Friar82 wrote:Here's a link to the Godfather's post...
http://friarblog.com/2009/01/30/74319473/
That aside:
1) I wouldn't trust a football school in the BE conference, ever again. UConn would need to shed football in order to come back
2) Furthermore, UConn would need to split the shares that it accumulated when the BE split, with the so called Catholic 7 which surrendered them
3) UConn fans would need to accept a lifetime ban from chanting U-C-O-N-N...UConn...UConn...UConn within a 5-mile limit of any opposing BE arena
4) UConn fans would need to stop dropping the "NC" reference in any discussion where opposing opinions are being shared. We don't care at this point, as we're all about the future - which is brighter than prospects in the AAC
MUBoxer wrote:Noonzy wrote:Respectfully disagree MUboxer. Providence is a 45 minute drive from Storrs and they travel well. If they invade you arena you will see that the post by the Godfather is timeless.
Disagree with which part? That it ignores the fact that UConn was, by far, the most successful team in the Big East (say what you want about the 80s no other big east team had 4 titles) and did it over 15 years? I'm not arguing the fans suck, or that Calhoun was a Dbag but saying "they didn't play UMass" when they played plenty of other very tough teams and had loads of success, is just fishing for reasons to hate on them.
I can relate to the whole fans that believe basketball was started in the 90s thing, it rings true with Wisconsin fans that believe basketball was started in 94 or 99 pending on who you talk to. But that doesn't mean I'm gonna take away from the fact they've had enormous success since. Credit where credit is due.
Bill Marsh wrote:Several posters have mentioned that UConn is chasing the fool's gold of football money. In all fairness, it's not about that at all it only seems that way to us college sports fans.
You have to think like a university president to see what the end game is. UConn aspires toward academic excellence. It wants to be a top public research university. It's presidents and Boards of Trustees look at the formula to attain that. Excellence in college sports - including football - is part of the formula. Moreover, affiliation in a major sports legue can lead to associations with those same universities with whom UConn wants to be considered a peer and even a research partner. They would love to be in the Big Ten, but the Big XII or the ACC would do.
Without debating whether they're right or wrong, that's what it's all about as a university policy. My guess is that they could care less about the football dollars and would probably prefer to be without football. They actually lost a lot of money on their trip to the Fiesta Bowl 7 years ago.
BEhomer wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Several posters have mentioned that UConn is chasing the fool's gold of football money. In all fairness, it's not about that at all it only seems that way to us college sports fans.
You have to think like a university president to see what the end game is. UConn aspires toward academic excellence. It wants to be a top public research university. It's presidents and Boards of Trustees look at the formula to attain that. Excellence in college sports - including football - is part of the formula. Moreover, affiliation in a major sports legue can lead to associations with those same universities with whom UConn wants to be considered a peer and even a research partner. They would love to be in the Big Ten, but the Big XII or the ACC would do.
Without debating whether they're right or wrong, that's what it's all about as a university policy. My guess is that they could care less about the football dollars and would probably prefer to be without football. They actually lost a lot of money on their trip to the Fiesta Bowl 7 years ago.
Yes. We have to remember that athletics is only a small portion of what universities do and care about. and even the TV money it brings is nothing compared to their overall budget/endowment. lot of schools lose money playing football but they still fund it because it's proven to increase general admissions.
so for Uconn to abandon football and join BE, it would take a catastrophic downturn in athletics and perhaps academics as well. so the question becomes then, do we still want them at that point?
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