MVCfans wrote:Gregg Doyel wrote a piece yesterday that I found interesting. Places blame on UIC, not the Horizon League. Unfortunately, it doesn't really matter because it's the student athletes who lose in the end.
Meanwhile, remember this: The Horizon League changed its bylaws in 2013, reducing the required notice to leave the conference without penalty from two years to one, but adding the conference tournament ineligibility component. That bylaw was approved in a unanimous vote, including a “yay” by then-UIC Chancellor Paula Allen-Meares, but only after someone presented the new bylaw in a motion to the Horizon's board.
And remember this: In 2013 the adult in the room who made the motion – the one preventing UIC athletes from competing in Horizon League championships in 2022 – was the chancellor at UIC.
https://www.indystar.com/story/sports/c ... 740655001/
I realize this is a nuanced discussion and the Horizon league is going to spin it their way, but the issue isn't that there are penalties for withdrawing without the required amount of notice.
The issue is the Horizon league is choosing to enforce a punitive punishment. Their bylaws do not mandate without exception that a school be kicked out of the League Championship. The Horizon League, via a vote by its Presidents, chose to kick them out of the championships.
Regardless of who made a motion about a rule in a meeting, the reality is all the Horizon League needed to do to mitigate any potential damages was to enforced the $500,000 penalty for early withdrawal.
That money is designed to offset any "damages" that they suffer. Anything else is punitive and petty.
UIC isn't without responsibility here. They know what sort of snake they're dealing with and should have known (hell, they probably did know) it was coming.