The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Fewer programs leaving campus for camps

- By Steve Megargee

Wisconsin offensive lineman Trey Wedig’s challenges in his first week of preseason camp weren’t limited to creating running room and protecting his quarterbac­k.

The Badgers’ dormitory accommodat­ions at the University of WisconsinP­latteville also meant the 6-foot-7 Wedig had to figure out how to sleep comfortabl­y in a twin XL-sized bed.

“My feet are hanging off or hitting that wooden frame,” Wedig said. “I sleep diagonally so I don’t hit that wooden frame.”

The Badgers spent a week working out in Plattevill­e, about 70 miles from Wisconsin’s Madison campus. New Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell got the idea to train out of town from his coaching tenure at Cincinnati, which is spending a 25th straight year practicing about 30 miles from campus at Higher Ground Conference & Retreat Center in West Harrison, Indiana.

Schools that train out of town rave about how isolating themselves from campus builds camaraderi­e that can carry a team through the grind of a season. Fickell said after his team’s final practice in Plattevill­e that “there’s no doubt” he’d want to make this trip again.

“They really enjoyed it,” Fickell said. “They’ve asked several times about, ‘Can we stay here for another week?’ … I’m the same way. If we could stay here another week, I’d love it.”

Wisconsin and Cincinnati are among a shrinking number of programs training off campus.

Of the 93 Football Bowl

Subdivisio­n programs that responded to an Associated Press survey, only Cincinnati, Wisconsin, Arizona State and Florida State are holding portions of training camp outside the city in which their campus is located and having at least one overnight stay. Ten years ago, 14 different schools spent at least part of the preseason working out of town.

That list of 14 schools included Northweste­rn, which has permanentl­y discontinu­ed its training camp in Kenosha, Wisconsin, which had been an annual tradition since 1992. Some of the hazing allegation­s that led to the firing of Northweste­rn coach Pat Fitzgerald and the filing of at least a dozen lawsuits stem from those Kenosha camps.

Brian Crow, who has researched hazing while chairing the department of sport management, hospitalit­y and tourism at Slippery Rock University, says it’s encouragin­g to see fewer teams leaving campus for preseason workouts.

“I believe there is a correlatio­n to more bad behavior the further from campus they are,” Crow said.

Elizabeth Allan, a University of Maine professor of higher education, conducted a 2018 study with colleague Mary Madden in which 57.1% of students reported hazing was most likely to happen off campus.

Allan noted her survey wasn’t limited to athletes and didn’t collect data specifical­ly focusing on off-campus training sites like the one in Kenosha, so it couldn’t determine whether there was any indication these types of camps increased the risk of hazing.

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