I played for UEA last year. I was new to paintball and after taking the gamble to buy the gear I was dissapointed when everything fell through and decided to sell up.
The problem with uni teams is the cost. I know UWE have got a good set up but not all unis are as supportive. UEA covered our paint/entry costs to the league last year but wouldn't help with transport, subsidising trips or much else. When they don't give you enough support to run events/trips for people who don't want to play Sup'Air or the ability to provide places to train then there is nothing to offer the paintball society members. Nothing to offer -> No members -> No funding -> No team.
I forked out over 350quid for gear. This is a lot of money when you only get £1000 per semester without any other financial support and are trying to budget. Most new players will be put off by this.
I don't mean to sound defeatist but paintball is an expensive sport and students don't have much money. It doesn't mix. UWE's good facilities for paintball obviously greatly aid the societies cohesiveness but speaking from my experience with UEA paintball, without the trips and the financial support its very hard to keep going as a society. Without the society the team doesn't have funding and without the funding the players can't usually afford to play.
I accept the comment about snowsports being expensive and attracting interest, but snowsports is a vastly more popular sport and not comparable to paintball. People are willing to pay 300-500 pounds on a holiday but not near to the equivelent on equipment followed by entry fees and then the continuous strain on cash from forking out for paint. At the end of the day, going snowboarding is seen as a better use of cash in most peoples eyes than splashing out on loads of money on equipment they might only use a couple of times a year.
Perhaps an active league would give more incentive to uni teams and I'm all in favour of that and I wish you guys luck if you're trying to get it going again.
My advice to uni teams would be don't expect your union to pay for you to play. I expect most unions are similar to ours in the sense that they give money out in relation to how much a society is and how much they need it. The problem is that people won't join a paintball society to go play woodsball once or twice a year which is what most people want to do. This limits the member base considerably. The only way to entice people is with considerable discounts so they can go play more often. These discounts are rarely offered and you'll find if you ask for them the sites will probably just give you their usual group discount which won't equate to much. Members will still be looking at £50+ per trip when you factor in travelling, food and paint. A lot of money, which puts people off.
I think I fell guilty to expecting too much from our union. Hopefully other unions are more accomodating and I'm wrong. I would say if you want to play in a uni team, get a devoted bunch of people together willing to pay their own way. Think about entering exisiting leagues and tournaments to get your regular play in. Then perhaps approach the uni to get things like reball training facilities set up. Then you can look into making official societies, with a more sporting based approach (which is what paintball needs) rather being a society providing for a team with occasional woodsball players to make up the required numbers as a society.
Sorry, if I'm putting a dampner on things. I'm just trying to be helpful by letting you know the problems we faced which inevertably brought us to a halt. Hopefully, you can avoid them and make more of a success of it than we were able.
Thanks for reading, good luck.