Why doesn’t AACC have varsity football team?
November 1, 2017
The final game of AACC’s old football team ended in 1989 with a parking lot brawl after a semester of poor athletic performance and academic controversy.
A streak of losses began for the Pioneers—AACC Athletics’ nickname before it became the Riverhawks—with a dramatic 55-0 loss to Montgomery College in 1988. Some observers accused Montgomery of deliberately running up the score, and 15 players walked off AACC’s Pioneers team on the spot.
The Pioneers never recovered.
In the following two seasons, the Pioneers went 0-7, ending with a crushing, 21-7 loss to Westchester Community College of Pennsylvania in fall 1989.
According to Campus Crier—then the name of AACC’s student newspaper—after the final game, players from both teams brawled for about 20 seconds before coaches could break up the fight.
No one was injured, but fans visiting from Baltimore attacked a Westchester fan in the parking lot, beating him so badly he went to the hospital.
Current Women’s Basketball coach Lionell Makell applied for the daunting job of head football coach that year, even as the program was under review for cancelation.
He told Campus Current that AACC officials said they were disbanding the team because the junior college football league only included one other team at the time, and the cost of insurance was too high.
But in an interview with The Anne Arundel County Sun in June 1990, Dr. Raymond Turner, an economics professor and chair of the committee that decided the AACC football team’s fate, said, “As far as money is concerned, it had very little to do with the decision. … [Football] wasn’t contributing to academic success.”
In 1985, the team had dropped from varsity to club status because the poor grades of the athletes made the program ineligible for varsity status under the rules of the National Junior College Athletic Association.
According to Campus Crier, a March 1986 academic report said 69 percent of football players had a GPA below 2.0 for the semester, and nearly a quarter had an average of 0.0.
The following year, the college instituted a program to encourage and monitor academic performance of athletes, but the GPA of the football team’s athletes remained low.
Thomas Florestano, AACC’s president at the time, told The Anne Arundel County Sun in a 1990 interview the team’s disbandment was “inevitable,” but not something he looked forward to.
“Scheduling games and finding teams that we could compete with was becoming more and more difficult each season,” he said. “[But] I, myself, am a big football fan, and I’m sure I’m going to hear it [for dropping football] from a lot of my friends.”
The Pioneers ended their record at 69-89-2 over the course of two decades.
Allen Cuffia • Dec 9, 2018 at 9:10 AM
I happened to stumble across this year-old article because I was always curious “why” AACC dropped its football program. I was a member of the 1986 and 1988 AACC football teams and I was on the team that loss to Montgomery-Rockville (who was ranked in the Top Ten among junior colleges that year). It wasn’t for lack of effort or lack of coaching; we quickly found out why they were ranked so high. I rode the bus from Baltimore each day to Arnold. AACC provided me with an opportunity to mature academically and personally, as well as continue my dream of playing football when I threw my chances, in high school, out of the window. Coach Alan Pastrana was one of the greatest influences in my life. From his football coaching to life coaching, he made me a better man; at the time I did not realize it. “Coach” is one of the reasons I coached several teams and sports and continued my education (c/o 2003) to become a special education teacher in the Baltimore City schools. I realize that a college football team is crazy expensive to field and I now realize how much Dr. Florestano, Coach Pastrana, et al. sacrificed for us. I guess I am submitting this comment because I want people to know the positive influence the AACC football program left on my life. Sorry that the most indelible image left by the program is one of academic ineptitude and childish behavior in the form of grown people fighting in a parking lot. But please know this, there is one person that will forever cherish the memories of attending AACC, playing football, and growing as a positive influence in my environment….AACC taught me that!! Peace