Also, just for the sake of some data. The argument here is that, if we don't field a very elite team (which we haven't done up to this point), that the university, city, and region will all implode. That's a logical fallacy - just because we don't have the money of Texas doesn't mean that most other teams don't, also, so there will still be plenty of competition at that next level down. Which - that's the same level we've been at now, anyway. We don't have Bama or Texas or Florida money, so we're not getting our own TV channel or anything, anyway - so really the argument is moot.
But let's go ahead and pretend it holds water. If it were true, then surely the years when we were out here just absolutely sh***ing the bed, our enrollment and city size should have been directly affected the next year, right? Since it's a 1:1?
I went ahead and pulled the data, and went ahead and made a chart. HERE is the enrollment data, the football win records (each of which I multiplied by 3000 so that they would show on the chart), the basketball win records (each of which I multiplied by 1000 for the same reason), and the last three censuses for Ames. I did all of this back to 1996. In the year, you'll note that there is an asterisk (*) any time we got to the NCAA tournament, and a tilde (~) any time we went to a bowl game.
And... wouldn't you know, there's just absolutely zero correlation. Arguably, after dual successes in 2000 (most especially with the Elite 8 appearance), 2001, 2005, 2012, 2017, and the past couple of years, we should have seen skyrocketing enrollment the next year... and there just wasn't. In fact, several of the years, they went down the next year. So one might think that perhaps there's just not that big of a correlation between the success of an athletic program and enrollment at large?
And also, population just keeps growing, regardless of wins altogether.
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Nobody wants us to be knocked down a peg in our athletics, but creating false narratives to try and elicit panic are not the way to avoid it.