ATLANTA — UAB was the first major college football program to shut down in nearly 20 years.
Chances are, the Blazers won't be the last.
With the enormous cost of having a football team and the growing divide between the haves and the have-nots in college athletics, it's inevitable that other schools will realize they simply can't afford to stay on the gridiron.
If anything, UAB's decision this week to throw in the towel on its money-draining program might make it easier for others to follow suit.
"The danger in one school dropping it is you never know what kind of domino effect that will have on other programs that may be struggling," said Lynn Hickey, the athletic director at UTSA (Texas-San Antonio), where they started a football program three years ago. "It's human nature that when someone opens the door, makes a big step, a big decision like that, sometimes that eases the pressure on other people who want to do that."
Hickey insists that her fledgling program is in solid shape financially, playing in one of the nation's largest cities while competing for fans with only one major league team (the NBA champion Spurs). The Roadrunners are among seven Division I team that have sprung up since 2000, many of them spurred by a desire to stay relevant in a wave of conference realignment that was largely driven by football considerations.
UNC-Charlotte was one of those schools.
"My primary reason for wanting football was to protect the rest of the athletic program," said Judy Rose, the 49ers athletic director. "We had invested a lot in our athletic programs. But all the decisions about conference realignment have occurred because of one sport — football. Basketball has nothing to do with it. Nothing. We've got to protect what we have here."