Engstrand, Gary2022-07-262022-07-262022-07-26https://hdl.handle.net/11299/229859College athletics and its governance has a long, circuitous history. In its infancy, athletic activities at the University of Minnesota were governed solely by the student players. In 1893, the faculty gained control through membership in the Advisory Board of Athletic Control (renamed the Board of Control in 1894) and, later reinforced by Big Ten Conference rules, maintained that control for nearly three decades. Ultimately, in 1922, athletics and physical education were to be directed by professionals, while the faculty, through membership in the University Senate Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics (SCIA, established in 1912), retained a major voice in the management of athletics. In 1930, in response to a study of intercollegiate athletics by the Carnegie Foundation, SCIA powers were greatly reduced; a statement on “faculty control of athletics” was included in the updated SCIA constitution to demonstrate continued adherence of Minnesota to the rules of the Big Ten, but, in reality, control now “entailed institutional management review and administration.” This is the carefully researched story of the evolution of the control of athletics at the University of Minnesota, 1893 – 1936.enUniversity of Minnesota AthleticsUniversity Athletic AssociationUniversity Senate Committee on Intercollegiate AthleticsBig Nine ConferenceBig Ten ConferenceCarnegie FoundationJames PaigeLD CoffmanJohn GleasonFred LuehringCollege Athletics: Evolution of Structure and Control at the University of Minnesota 1893 - 1936Article