Cringer said:
That was also three years ago, and it is possible the Oregon team has improved since then. I see where your once proud Titans are a salty 1-7. Believe me, I am the last person who is going to rip on C.C. baseball, (Albert Pujols played a season for Maple Woods Community College before everyone realized he was...well God). Community College baseball squads are made up of players who hope to pursue a higher level of baseball, where as club teams are made of players who chose their school for academic purposes and wanted to play some ball on the side. I have no doubt your school was good, but with a roster of 31 players who consistantly practice (many of which were recruited) I am not shocked you beat the underfunded, sparsely supported club teams. Club team baseball isn't a joke, it's just not a priority. Out of curiousity, where did you play after you left Lane?
Yeah, they're not starting the year off on a very good note. This is apparently the last year of the baseball and volleyball programs at Lane. They've been saying it for the last few years, but now they're saying it's for sure this time. Due to lack of funding from the state, the school can no longer afford to support the programs. My last year, in 2004, they said it was the last year, so we as a team had an "us against the world" mentality and carried that mentality through the season and into the NWAACC tourney. After we won the regional championship, there was a ton of businesses and private donors who all of a sudden wanted to help fund the program. Ever since then, it's been funded only by the businesses and donors, and they don't take any money out of the schools athletic fund. I guess it's kind of a pride thing, to know that we saved the baseball program at Lane, even if was just for a few more years. It's just a shame that they have to cut the program now. It doesn't help that the athletic director HATES baseball. I won't go into detail about what I think about him, but anyway they say the reason for cutting the baseball program is because it has the biggest budget. Which is true, but the school is paying for they're budget anyway. Wierd. I guess that's what happens when you have an "anti-baseball" AD. The baseball program is the most successful sport at Lane and they doing away with it. It's very unfortunate. They have to cut a female sport in order to comply with title IX, and they chose volleyball. Hopefully this isn't the year, but if it is, maybe they'll be able to fund it again sometime down the road. The thing that hurts the program with the "well this is the last year" thing, is it turns away recruits when they know they're just gonna have to transfer after one year anyway. We lost 3 first team all-state recruits my last year there.
I stated that last post wrong. I shouldn't say that all club ball is a joke, but Oregon's team was a joke 3 & 4 years ago. I can't imagine that it's improved much, but I could be wrong. Club ball is a good opportunity for some people.
As for where I played, I screwed that up. I recieved my AAS degree in Auto Technology at Lane, and didn't even question the fact that my auto classes weren't going to transfer. Well, I was in the process of transferring to division II Western Oregon University when they informed me that I only had 36 transferable credits and that I needed 72 to be considered a junior. I was going to have to go to school for about a year and a half to get enough transferable credits before I could play ball. I wouldn't have got any scholarship money until I was an eligible junior. Therefore, I was gonna have to pay for a year & a half to two years out of my pocket with a little financial aid. Financially, I just couldn't afford it, so I had to give it up. I kick myself for not looking into what classes would transfer before I started my AAS program, but you live and learn I guess.