"We cannot be managing for today and tomorrow," ODU president John R. Broderick said. "We must be managing for three to five years out."
Among the report's recommendations: ODU should consider expanding Foreman Field and should embrace the success of the fledgling football program as a fund-raising tool.
In expanding Foreman Field, consider adopting a horseshoe design in the north end zone.
Student fees provide 72 percent of revenues – consistent for an FCS school. But those fees are not expected to grow substantially in the next few years.
...the football...head coaches are in the bottom half of the CAA pay scale, though they rank in the top 25 percent nationally.
ODU should develop a strategy for playing guarantee games in football and men’s and women’s basketball.
And the most interesting part:Couched in the report was an expectation that ODU recognize where it stands in the grand scope of NCAA athletics and to be comfortable with that. It also hinted that ODU should no longer continue its long-standing philosophy of "Selective Excellence."
"Universities with large revenues from the Bowl Championship Series dominate today's intensely competitive environment in all Division I sports," the study stated. "Those revenue streams are not available to (FCS) schools like (ODU)."
http://hamptonroads.com/2010/02/report- ... d-tomorrowWhile the report indicated that the Colonial Athletic Association is now the best fit for ODU, it also warns school officials to prepare for a "changing landscape." Just recently, two CAA schools dropped football, shaking up the division alignment for 2010 and beyond.
Btw, what's a horseshoe endzone? Just a wrap-around endzone I assume?















