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Virtual University Getting A Piece of Athletic Action - Brief Article
Black Issues in Higher Education
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October 26, 2000
FRANKFORT, KY.
Kentucky Virtual University, the state's electronic portal to a higher education without lecture halls, dorms or bad cafeteria food, has a sports franchise.
There are already T-shirts from the KVU Athletic Department, and there will be a logo after its selection by an online poll of KVU students.
The next thing you know, the KVU @vengers will probably want state funding for a football stadium. Or they'll try to get investigated by the NCAA.
Actually, the @vengers are a huge success. They started the season 2-0 and already have generated interest and enthusiasm among the far-flung virtual U students and staff.
"We're just trying to have a little bit of fun and raise the awareness of distance-learning opportunities," says Sue Patrick, a spokeswoman for Kentucky Virtual University.
The @vengers help create a sense of sharing and community among the online learners, Patrick says.
The idea was hatched in early 1999 when a publication facetiously suggested that if Virtual U really wanted to be accepted in Kentucky, it needed a mascot and probably a basketball team.
Mary Beth Susman -- all 5-foot-nothing of her -- is @venger coach, head cheerleader and chief executive officer of Kentucky Virtual University. She grabbed the idea of a mascot and ran with it.
There are five other "real" teams in the league -- virtual learning institutions at Michigan, New Hampshire, Old Dominion, Texas and Magellan. Old Dominion adopted the Monarchs, which is the name for its real teams. Michigan
went with MegaRams; Texas is MegaHertz.
To fill out the league, six other schools were invented.
The computer simulation games are played every Saturday and game reports are compiled and sent to Virtual U students. A Web site keeps track of the league, complete with statistics. There will be a full 11-game schedule, then a Virtual Bowl to crown the league champion.
Real Virtual U students lent their names -- some real, some e-mail addresses or nicknames -- to players for the @vengers. There were no in-home recruiting visits or scholarships, though apparently some of the players already have suggested that would be a great idea.
This is not big-time college athletics. Virtual U paid $3,000 to the public relations director at Swarthmore College to run the fantasy football league and is getting most of that back from the other five participating schools.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Cox, Matthews & Associates
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group
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