $2.4 million expense reduction.

The school will now offer 19 total athletics programs: 12 for women and 7 for men. The balance was previously 11 women’s sports and 10 men’s sports, before the 4 aforementioned sports were cut.

This is the first new sport added by the school since the 2001-2002 academic year. That year saw a similar shift at that point, when they added women’s rowing just a year after cutting men’s soccer and men’s tennis.

Eastern Michigan will join Akron, Central Michigan, and Kent State as all-sport members of the MAC with women’s lacrosse teams. Detroit Mercy and Youngstown State will also join the conference as affiliate members for women’s lacrosse. There are 116 Division I women’s lacrosse programs nationally at present, with more to be added in the next few years.

Eastern Michigan’s women’s swimming & diving team continues, with Derek Perkins named the new head coach prior to this season.

The school also brought back a women’s tennis program for the 2019-2020 season, and says that they have no plans to add or cut any other programs.

Eastern Michigan says that they had to add the sports to become compliant with Title IX after a court originally ordered them to reinstate the cut softball and women’s tennis programs. While Eastern Michigan provides a vague and optimistic explanation to answer a question about why they are adding a sport, they later acknowledge that the addition is “one of many efforts Eastern Michigan has undertaken to maintain its laser focus on Title IX compliance.”

WHY IS EASTERN MICHIGAN ADDING A SPORT?
This decision best positions the University’s Athletics programs for the future. The addition of athletics offerings at Eastern Michigan University is a complex and strategic decision that takes into consideration a number of factors, including high school and college sports participation rates, and resource requirements. It focuses on the most effective means for fulfilling the University’s commitment to enable our student-athletes to achieve ambitious academic, athletic, and personal aspirations, and to compete successfully for conference championships and national recognition.

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE LACROSSE?
According to a 2018-19 National Federation of High School Associations participation survey, women’s lacrosse is the fastest growing sport in high schools across the country. The sport saw a 53.6 percent increase in participation from 2008-09 (64,929) to 2018-19 (99,750).
Furthermore, at the NCAA Division I level, individual participation in women’s lacrosse increased by more than 46 percent from 2012-18. During that same time period, collegiate sponsorship of the sport grew by more than 34 percent.

HOW DOES THIS DECISION AFFECT EMU’S TITLE IX COMPLIANCE?
The addition of lacrosse is one of many efforts Eastern Michigan has undertaken to maintain its laser focus on Title IX compliance. We presently have more opportunities for female student athletes on campus than we ever have. In fact, more than 50 percent of our student athletes this year are women, and that number will increase further with the addition of lacrosse and our other ongoing efforts. At present, the lawsuit brought in 2018 by members of our tennis team and former softball team remains pending in federal court.  We cannot discuss the ongoing litigation, but our commitment to Title IX compliance has never wavered.

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SwimCoachDad
5 years ago

So, according to the NCAA, one of the three requirements to be compliant with Title IX is to “provide participation opportunities for women and men that are substantially proportionate to their respective rates of enrollment of full-time undergraduate students.”. Since EMU has enrollment made up of 40% male and 60% female, they will need to provide more scholarship opportunities for women than they have now (they stated that over 50% of their student athletes are women). With 85 full scholarships for their (lackluster) FBS football program, and if they fully fund all 11 of their women’s sports programs including women’s lacrosse (131 scholarships), that will allow them 87.3 men’s scholarships, so 2.3 to be shared among the 6 other men’s… Read more »

2 Cents
Reply to  SwimCoachDad
5 years ago

Careful now. Using stats and logic is never taken to very kindly on this site in the comment section.

EMU Alum
5 years ago

The “leadership” at EMU has been blind for years! This is just another in a long line of terrible decisions. The Men’s Swimming program is the winningest program in Mid American Conference history. In ALL sports! It looks like that decision to go all in on football was a good one. What’s their record again???

meeeee
Reply to  EMU Alum
5 years ago

Agree. Here is one of their leaderships terrible decisions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Laura_Dickinson

PsychoDad
5 years ago

I have 2 boys and 3 girls. 4 of them swimmers. Although it is fun watching our son swim fast, it is more fun watching 3 girls enjoying, much more than him, just participating in sports. Women are just better, in everything.

Swimmer
Reply to  PsychoDad
5 years ago

Username checks out

DMacNCheez
5 years ago

If more than half their athletes are female, why did they need to add another women’s sport? It’s seems they already had equal opportunity?

Corn Pop
5 years ago

Unlike swimming Lacrosse is an indigenous American sport . The Iraquois Nation has won medals when Worlds have been held in the US . They are always invited to overseas comps & would be celebrated as heros but the US will not let them leave without a US passport which they refuse.

Lacrosse itself is a fast growing sport worldwide . From just 4 nations in 74 , 48 nations competed in Israel 2018. . Even though Australia has Olympic medallist field hockey status , lacrosse has been competed for 145 years. My city has 8 teams !

However I think this college should have a mens team too but what can you do with football ?

RenéDescartes
Reply to  Corn Pop
5 years ago

This is swimswam.com

Corn Pop
Reply to  RenéDescartes
5 years ago

So? Its good for your mental health to know stuff . It helps you accept change & understand its really ok .for someone to choose lacrosse over swimming . It is not the end of the world .

.

MY MOM!
Reply to  Corn Pop
5 years ago

Europeans learned the crawl stroke from indigenous Americans.

asdagh
5 years ago

“In fact more than 50% of our student athletes this year are women”.
Equality! More seriously that statement shows what their priorities are and it makes me sick. I wonder what the NCAA is going to do now that male athletes are going to be making 200% more than the avg female.
Well I guess I am just bitter cause I had friends on that swim team but seriously this is such garbage.

2 Cents
Reply to  asdagh
5 years ago

It doesn’t matter the number that are participating, it matters how many scholarships are offered. So calm down.

Jred
5 years ago

The equal sports spots across gender thing sucks because of football.

If they just excluded football from scholarships etc. It might actually achieve what they want it too.

Men in non-football sports get completely screwed.

200 SIDESTROKE B CUT
Reply to  Jred
5 years ago

Or stop having football rosters of like 8,000 per school. Keep 20 or 30 who actually do anything, expunge the rest of them.

swimfast
Reply to  200 SIDESTROKE B CUT
5 years ago

Good theory but..

Jred
Reply to  200 SIDESTROKE B CUT
5 years ago

Except that just isn’t how football works.

And besides, college football is a money spinner. Smaller schools who don’t make money have smaller rosters and don’t offer as man yh scholarships.

First to the 25
5 years ago

What a joke

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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