Lehigh Football Nation
April 22nd, 2005, 10:03 AM
colgate13, you will appreciate this:
State of the Ivy League II: Solutions to the Problems (http://www.cornellsun.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/04/22/42687160221e3)
The article gives a great summation of what, well, pretty much every I-AA and NCAA basketball fan would like to see the Ivies implemented, but this caught my eye:
In 2003, Colgate's football team advanced to the Division I-AA national title game. Colgate is virtually on par with the Ivies as an academic institution, and it's participation in the I-AA tournament did not serve as a detriment at all to its players' academic standing, while at the same time giving those student-athletes a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to play on a national stage. There is no reason to believe that such an ill-effect would occur at Ivy schools either.
Harvard Business School, Wharton, Columbia Law -- all ON PAR with Colgate. :D
State of the Ivy League II: Solutions to the Problems (http://www.cornellsun.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/04/22/42687160221e3)
The article gives a great summation of what, well, pretty much every I-AA and NCAA basketball fan would like to see the Ivies implemented, but this caught my eye:
In 2003, Colgate's football team advanced to the Division I-AA national title game. Colgate is virtually on par with the Ivies as an academic institution, and it's participation in the I-AA tournament did not serve as a detriment at all to its players' academic standing, while at the same time giving those student-athletes a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to play on a national stage. There is no reason to believe that such an ill-effect would occur at Ivy schools either.
Harvard Business School, Wharton, Columbia Law -- all ON PAR with Colgate. :D