The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

O-Issue 2012: Varsity sports

No stadiums, no prime-time television contracts, but all the competitive spirit you could desire
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Jordan Larson

There are no athletic scholarships at the University of Chicago. There are no five-star recruits and there is no “Big House.” Saturdays are reserved for studying as much as they are for football, and replica jerseys rarely fill the stands. Yet the U of C is an institution that produces legitimately high athletic competition and the Maroons are represented by stellar athletic play, week in and week out.

The University of Chicago boasts one of the nation’s finest Division III athletic programs. The Maroons have produced eight UAA Championship teams over the past three years—for those unfamiliar the UAA, or the University Athletic Association, is the University of Chicago’s athletic conference, much like the SEC or the Big Ten, except it is composed of schools more along the lines of Carnegie Mellon and Wash U. The most recent U of C conference champ is the women’s tennis team, which took the UAA championship before finishing second overall at NCAA’s last year.

Of course Division III is by no means Division I. We are not Michigan or Alabama. We aren’t even Bowling Green. The athletes you have in your classes will often be more exceptional in the classroom than they are on the playing field, but considering they have the capability to study at a school like the U of C, that’s nothing to look down upon. And this doesn’t stop the Maroons from getting their fair share of highlights—see You Tube for recently graduated basketball guard Matt Johnson’s buzzer beater, which managed to crack ESPN’s “Top 10 Plays” last year.

Make no mistake about it; athletes at the University of Chicago were some of the best, if not the best, athletes in their high schools. They were All-Conference and All-State. They won rings and state titles. They were heavily recruited at the level they play and they are merely a half second too slow or two inches too short for “big time” college ball. This creates for some extremely competitive athletic teams that may not be at the level of what you might see on ABC Saturday afternoons, but are still way too skilled to pass up the opportunity to watch compete on a weekly basis.

All of this athletic talent being regarded with such little recognition makes our varsity student-athletes that much more unique. They are not playing for fame, for perks, or because they are bound to their sport by a scholarship. Athletes here don’t play for the sold-out stadiums or the recognition that comes with it. And pretty much everyone will be going pro in something other than sports.

Instead, the reason U of C athletes compete is because they love the game and because they were presented with an incredible opportunity to continue playing at a high level—an opportunity they couldn’t pass up.

So, if there is anything off about U of C athletics, it’s when Stagg Field, the football stadium, or Ratner, the basketball arena, are not filled to the brim with the student population supporting the teams that represent them.

Taking into account the early morning hours at which they wake up to practice, the hours upon hours spent watching film and in the gym, and the late nights spent trying to compensate for time spent training instead of studying, athletes on this campus deserve to see you out there on game day.

So the next time you see a Maroon athlete in one of your classes, give him a “Good game,” or a “See you out there Saturday,” because even though the stadium may only hold a few thousand, U of C athletes deserve every one of those seats filled.

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