NCAA News: 'Chargers Discover New Haven in Northeast-10'
By Gary Brown, NCAA NEWS
New Haven Athletics Director Debbie Chin is a pack rat when it
comes to sports equipment. It’s a good thing, too, because
when the school announced in 2003 that it was discontinuing
football, she had a sneaking suspicion that the decision
wasn’t permanent.
So she stuffed all the jerseys, pants, helmets, pads, blocking
sleds, kicking nets and everything else into a trailer out back.
Sure enough, four years later, Chin was able to unlock a new era of
New Haven football when the school declared that its membership in
the Northeast-10 Conference had facilitated a return to the
gridiron.
It’s an interesting full circle for Chin, who had to fill a
football coaching vacancy as one of her first duties as New
Haven’s brand-new AD in 1993. She didn’t do so badly
back then, luring New Haven alum and future Miami Dolphins coach
Tony Sparano. He didn’t do so badly, either, taking the
Chargers to the 1997 Division II championship game before heading
to the pros.
But as an independent Division II team since 1982, New Haven had
difficulty scheduling games. The Chargers made their living –
albeit an expensive one – traveling to California, Oregon,
Washington, Texas, New Mexico, Minnesota and North Dakota to get a
competitive Division II schedule. “The Pennsylvania and West
Virginia conferences gave us one or two games per year, but beyond
that, we were out of region,” Chin said.
Not surprisingly, the school cited budget challenges as among
reasons for dropping the sport. Chin said standing before the
student-athletes and telling them their program was being dropped
“was the worst thing I had to do in my professional
career.”
But it wasn’t long before alumni and other interests began
clamoring for the popular sport’s return. “It’s
just not the same having homecoming around your soccer
games,” Chin said. But not only that, the football void
created others – students weren’t participating in the
football-related entertainment activities on Saturday or Friday
nights, and the sense of community football had created was
missing.
Without a conference, though, the same problems that took the sport
down in the first place would remain. That’s when talks with
the Northeast-10 escalated. That coincided with Division II
implementing an “earned-access” policy for championship
selection that emphasized in-region play against Division II
nonconference teams. The union between New Haven and the
Northeast-10 satisfied needs for both parties.
New Haven begins play as a member of the league in sports other
than football this fall. The Chargers assume football membership
beginning in fall 2009.
Chin already has hired a head coach – former Albany (New
York) assistant Peter Rossomando – and a staff that already
has recruited more than 50 student-athletes. They’ll
scrimmage the Yale junior varsity among contests this fall.
Which means they’ll be using some of the equipment Chin had
the foresight to save.
“I never got rid of any of it,” she said. “We
were barraged by people who knew we had dropped the program and
were asking for us to donate the equipment, but I kept it.
“And now we’ve opened that trailer.”


























