Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College (SMWC) President Dottie L. King, Ph.D., announced that SMWC will join five other colleges and universities in the Midwest and Upper South to field a sprint football team starting in fall 2022. This will become the 16th intercollegiate scholarship team at SMWC.
These six private colleges and universities are the charter members of the newly formed, independent athletic conference, the Midwest Sprint Football League (MSFL). The other charter members of the MSFL are Bellarmine University (Kentucky), Calumet College of St. Joseph (Indiana), Fontbonne University (Missouri), Midway University (Kentucky) and Quincy University (Illinois).
President King said about the announcement, “I am so excited for this opportunity! In our planning to launch the new Midwest Sprint Football League, I have been inspired by conversations with each president. Together, we are committed to bringing something special to our institutions, our communities and to the Midwest. We will be offering wonderful educational opportunities to young men with a lot of talent who might not have otherwise been able to play collegiate football because of size regulations.”
Brennan Randolph, who oversees athletics and is vice president for enrollment management and institutional technology, said, “The addition of men’s sprint football will be a great enhancement for the athletic program. Additionally, there will be benefits to the campus, the Wabash Valley community and the collegiate experience for students. It should help increase enrollment, retention and be a big boost to our institutional pride.”
Randolph indicated that a search for a head coach will be launched immediately. “We plan to hire someone that can help us launch this new sport and realize the full potential for SMWC and for the student-athletes.” Recruitment will begin at once with a minimum goal of recruitment of 40 players for the inaugural season.
Sprint football has the same rules as standard American football except players must maintain a weight limit of 178 pounds. King is in discussion with Rob Haworth, Ph.D., superintendent of Vigo County School Corp., about use of the high school football facilities. MSFL games will be held on Saturdays, eliminating conflict with high school football games.
In May 2015, SMWC announced a shift in its mission to include male students in all modalities. That fall, male students became part of the traditional undergraduate programming for the first time in 175 years. Since that announcement, five men’s and a women’s athletic teams have been added. In the fall of 2021, men’s basketball will begin competition, while men’s volleyball is slated for a Fall 2022-23 start.
Sprint football began in 1934 with the current Collegiate Sprint Football League in the East. Unlike conventional collegiate football, the emphasis is on speed and agility rather than body weight and strength. King said, “Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College was part of the first recorded intercollegiate basketball game in Indiana for women in 1920. The SMWC women’s team defeated Indiana State Normal College and were led by ‘stellar player’ Mary Joseph Pomeroy, who became the naming inspiration for the College’s athletics teams. We are excited for this new ‘first’ at The Woods and eager for the new stories and experiences that will result!”
New intercollegiate athletic conference forms for sprint football
For nearly a century, universities on the East Coast have played the varsity sport of sprint football, in which each football player must weigh no more than 178 pounds. Beginning in 2022, sprint football will come to Middle America for the first time.
Six private colleges and universities in the Midwest and Upper South are the charter members of a new, independent athletic conference, the Midwest Sprint Football League (MSFL). Each MSFL member institution will recruit student-athletes to join their new sprint football teams and begin league play in Fall 2022. The charter members of the MSFL are Bellarmine University (Ky.), Calumet College of St. Joseph (Ind.), Fontbonne University (Mo.), Midway University (Ky.), Quincy University (Ill.), and Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College (Ind.).
Sprint football evolved on the East Coast and offers a different approach to playing American football. While NCAA and NAIA football in American athletic competition emphasizes strength and body weight, sprint football values speed and agility. As described by the New York Times, sprint football is known for its “quick players” and its “fast-paced style of play.”
Since 1934, intercollegiate student-athletes have benefitted from participation in sprint football, which currently is organized under the direction of the nine-member Collegiate Sprint Football League (CSFL). The addition of the separate Midwest Sprint Football League, with its own rules and championships, will represent the largest single-year expansion of the sport in nearly 90 years.
“Sprint football will be new to some fans in the Midwest and Upper South, but it won’t take long for our part of the country to get excited about sprint football,” said Nancy Blattner, Ph.D., president of Fontbonne University and founding Chair of the MSFL Board of Governors. “Sprint offers a distinctive and fast-paced approach to playing football at the highest level. Our six member institutions are working together to provide new opportunities to student-athletes, who will take football in our four-state region in a different and inspiring direction.”
“I have been inspired by the cooperation of our six founding institutions in carefully reviewing the opportunities for a new sport in our region,” said Blattner. “Today, we have shown the ability of these colleges and universities to collaborate, to innovate and to act decisively.”
Fontbonne University Vice President for Athletics, Maria Buckel, will serve as the new league founding Commissioner during the 2021-2022 academic year. An independent commissioner will be hired to oversee the first year of varsity competition of completion in August and September 2022.
The rules for sprint football are very similar to those for other forms of intercollegiate, varsity football, as sponsored by the NCAA and NAIA. As in wrestling, each sprint football player must weigh in before games to show they meet the weight limit for play.
“Many American men who are in their late teens and early twenties will qualify to play sprint football, especially if they are under six feet tall,” said Josh Rabe, director of intercollegiate athletics for Quincy University. “The reality for most NCAA and NAIA football programs today is that relatively few of their players are a match for sprint football, given the emphasis of the NCAA and NAIA versions of the sport on strength, height and body weight. Sprint football will make varsity, intercollegiate football available to hundreds of talented players in the Midwest and Upper South who don’t currently have access to a version of the sport that matches their size, quickness and athleticism.”
Sprint football is an intercollegiate, varsity sport not sponsored by the NCAA or NAIA. The founding members of the Midwest Sprint Football League also are affiliated with the NCAA or NAIA. Their MSFL membership and competition in sprint football will be separate from their NCAA and NAIA sports and affiliations.
Five of the six MSFL charter members do not currently sponsor varsity football in NCAA or NAIA competition. The sixth, Quincy University, plays varsity football in NCAA Division II. Beginning in 2022, Quincy University will sponsor both NCAA Division II football and sprint football as two separate teams. Several current CSFL universities, including Cornell University, Alderson Broaddus University, and the U.S. Military Academy, also offer both NCAA football and sprint football as varsity sports.
The expansion of sprint football to the Midwest and Upper South has the support of the universities already sponsoring the sport. “I am excited to see the growth of sprint football in another region of the United States,” said Dan Mara, commissioner of the Collegiate Sprint Football League. “I believe administrators at the Midwest schools will provide leadership to not only enhance the sport, but spark potential growth for sprint football in other parts of the country. The Collegiate Sprint Football League looks forward to working with the Midwest Sprint Football League in providing opportunities for football student-athletes to continue their careers at the collegiate level.”
The skills of sprint players make for a different approach to the game, with unique strategies and playcalling. According to one former sprint player for the University of Pennsylvania, sprint can be “more exciting” than other forms of football. In sprint football, as one example, the weight limit for players means that “a defensive lineman has the ability to run down a tailback.”
Generations of former sprint football players have gone on to successful careers in the military, in business, in non-profit organizations, in law and medicine and in politics. U.S. President Jimmy Carter is the most famous of the former Republican and Democratic politicians who were sprint football players.
The members of the MSFL have much more in common than sprint football. Five of the six charter members of the MSFL are Catholic institutions. The sixth, Midway University, is affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). In addition to their shared commitment to Christian higher education, the MSFL institutions embrace the value of the liberal arts. The MSFL institutions also recognize the academic advantages of small classes and highly individualized instruction emphasizing small classes and intense faculty mentoring of students.
“With the MSFL, we have a group of universities with common values and a deep commitment to the intellectual and spiritual development of each student,” said Dottie King, Ph.D., President of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College. “At SMWC, we believe sprint football will be an outstanding addition to our 15 existing varsity sports and will create opportunities for students who are not well served by most existing intercollegiate football programs.”
Fontbonne University President Nancy Blattner formerly was president of Caldwell University in New Jersey, which sponsors sprint football in the East Coast’s CSFL. She initiated the conversation about sprint football among a group of college and university presidents and athletic directors, which led to the formation of the new MSFL.