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Arkansas reinstates tennis programs 20 days after announcing they'd be cut

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The Athletic
2026/05/14 - 19:12 501 مشاهدة
AlabamaArizonaBYUGeorgiaGeorgia TechHoustonIndianaIowaJames MadisonMiami (FL)MichiganNorth TexasNotre DameOhio StateOklahomaOle MissOregonTexas A&MTexasTexas TechTulaneUSCUtahVanderbiltVirginiaScores & ScheduleStandingsPodcastsNewsletterRecruitingOddsPicksBest Portal Classes2026 CFB PredictionsEarly Top 25Transfer QB RankingsArkansas reinstates tennis programs 20 days after announcing they’d be cutArkansas originally announced the tennis programs would be discontinued on April 24, citing a shifting college sports landscape. Steve Roberts Share article1The University of Arkansas announced Thursday that it will reinstate its men’s and women’s tennis programs effective immediately, less than three weeks after the Razorbacks discontinued the varsity sports following the 2026 season. The university credited short-term funding donations as the reason for reversing its decision. “Following extensive analysis and in alignment with our strategic priorities, we made the difficult decision earlier this spring to discontinue our men’s and women’s tennis programs,” Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek said in a statement. “Since that announcement, we have engaged in meaningful dialogue with stakeholders, including alumni and donors, to explain our rationale and listen to their concerns. We are thankful for our generous donors who have stepped forward in recent days with commitments to provide short-term funding for both programs. While this support does not represent a permanent solution, it offers a viable path forward.” Arkansas originally announced the tennis programs would be discontinued on April 24, citing a shifting college sports landscape in the wake of last summer’s House v. NCAA settlement, which allowed for universities to begin paying college athletes directly through annual revenue sharing. With most of that money and other name, image and likeness (NIL) compensation going to athletes in revenue-generating sports such as football and basketball, the growing financial burden led Arkansas to cut tennis, which had a combined annual budget of roughly $2.5 million. Yurachek acknowledged the economic challenges for Razorbacks tennis moving forward. “Looking ahead, a significant endowment remains the only feasible long-term solution to ensure the sustainability of our tennis programs. A dedicated group of supporters has committed to pursuing that goal,” Yurachek said. “Over the next year, the Department of Athletics and the Razorback Foundation will closely monitor the progress of this endowment effort — ensuring it does not detract from any of our broader fundraising priorities and confirming that significant progress is being made to acquire the necessary funds for the tennis programs’ long-term sustainability past this initial investment.” The new financial structure under the House settlement has led to several Division I universities eliminating or reducing funding for dozens of non-revenue sports over the past year, most at low- and mid-major schools. Louisiana-Monroe discontinued women’s tennis last year, and Washington State made cuts to its track and field programs, among others. Marshall University similarly discontinued its women’s swimming program before reinstating it this past March. In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Stanford planned to cut 11 men’s and women’s varsity sports before electing to continue sponsoring them in May 2021. Federal Title IX regulations factor into these decisions, which require a university’s athletic scholarship and participation opportunities for male and female athletes to mirror the ratio of the school’s student body. During the pandemic, the University of Iowa eliminated four sports: men’s and women’s swimming and diving, men’s gymnastics and men’s tennis. The impacted female athletes sued Iowa, which was found to be non-compliant with Title IX. At the time, men comprised 45 percent of Iowa students but had 54 percent of its athletic scholarships. A settlement required Iowa to reinstate women’s swimming and diving, plus add a second women’s sport, wrestling. Iowa still dropped the three men’s sports, and now 54 percent of its athletes are female. Thus far, power-conference schools have been more resistant to cutting sports as a result of the House settlement, but Arkansas’ discontinuing of tennis signaled that even the richest programs are not immune to financial stresses. The search for new and increased revenue streams is at the heart of private equity and private capital interests within college athletics, a factor in the recent expansion of the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments and possibly the College Football Playoff. It’s also part of the ongoing political lobbying and debate regarding potential Congressional intervention in the future of college sports. —The Athletic’s Scott Dochterman contributed reporting Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms
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