Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.
Why are you lumping together DII and DIII? There is a massive difference between the two of them.
I don't believe you about playing for a small DII school that had a winning record against Purdue. Now, it's possible they did lose to D2 schools, but the odds that you happened to play on a team that was consistently playing them and beating them more than you lost is pretty remarkably low. If you want to say what school you played for then I can check into it further and see. College baseball records are pretty poor for the 1960s though.
The Hawk wrote:
In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.
Most of those schools are begging kids to play there. It is basically a club sport.
WE played Purdue quite a bit in what you might call pre-season games. They were just a short distance from my school. And our "games' were pretty competitive. Our official "season" with them only included one game. What was terrific fun for me is that two guys I played high school with played for Purdue for a few years. They were Hank Suerth 1B and P and Frank Ganzer SS. We'd get together after the games at some bars outside Purdue. Purdue back then didn't have a very good baseball program but was a big D1 school and our coach loved the competition.
Our conference which was then called the ICC(Indiana Collegiate Conference) did have a decent record against Purdue. When I played, the conference had Ball State, Butler, Valparaiso, Evansville and Indiana State in it which were much bigger schools. I was actually offered a scholarship to Butler but decided that I'd get a better chance to play at St. Joes. It was a pretty good little athletic conference back then with the bigger schools leaving sometime in the late 70's or so.