OCC games slashed
Bryce Alderton
An attempt to reduce a gaping hole in the stateâs budget has forced
community college schools such as Orange Coast College to cut
everything from classes to teachers, and now regular-season and
playoff games for the OCC sports teams
In March the stateâs governing body, the Commission on Athletics,
approved the reductions in the playoff formats, which began last fall
and continue into the spring season. The reverberations from the
March decision can still be felt, especially among the coaches, who
have shown a general disdain of the new schedules.
The cuts were made on a one-year trial period in hopes the stateâs
financial picture will be a little more rosy in 2005.
âWe had to come up with a standard across the state that saves
more than others,â said COA Commissioner Joanne Fortunato. âThe
presidents didnât want colleges to drop sports, so they cut down the
number of [games] across the board. Many athletic directors are happy
to have sports and save money.â
Every softball team in the state had its regular-season schedule
reduced by 30% while baseball took a 20% hit. Football lost a
scrimmage. Every other sport had its schedule reduced by 15%.
OCCâs baseball team had its regular-season schedule reduced from
44 to 36 games and a new playoff system has further irked Coast Coach
John Altobelli.
The regional playoffs will now feature single-elimination games
instead of the best-of-three format used in past years. The state
championship will feature one team each from Northern and Southern
California in a two-day, single-elimination structure.
âI hate it, everyone hates it,â Altobelli said. âThere is not a
coach out there who is for it. At any other level it is
two-out-of-three, three-out-of-five or four-out-of-seven. Baseball is
a unique animal. It is just unfortunate because the [players] work so
hard all year and to only have a one-game playoff? This needs to be
looked at closer and there are a lot of people looking to get it
changed.â
OCC Athletic Director Fred Hokanson doesnât like the cuts, but
felt they were fair across the board for each sport.
âEveryone is being hit. No one is ever happy with cuts,â Hokanson
said. âThis is not permanent.â
The onus of paying officials often makes up a majority of the
costs schools must dish out, which was also a concern, Hokanson said.
âWhen you cut down on contests, you cut down on officials and cut
down on travel expenses,â Hokanson said. âWe are trying as a unit to
save money.â
A school can pay $300 in officials fees per game, Hokanson said.
Six fewer games means a savings of $1,800.
âFor better or worse, we complain about things before they
happen,â Hokanson said. â[Coaches] complain about not being
equitable, but we havenât gone through it yet. We are trying to save
our whole department. We didnât eliminate any teams.â
The COA took recommendations from the stateâs athletic directors
at a conference in San Diego at the end of the last school year,
Hokanson said.
There will be no Southern California individual regional champion
in tennis this year, one of the several changes in the sport.
Play in the regionals will stop in both doubles and singles after
the quarterfinals and will span one day instead of two. The state
team tournament will feature eight-game pro sets. All matches at the
state tournament will be two sets with a 10-point super tiebreaker
(if needed) to decide the match.
Part of the attempt to save money is limiting teamsâ overnight
stays.
âThey figure those that make it to the semis will go into the
state tournament, otherwise, they would be guessing at seeds,â said
OCC womenâs tennis coach Janice Maran, who is not in favor of the
revised system. âNo one is a winner. There is no champion and no
runner-up [in the regionals]. It doesnât allow for the upset, which
you always [should have].
âItâs like playing basketball and whoever gets to 100 points
[wins], rather than playing out the whole game. For instance,
reducing the third set to a tiebreaker is not how tennis is played.â
OCCâs regular-season schedule was reduced from 21 to 18 matches.
âI know budgets are smaller for everybody, but if the school
really loves athletics and wants the programs to go, they need to
help them,â Maran said.
Another casualty of the budget crunch has been adjunct (walk-on)
and assistant coaches, who have suffered pay reductions, Hokanson
said. In some cases, assistants were let go.
Four menâs volleyball teams will qualify for the state tournament,
a single-elimination, one-day event. There will be no regionals.
The state basketball tournament will halve its tournament field to
include four schools (two from both the north and the south) and be
reduced from two to three days. OCC had its regular-season schedule
trimmed by four games.
The COA board will meet Feb. 18 at a conference at a hotel near
Los Angeles International Airport. Fortunato said athletic directors
will be able to meet and discuss whether to continue or abolish the
current structure and make any recommendations.
âWe are doing the best job we can,â Fortunato said. âWe are not in
Fort Knox. The economy is across the board. Coaches see their own
sport and I would expect them to do that. But they donât have to
balance an athletic budget.â
Even sports hasnât escaped the fiscal tentacles of a monster
seemingly out of control.
âI remember back in 1981 or 1983 when OCC was in such dire
financial straits that they laid off teachers,â Hokanson recalled.
âWe had to cut over 1,000 [class] sections [this year]. Weâve had
these problems before, but the state hasnât been $30 billion in the
red before. Everyone is hurt here.â
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