Kansas Relays "paused" to save money

theshadow

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Apr 19, 2006
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That's right. The recipients of a $300M gift are "pausing" a 100-year-old nationally-renowned event in order to save...$350,000.



Athletic Director Travis Goff said the decision was the best option as KU navigates “expense management” due to the House v. NCAA settlement, which requires schools that opt in to fund up to $20.5 million annually in athlete revenue sharing.

“It really is tied most directly to expense management, and just needing to get our legs underneath us in this new chapter with the House settlement,” Goff said.

The pause is expected to save roughly $350,000 in expenses, but Goff emphasized this is not the end of the 102-year-old tradition, rather a short-term decision as the department adjusts to the new financial landscape. It’s also worth noting that over the summer, KU Athletics stepped away from the Rim Rock Farm Classic, the annual high school meet that brought nearly 2,500 athletes to Lawrence last September.




As the Journal-World reported in May, KU Athletics gradually eliminated, via a combination of a hiring freeze, voluntary separations and layoffs, 30 employees from the department, in order to save $3 million. Goff later said during a KU Athletics board meeting in June that over a nine-month period, the department had found ways to reduce its expenses by more than $15 million in total, many of which were not expected to come to fruition until the fiscal year 2026.
 
We knew there would be consequences to the house settlement and ultimately paying players an additional $20M per school. And it’ll be the Olympic sports that feel those consequences. Better get used to it because it’s only going to get more common.
 
We knew there would be consequences to the house settlement and ultimately paying players an additional $20M per school. And it’ll be the Olympic sports that feel those consequences. Better get used to it because it’s only going to get more common.
This is like Drake canceling the Drake relays to save money. It’s actually the high schools that are losers, not the Olympic sports at the school.

Only if Drake was a P4 D1 school, and just recieved a 300 million gift from a booster and the state of Iowa was funding their new football stadium renovation.
 
We knew there would be consequences to the house settlement and ultimately paying players an additional $20M per school. And it’ll be the Olympic sports that feel those consequences. Better get used to it because it’s only going to get more common.

It’s more a consequence of college athletics finally being treated like the big business that it is.

Good. It had already become in essence a high school meet.

They can afford it if priorities were the same. They just don’t want to. Spending money on non-revenue sports isn’t as palatable as it once was.
 
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i love tradition as much as anyone, but the Kansas Relays became a tradition not worth saving. i looked at the results from a recent year, and they weren’t getting any name teams to attend. the Kansas Relays used to be a big deal with the Drake and Texas Relays. Now many schools go west to run at MtSac, Stanford, and Bryan Clay.
 
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Just how much do you want donors to give. They have been asked over and over again everywhere that isn't Texas or Ohio State.
Did they build a separate track and field space? The track used to be in the football stadium. Clearly not one in there now.
 
Did they build a separate track and field space? The track used to be in the football stadium. Clearly not one in there now.
Yes they do. Its a nice facility too.


I'm disappointed by ending the legacy of the KU relays but like @drlove said, its not worth, on a collegiate level, being saved. I feel bad for the high schools though. Maybe that opens a spot for a high school to run a premiere meet at KU during the normal relays weekend. Would provide KU with rental money as well.

With all of that being said, something is off with the financial aspect of it. $350,000 to run a meet. Seems a bit excessive but there are a bunch of expenses in hosting such an event that add up quickly. Not one mention of the revenue it brings in though. If that is a net negative of $350,000, someone is mismanaging things.
 
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Just how much do you want donors to give. They have been asked over and over again everywhere that isn't Texas or Ohio State.

David Booth paid $4.3 million to purchase the Naismith rules of basketball and donate them to KU. He could trip and spill $350,000.

It isn’t a lot of money to big donors and a shame such a tradition ends.
 
Northern track meets are a thing of the past at the high major level and have been for some time. Drake is not much better than Kansas from a collegiate lens as it is a bad college meet. ISU and Iowa carry Drake, and it probably comes at the detriment of their runners.

If Drake wishes to survive, it needs to allow out-of-state HS races and cut this middle school relay crap out of its program. Nobody spends $30 to watch middle school races
 
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New one will be close by.
Yes, the Rock Chalk Park is west of Lawrence, and it has a very nice facility for track and softball, but it is more windy than the old SW Athletic Complex at ISU was. The facility has already hosted the Big 12's and the NCAA Regionals
 
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