“Terrible”: Track and Field Community Heartbroken by Latest Setback While NCAA Settlement Fallout Hits the Sport

After Friday night, the college sports landscape changed forever. With the $2.8 B NCAA vs House settlement officially approved, some drastic changes were brought in, leaving many skeptical. With athletic departments now having to share revenue, what will happen to the sports that make less money? Will basketball and football always get the edge? Or will it be doomsday for sports like tennis and track and field that, at times, bring neither revenue nor TV exposure? Well, some of these fears might just be coming true…

Something really concerning has come to light, and many track and field fans are wondering if this is the start of the fall of college sports. Some decisions were anticipated to keep the new revenue-sharing idea in check. Like reducing scholarships or cutting down costs wherever feasible, especially in the non-revenue sports domains. But none expected something this monumental to happen so soon after the decision…

On June 17, Chris Chavez, the founder of a track and field podcast, provided an update through X that shocked many to their cores. He informed that Washington State announced on June 16 that it will be shifting to a “distance-focused approach” and “field events (e.g., jumps, throws) will no longer be supported, effective immediately.” Not just this, even the sprint and hurdling opportunities will have a cap, reducing them to a limit going forward.

This step led to some serious reactions from the track and field fans. One of them straight up said, “That is terrible.” While another one gave a sarcastic nudge, “Welcome to the revenue-sharing era.”

While Washington State announced that they will be moving to this approach, they also notified that they will still honor the program cut-impacted students with scholarships. However, looks like this is too little to keep the track and field fans assured.

Track and Field fans were unable to digest this news

Reacting to this sudden blow, a track and field fan wrote, “Really bummed about this. Always enjoyed hurdling against the Cougs. Shoutout CJ Allen, Jesh Anderson!!” While they made sure to give a shoutout to their favorites, there’s a total of 30 athletes impacted by this call, 15 from each men’s and women’s teams, which is no small number.

Another fan commented, “The negative side of NIL nobody wants to talk about smh.” Well, after this and with the recent developments around NIL, the transfer portal, and the House vs. NCAA settlement approval, it’s only fair if track and field programs across the country brace for impact.

But it’s not just the aftermath of the NCAA settlement. This may have also been a strategic move adopted by Washington State University. One of the fans broke this down well. They said, “I understand the move. Way better shots at scoring in distance events (foreign recruits, getting a nice transfer) vs recruiting/developing good sprinters. S–ks but folks be in win now mode.”

Well, it may not be a coincidence that this step comes after WSU’s distance program peaked to some serious success this season. There was a sophomore named Evans Kurui, who recorded the fastest 10,000-meter run in the country and finished fifth at nationals in the event. But, whatever may have caused this decision, it truly is a big concern for track and field as a sport as the sport’s future is put at stake!

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