Buffalo State (NCAA D3) Cuts Men’s & Women’s Swimming & Diving Programs

NCAA Division III school Buffalo State Univerity in Buffalo, New York has eliminated its varsity men’s and women’s swimming & diving programs, effectively immediately.

The school’s brief announcement on the topic did not give a specific reason for the decision, saying that it came “following a lengthy review of the sustainability of the programs.”

“This difficult decision does not diminish the many significant past contributions of the swimming and diving student-athletes and coaches who have played such an important role in the history of Buffalo State Athletics.”

The school did provide SwimSwam with a list of FAQs, though, that expanded upon the decision.

The school says that the 6-lane, 25-yard on campus Kissinger Pool will remain open through the next academic year, at which point “a complete facilities assessment will be completed to determine the direction of that facility moving forward.”

They expanded on the decision by saying that there were “concerns over impeding maintenance expenses to ensure the viability of the aquatics facility.” Facility deficits and costs have been cited as part of the decision making in a number of recent collegiate program eliminations.

The school also said that “decreasing participation trends at the high school level and the increasing challenge associated with fielding competitive rosters that meet NCAA sport sponsorship minimums.”

According to the NFHS, high school swimming & diving participation rates, like most sports, fell coming out of the pandemic; however, swimming & diving participation rates also fell from the 2017-2018 to 2018-2019 seasons, the last pre-pandemic data available.

USA Swimming membership numbers have also fallen.

Buffalo State has a long history in the sport. For the men’s team, that includes NCAA All-Americans as far back as the 1960s, before the NCAA was split into different divisions.

The men’s team has generally had more success than the women’s team: the men have scored at the NCAA Division III Championships five times, including most recently in 2018, when they placed 28th. The women’s team scored just once, in 1982.

At the 2023 SUNYAC Championships, the women’s team finished 7th out of 9 teams, while the men finished 9th out of 9 teams with 33 points. The next-lowest scoring program was SUNY Fredonia with 170 points.

The men’s team currently lists only four swimmers, all underclassmen, while the women’s team lists 11. There is also only one diver listed on the team, Hailey Hankinson, who also swam for the Bengals.

The team’s rosters never recovered after COVID. The program had 12 men and 13 women in the 2018-2019 season, though the men’s squad began to retract a little even before the pandemic.

Mike Kroll was the head coach of Buffalo State for the last five seasons. He had previous stops as the first-ever head coach at D3 school Manchester University in Indiana for the prior four seasons, two years as an assistant coach and aquatics director at D3 Ohio Wesleyan, and two years as the head coach and aquatics director at Genessee Community College.

The move comes just months after the school officially changed its name from Buffalo State College to Buffalo State University as part of an effort to enhance the school’s brand, especially among international students. The school’s fall 2022 undergraduate enrollment of 5,464 is a 11.1% decrease from fall 2021. That is part of a dramatic downward trend in the school’s enrollment which was over 9,300 in fall of 2014.

The move to cut the program bucks the trend of colleges outside of NCAA Division I adding swimming & diving programs as part of an effort to attract students.

Buffalo State still sponsors 7 men’s and 10 women’s varsity sports, including a football team. Federal data shows that the varsity athletes made up 347 of the school’s undergraduate enrollment, or about 6.5%. Of those 347 student-athletes, only 37.8% were female, as compared to about 57.8% of the student body. The move to eliminate swimming programs seems to put the school further out of compliance with the first two prongs of Title IX – proportionality and history & continuing practice of program expansion, especially with the number of impacted women’s athletes being much higher than the number of men’s athletes.

That leaves only the third prong, accommodating student interests, as a path to Title IX compliance.

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greenknightflame
1 year ago

Feel terrible for the athletes and coaches. I am sure this is all happening while administrators are still getting their annual pay increases and bonuses. I can also only imagine how much money it’s costing the university to do all this “rebranding” to BSU. I hope one day schools actually use money for the wellness of the students, and not their personal gains.

Also, Mike Kroll is one of the greatest people I’ve ever met and has an unmatched love for the sport. I hope another school who values this gives him an opportunity.

Coach
1 year ago

There are too many d3 programs in a similar position. Roster numbers in the low single digits per gender. Not sure what the solution is; I’ve always felt there’s a place in college swimming for anyone who wants it but there also needs to be coaches willing to go looking to fill those spaces!

Last edited 1 year ago by Coach
SwimCoachDad
1 year ago

Once SUNY schools dump programs, they don’t usually bring them back. And for the state colleges in the SUNYAC like Buff State (regardless of what they call themselves), the costs of athletic teams is difficult to fund on $7000 tuition. The private colleges have a much more sustainable financial model for sports.

KSW
1 year ago

F.

1 year ago

Generally not many pools to swim at in the Buffalo area. The local population does not have great access to learn. This cut is not good for the swimming community and the Buffalo area.

Last edited 1 year ago by [email protected]
lil swimmy jr.
Reply to  [email protected]
1 year ago

I would disagree. Buffalo holds some of the biggest competitions each year in the state of New York. They have both right downtown the ECC natatorium and UB’s natatorium. Though it might not be the best access for local residents you can’t say that it will be that big of an impact on the local swim community. The Buff sate pool will still be open and will most likely still do lessons and club practices.

Reply to  lil swimmy jr.
1 year ago

Outside of UB and Buffalo St there are not many pools in the area. Amherst closed the Rec center pool and Tonawanda recently closed a pool. Where does the general population learn how to swim? They do not go to a university to learn how to swim.

Big Ben
Reply to  lil swimmy jr.
1 year ago

As a swimmer in upstate NY for college who came from the DMV which has an actual swim culture, I can assure you that swimming is a joke up here. The amount of “oh that’s a sport” I’ve gotten is wild.

Where I grew up 80% of my high school class swam competitively at one point or another. Here, maybe 5%.

grizzled bastard
1 year ago

My daughter goes there. She said the admin whines about money constantly and word is the school is losing a lot of money financially. So this is very sad but not surprising. Their football team is awful and for some reason they keep them.

Noah F
1 year ago

Swam there a couple times in college. Nice pool, good kids and great coach. It’s a shame with UB cutting men a few years ago and now Buff State losing their whole program. Not good for swimming in the area.

Former UB swimmer
Reply to  Noah F
1 year ago

I swam at UB just before they cut their program, and had close friends at Buff state who swam too. This is a huge loss to the swimming community, and a sad trend to see continue. My heart goes out to all the athletes, after losing my team…my family, I don’t want anybody else to have to go through that.

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Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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