Sept. 2, 2010
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. -
By David Pickle, NCAA.org
A bit of NCAA history will move closer to reality this weekend - and it will not occur within the United States.
Soccer, women's volleyball and football teams from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, begin the 2010 season in their second year of Division II candidacy. When the process is complete at least two years from now, Simon Fraser will be the first institution from outside the U.S. and its territories to compete as a full-fledged NCAA member.
Most of the attention this weekend will focus on Saturday's Great Northwest Athletic Conference football game with Western Oregon on SFU's campus in Burnaby, British Columbia, where the transition continues to be a big deal.
Athletics Director David Murphy said Simon Fraser's move has been chronicled in Sports Illustrated, described by the Associated Press and featured on TSN, the Canadian equivalent of ESPN. The local newspapers are writing it up, and the Burnaby Sports Hall of Fame has gotten in the spirit, having requested memorabilia from the Western Oregon game.
"We've really got a lot of mileage out of this for sure," said Murphy, who looks forward to contributing to an important chapter in Simon Fraser history.
"It means a heck of a lot, actually," Murphy said. "We're actually going back to our founders' dream of playing in the NCAA like they always expected us to do. So it's a dream realized."
Although competition begins this week, the football experience will not take on a more American feel until September 11. That's because this Saturday's games will precede the return of the Simon Fraser student body for the 2010-11 school year. So, most of the hoopla will be reserved for the second game against Eastern Oregon.
"We're planning an American type of rally," Murphy said. "We have a big what we call Convo Mall and we'll have a pep rally - things that we haven't done before with the Canadian competitions. We'll make a very special event out of it."
The experience is also special for Western Oregon, which has the honor of being the first international opponent in a Great Northwest Athletic Conference football game.
"One thing I've been trying to trumpet with our conference," said Western Oregon Athletics Director Daniel Hare, "is that we're able to provide our student-athletes with an experience where they get to travel to Alaska, Washington, Montana, Idaho and now up into Canada and how important it is for a collegiate experience to be able to see the different kinds of cultures. Things like that are really, really exciting for us."
Back at Burnaby, the transition has Simon Fraser's Murphy looking at the big picture and details alike almost non-stop.
"We really got stung badly on the recruiting side because we got jerked out of the Canadian league a year early," he said. "But on the other hand, it made us become administratively compliant (with Division II) quicker, and it really worked out very, very well."
Perhaps the bigger challenge in the near term is dealing with the details of matching up with the NCAA on matters such as officiating. It doesn't always go smoothly.
"There have been some hiccups, there's no question," he said. "We just had the volleyball group up here to introduce the differences in some rules and the calls and the scoring and everything with the officials here, which went extremely well. But there are a lot of little things that you don't think about.
"Just before you called, I came in from the football field. We had to move our goalpost back to reconfigure back to the Americans dimensions. Things like that you just never think of...all the minutiae where you have to make sure of game-day protocol and make sure it's up to scratch."
With all of the challenges, Murphy occasionally must remind himself to enjoy the experience.
"It is a very special time in our lives up here," he said. "We're really right in the middle of the forest right now with everything that's associated with being in the NCAA as a newbie, and sometimes you forget what a big deal it is."
International crossing borders on a challenge
By David Pickle, NCAA.org
The Simon Fraser University athletics program may face a multitude of issues as it moves toward becoming the NCAA's first international member, but the Canadian institution may be advantaged in one area: border crossings.
Teams from Simon Fraser have competed in the United States for so long that crossing the border at Blaine, Washington, is almost second nature for them.
"It all depends on what's going on at the border on that particular day," said Simon Fraser Athletics Director David Murphy. "I've been there when you just breeze right through and then there are other days where there might be some sort of alert on. But generally speaking, when they see a busload of SFU student-athletes, they kind of know what the deal is. We've been doing it since 1965, so we've got a lot of experience going across that border."
That's not as true for their American counterparts, including Western Oregon, which plays at Simon Fraser this Saturday.
Asked whether he expects the crossing to go smoothly for his football team this weekend, Western Oregon AD Daniel Hare joked: "Well, I guess we'll find out tomorrow!"
Kidding aside, Hare said that he and other administrators have carefully considered how the crossing will be accomplished.
"We've been dealing with that quite a bit and trying to get as much information as we can about the border crossing," he said. "Obviously we're trying to get all of our kids with passports.
"With international student-athletes (an issue in sports other than football), we're trying to make sure that they have all their paperwork so, most importantly, they can get back in to the country after they leave."
In fact, Hare said the return is his biggest concern.
"It's one thing to call Mom and say your kid couldn't play in the game and it's another to call and say he can't get back in the country," he said. "So that's a big one for me."
Hare said coaches and administrators will take what they learn from this trip and use it as the template for other Western Oregon teams that will travel to Simon Fraser this year.
The team will not be the only Americans heading north this weekend.
"I know a number of our fans are making the trip," Hare said. "It's sort of a mini-vacation to go to the Vancouver area, especially over the Labor Day holiday weekend. So there is a lot of excitement about that."
Western Oregon already has a popular game ("The Battle in Seattle") scheduled annually against Central Washington at Seattle's Qwest Field.
"I think the game with Simon Fraser can turn into another game like that for our fans," Hare said. "It's very drivable for us. So, yes, there are all sorts of possibilities."