First of all, I really appreciate the great job the kids did this year.
As for baseball, there is no bigger fan than me. I am writing this from an MLB All Star game trip to San Diego, which has been awesome. For oldtimers, I got to meet Benito Santiago, Tony Oliva and Kenny Lofton on the trip. It is awesome.
To the crux of the matter, I think a Huntington facility would be great, but on campus would be unlikely...there just isn't any room to speak of and you have the future problem of if you say yes to a baseball stadium, you are basically saying no to a couple of academic buildings or a student dorm.
Baseball will not produce revenue. Here's a right good article on the subject:
http://www.dailyprogress.com/news/local/when-it-comes-to-college-sports-revenue-even-a-powerhouse/article_29eb808c-edd8-11e3-9f88-0017a43b2370.htmlIt can however present a positive quality of life aspect for people living in the tri-state. By hosting travel baseball it could also produce a modest boon to the local economy.
You can't drop baseball. It is probably a condition of CUSA membership. Actually, even talking about it after one of our most successful seasons ever seems strange.
The price tag for a CUSA baseball stadium, last I heard, was $12 Million. By the time the unions get done getting their hands in the pie, it's probably closer to $20. It seems to me the best thing to do is to find some accessible land, preferably in a populated area where it would be likely people would attend, and begin building a stadium with a footprint that could be brought up to CUSA specs. First step would be simply to get the field and bleachers and begin by playing your OOC games there. Phase it to get the facilities up to par a step at a time. It might take 10 years, but that's better than never.
I also think Marshall couple probably get some exemptions if they were building in good faith. After all, Charlotte football did.