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Florida Tech students push to reinstate some varsity sports

VERO BEACH, Fla. — Josh Navarro spends time rowing in Vero Beach, but one thing sits heavy on his mind.

“Going from varsity to club is really damaging and I sat there at work and I had a really long shift just thinking about it and I was crushed. Like I said this sport kind of became my life,” said Navarro.

His university, Florida Institute of Technology, decided to drop 5 varsity sports programs to “club status” including men’s rowing, women’s rowing, men’s cross country/distance track, women’s cross country/distance track, and men’s golf.

“What made me decide on F.T.I. was the fact they had a wonderful rowing team, they had a great coach a good group of guys,” said Navarro.

He said the move not only means his team no longer competes at the NCAA level but it will also impact recruitment, funding, scholarships and travel.

“This happened in the middle of the summer. School applications close, rosters fill up on rowing teams, so it’s really hard to transfer out,” said Navarro. “I want to be able to row at a varsity level. I want to be able to have that, I want all of my team to have that, I want all of the other athletes on the other team to have that.”

Navarro said he plans on staying at F.I.T. and the school will continue to honor his scholarship.

But he fears what it means for the programs moving forward.

“For future people in this sport coming from Florida and wanting to stay local, that’s no longer. F.I.T. will no longer be an option for those students who are pretty competitive in high school and want to continue on.” said Josh’s mother Gina Navarro. “They’ll be going to the northeast schools they will not stay in Florida.”

F.I.T. said the decision was to focus on 11-other competitive sports and provide them with more resources.

“Us being as competitive as we are I think we are the oldest sport in the school, men’s rowing. So I think for them to jump and make this decision was just a poor and rushed decision,” said Josh Navarro.

Right now there’s also a petition on Change.org to reinstate the programs which have a goal of 7,500 signatures.



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