Six months into his term as ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s athletic director, Dave Heeke has shot way past the break-in period and made decisions that will last for decades.
At the ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Board of Regents meeting this week in Flagstaff, Heeke will ask for approval to build $66 million of overdue capital projects. The four centerpiece items will be:
- $25 million to re-do the ancient underpinnings of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Stadium’s lower east side. Perhaps they’ll find dinosaur bones beneath the old place.
- $12 million to dig up the 43-year-old Hillenbrand Aquatic Center facility and start over. The plumbing is busted.
- $18 million to construct an indoor practice facility/fan-engagement center down the right-field line of old Kindall-Sancet Stadium.
- $8 million to revitalize Hillenbrand softball stadium with fan suites, a press box and much needed shade structures.
The over arching theme will first be to make a dent in the much-needed ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Stadium infrastructure woes. By attending first to the Zona Zoo amenities, it will give students evidence that their $100-a-year fee for the athletic department is well spent. Construction is expected to begin after the Dec. 30 ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Bowl.
“Approval (by the regents) won’t determine the start dates; it’s just that we can move forward to fully develop plans as well as budget and make logical construction schedules,†Heeke told me. “We have done some of this behind the scenes already so we can hit the ground running over the next few months.â€
Funding for the $66 million series of projects would be helped by the upcoming student fee and donor contributions, with the rest paid over time and with Pac-12 media rights revenue, as was the case with the Lowell-Stevens Football Facility and McKale Center renovations.
Building never ceases in the Pac-12. Washington State, which had a $13 million budget shortfall last year, is in the process of building a $28 million indoor workout facility, moving past the $10 million indoor bubble it built 14 years ago.
Debt service is significant at all Pac-12 athletic departments. USA Today reported that Oregon had $19.1 million in debt service in the fiscal year 2017, followed by Cal’s $18.7 million, Washington’s $16.2 million and Colorado’s $14.8 million. ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s debt service was roughly $6 million.
Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens, a man blessed with so much of Nike’s wealth, told The  Register-Guard in Eugene last week that even the Ducks are struggling and won’t be able to add a men’s soccer program, as hoped.
“Quite frankly, we are maxed out on resources,†he said. “As we see a declining ticket fan base in football, we see greater financial challenges.â€
If the Ducks are hurting, who isn’t?
Heeke inherited an enormously difficult job when Greg Byrne departed for Alabama. Byrne was a little surprised that the previous athletic administration had essentially identified about $500 million in building projects, but had done little to chip away.
He dug in, spent about $150 million on overdue projects and created momentum; now it’s on Heeke to double that over the next few years just to keep ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ competitive.
He’s off to a promising start.