From what I understand NU did not do away with male cheerleaders, they couldn't get any to come on board.Shakes? It's the same problem with the size of the band, dismal and not enough people to carry the flags for every school. I don't have answers for this kind of non-participation but maybe a scholarship or least a credit or two could help.
Yeah, it was kind of a self fulfilling prophecy. Once you start losing guys and the numbers start to dwindle, no one wants to be the only guy. Two things that people probably don't realize.
1. In 2004, we had a lot of senior guys. A few I suspected would've quit before their senior year if we weren't playing at Hawaii. There were several bad attitudes that festered as well. 2 guys quit before the year and 2 after the year. Combine that with 5 or 6 guys graduating, and the number took a huge hit. Then it became the prophecy where the numbers when 6 to 4 to 2 to 1 to 0.
2. I'm not sure when the rule came in, but in order to try out for a varsity sport, you had to have a physical. Then after you make the team, the team's doctor had to give you a full sports physical before they'd insure you. Every freshman has to have a physical before they come to NU. For some reason Searle didn't give these out. They made you get a new one. Basically, you'd have to get a physical to come to NU, then get another to try out, then get a third one like 5 days later. If you really want to be a cheerleader, you'd do it. If you're showing up to tryouts because a cute girl asked you to (which is like 90% of the guys I know from all over the country), not a chance you're going to make a doctors appointment first. I slipped through the cracks and didn't bring a physical to tryouts or know anything about having to. As liability involved with cheerleading increased, we started having trainers at practice. This was a great thing as injuries did happen. It also meant that we couldn't have random guys just show up and have a pseudo tryout. We had to get them to bring physicals or not participate. Then it was physicals, waivers, medical histories, insurance forms copies of insurance cards... That coincided with the guys falling out.