NEW
YORK, N.Y. –
The Towson University football program will be featured as part of a report on
college football, scheduled to air on the November 18 edition of the CBS-TV
program, “60 Minutes.”
The most successful news program in
television history, “60 Minutes” airs on CBS-TV on Sunday evenings at 7:00 p.m.
(EDT).
When the Towson football team
travelled to Louisiana State University in late September, CBS reporter Armen Keteyian and his crew accompanied
the team. They conducted numerous interviews as part of their story on college
football.
Before and after the game against LSU,
Keteyian interviewed Coach Rob Ambrose,
Director of Athletics Mike Waddell
and several players. Facing one of the top major college football teams in the
nation, Towson was a decided underdog when the teams met on Sept. 29.
However, Towson gained national
notoriety with its gutty performance against LSU. Towson actually took a 9-7
lead in the second quarter before eventually dropping a 38-22 decision.
Towson's 22 points scored are the most
allowed by LSU this season. LSU currently has an 8-2 record and is ranked
eighth in the nation.
According to the story preview, there
is no recession when it comes to big-time college football, where hundreds of
millions are spent to renovate stadiums, stealth fighters are hired to
entertain fans and head coaches can make several million dollars a year.
That's because football programs have become critical tools in a race to raise
revenues, bolster images and ultimately, win bowl games and championships that
will attract more students and better players next year.
The University of Michigan Wolverines
play in a 112,000-seat stadium, the biggest in the country and recently
renovated to the tune of $226 million. The school is a perennial power, but
Michigan's Athletic Director Dave
Brandon tells Keteyian you can never sit still in what many call an arms
race. “If you don't keep pace, if you don't stay competitive, you're going to
have a problem.”
With the revenue from the football
program paying for 75 percent of all the other sports programs under him at the
40,000-student public university, Brandon has a huge responsibility. “We're
going to have excited fans, we're going to fill stadiums, we're going to be on
TV. We're going to accomplish all the goals that we need to accomplish to keep
this department moving ahead,” says Brandon, who once hired a stealth fighter
to fly over Michigan's stadium to fire up the crowd.
Brandon's work paid off in spades
recently. His team was picked by ESPN to play a televised, season
debut game against the Alabama Crimson Tide a few months ago. Alabama has
the ideal football program and one of the country's highest-paid coaches in Nick Saban, who makes more than $5
million per year.
Is he worth it asks Keteyian?
“Probably not,” says Saban with a
laugh. “But I think the other side of that is you almost have to look at what
return has there been on that investment.” Alabama has won two national
championships in three years and profits have nearly tripled since he took the
job in 2007.
The Alabama-Michigan game was viewed
on television by millions. It stoked interest in the coming seasons of both
teams, selling tickets and merchandise. It burnished images of big, successful
universities potential students could be proud to attend. It's the kind
of reality that's only a dream for other schools, but still an essential goal
for many of them, like Towson University in Maryland.
Towson is about half the size of
schools like Michigan and Alabama and plays in a subdivision of Division I in
the National Collegiate Athletic Association. It's good football, but not
in a league with Alabama, Michigan or another powerhouse, Louisiana State
University. But when the Towson Tigers were asked to play LSU in a televised
match, a certain loss, the team saw a win-win situation.
Not only did the game mean a
guaranteed $500,000 from LSU – money to seed scholarships for future
players and to improve facilities, among other things to pump its program up –
but a chance at national and historic exposure.
“They'll be more people watching this
game tonight than perhaps have ever watched anything to do with Towson
University in our history, going back 146 years,” says its Athletic Director
Mike Waddell.
The Tigers kept it close until the
second half and lost 38-22 in what could be considered a very respectable
showing and a single step up the ladder towards elite, big-time status
someday. Says Waddell, “You couldn't buy this type of an advertisement
nationally.”
A Towson graduate, Bill Owens, '88, is the executive
producer of “60 Minutes.”