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By MARY COCHRANE and SUE WUETCHER Reporter
Staff
Dale Freier is the kind of student who causes college admissions
officers to drool.
 |  Walt Stefani pleads the case for
establishing a mens volleyball team during the open forum held
Feb. 22 at the United Way of Buffalo and Erie County. PHOTO:
MARY COCHRANE
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The 17-year-old senior from Lancaster High School carries a 96.45
average and ranks 40th out of a class of 469. He's interested in
studying engineering and says he was "blown away" by the academics and
facilities offered by the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
during visits to the school. But Freier plays volleyball. He's
the captain of the Lancaster team that won the state championship this
past fall. He also plays for the Eden club volleyball team, one of the
top club programs in Western New York. Freier has signed a letter
of intent to play volleyball next year at The Ohio State University.
However, he told members of the Corrigan Committee on Tuesday, if UB
fielded a varsity men's volleyball team, he "would be there in a
heartbeat" because of the academics. Freier was one of numerous
speakers who attended meetings held on Feb. 22 at the United Way of
Buffalo and Erie County, and on Tuesday in the Center for the Arts to
encourage the university to add particular sports to its program.
The meetings were convened by the Corrigan Committee, a 13-member
panel formed by President John B. Simpson and chaired by Nils Olsen,
dean of the UB Law School, to respond to issues raised in the June 2005
report evaluating UB's athletics programs by Gene Corrigan,
intercollegiate athletics consultant. Men's volleyball was
perhaps the most well-represented sport at the meetings. Mike
Norton was one of numerous speakers at both meetings who asked the
university to consider creating a men's volleyball team. "Western
New York has produced many great volleyball players who have left the
area for college because there is no affordable Division I school in New
York State," Norton said. "Last year, we watched senior Dan O'Dell from
Rochester and freshman Matt Anderson from West Seneca play for Penn
State in the national championship game on ESPN. You can go to schools
around the country right now and from Erie County, you can find a good
starting lineup playing Division I volleyball," he said. Although
Olsen pointed out that only one institution in the Mid-American
Conference fields a men's volleyball team, Norton and others maintained
that several teams in the Northeast would welcome a UB team.
"We've been told, for example, that Ohio State would put us on the
schedule tomorrow," Norton said. "You've got Ohio State, Penn State,
Rutgers, Ball State and IPFW (Indiana University-Purdue University Fort
Wayne) coming through this area all the time. The interest is here and
it seems like a natural fit." Western New York also has a growing
talent pool to draw upon, including high school teams and amateur
players, according to Norton. "There's a strong club program. I can't
even tell you how many club teams we have developing kids in this area
right now," he said. He also said that the NCAA only allows 4.5
scholarships for men's volleyball. "Call that a salary cap, if you will.
Volleyball is affordable, we have the local talent and we can be
successful soon," he said. Robert Pierce, director of the Eden
club volleyball team, echoed Norton's remarks. With the wealth of
talented players in Western New York, "I can almost guarantee that
you'll get national exposure and will be competing at the highest level
within three to five years," he said. Walt R. Stefani, coach of
the boys' volleyball team at Orchard Park High School, pointed out that
in the 1993 NCAA finals, "out of the 48 boys that were playing, 12 of
them came from Western New York." Committee member Wesley Hicks,
noting that supporters of lacrosse have made some of the same arguments
about the abundance of talented players in Western New York, asked how
many of those student-athletes would "be compelled to come to UB to play
in what would be a fledgling sport with no history and no record.
"How could we be guaranteed that those young men and women who can
compete at a national level would, in fact, choose UB? Yes, one or two
may do so for financial reasons, but one or two alone doesn't make for a
national championship team," Hicks said. Stefani answered that
there are no guarantees, but said, "it's a compelling thing to keep
young men home, who then become part of your community." Vince
Schiffert, lacrosse coach at Niagara-Wheatfield High School and a member
of the Iroquois Nationals lacrosse team, led the argument for
establishing a men's lacrosse team. He pointed out that there are many
talented lacrosse players in Western New York, Ontario and Quebec, and
the Native American Studies program in the College of Arts and Sciences
would provide a wonderful academic complement. Olsen agreed,
saying that lacrosse "offers opportunities to strengthen ties between UB
and its neighbors." Olsen opened both forums by outlining the
responsibilities of the committee. "Our role is to gather
information, try to understand the situation as it exists today and make
recommendations of possible issues for the athletics director and the
president to consider," he told those attending the meetings.
"The charge of this committee is not to make recommendations as to
which sports to drop or add. It's to look at the program overall and to
assess the university's current ability to mount competitive teams
across all the sports. "The president is, I think, committed to
having an athletics program that also reflects the academic aspirations
of the university," he said. "UB aspires and insists on excellence in
academics and it also wishes to have an athletics program that is highly
competitive in the MAC." Other speakers asked the university to
add sports they believe would help UB reach its goals. Thomas W.
Schratz, a 1974 UB graduate and player on the university's varsity
hockey teams during the 1972-73 and 1973-74 seasons, wants UB to
revitalize its hockey program. "I'll never forget skating on the
ice at the Holiday Twin Rinks before thousands of fans and thousands of
students back in 1973 and 1974," he said. "Our season at that time
consisted of 30 games, against the likes of Vermont, St. Lawrence,
Bowling Green, Ohio State and Kent State. They were exciting times, not
only for the hockey program, but also for the University at
Buffalo." Noting the frequent sell-outs for area college hockey
games, as well as the general enthusiasm for the sport at the high
school level, Schratz said UB could draw on local talent and put
together "a very successful hockey program." Patty Jordan lobbied
for golf teams at UB. An LPGA professional who attended Wake Forest
University on a golf scholarship, Jordan said that golf provides "an
excellent opportunity for personal self-growth." She called golf "a life
sport" that one can continue playing well beyond the college years.
Thomas Frank pleaded "for the creation of a new
intercollegiate gender-parity cycling program," noting that cycling is
an Olympic sport and that the Niagara River Basin Greenway from Lake
Erie to Lake Ontario "is the crown jewel of places on planet earth to
ride a bicycle. "This would create a program that ties in not
only outdoor athletic and recreational activity and cultural tourism,
but also ties in health and fitness," Frank said. It also would
provide another outlet for student athletes in their off-seasons. "A lot
of cyclists cross-train as hockey players, figure skaters and speed
skaters," Frank said. Viqar Hussain, president of the
undergraduate Student Association, asked if there is any plan to convert
the university club sports teamsincluding volleyball, rugby,
lacrosse and cycling, "some of which compete with nationally ranked
teams such as Harvard"to varsity programs. Olsen replied
that the club sports program is "one of the areas we're looking at.
"It's certainly a relevant factor to consider when you are talking
about adding sports to look at existing student participation and
performance," he said. Several members of club sports, including
the men's crew, asked for better facilities and more support, both from
the divisions of Athletics and Student Affairs.
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