HoosierPal wrote:DudeAnon wrote:HoosierPal wrote:And they make the NCAA every year and they sell out every home game.
Both of those statements are wrong lol
Last statement on Dayton, as they have been covered way too much on this board, but they are outdrawing every Big East team except Creighton. You may not like Dayton, but recognize them for what they are, a quality program with passionate fans.
Bill Marsh wrote:JP, from reading your stuff, I can only conclude that you are a professional con man in the real world. You have consistently pushed the argument that the BE is capped at 6 bids in a 10 team league when they could get to 7-8 bids in a 12 team league.
Why is 7 of 12 better than 6 of 10? It isn't. 6 of 10 = 60%. 7 of 12 = 58%.
8 of 12 (66%) is only fractionally better than 6 of 10, so no big gain there either.
Your con is based on the proposition that the BE should add Bona and another A10 school, both of whom would simply roll over for BE opponents so that more of the current membership would benefit. That is of course complete nonsense and only a con man would expect anyone to buy it. The 1-2 extra bids could just as easily go to the new teams, meaning no new bids for current members since the new members, now with increased resources, would compete as hard as they could to benefit from the new affiliation.
It's the old bait and switch. Take in the Sisters of the Poor so we can become doormats, only to find that this same Trojan Horse wants to kick our butts after they get inside the walls.
What you've ignored is the increased difficulty in rising to the top with increasing numbers. All of us Big East fans experienced that. When. There were 7-9 members in the '80's, PC and SH could both rise from the bottom to reach the F4 within the first decade of league competition. No one was locked in as a bottom feeder.
However, as the league grew to 12-16 members, it became a 2-tiered conference and it was next to impossible for those in the lower half to become competitive with those in the upper half. No one wants to go back to that. It's why so many are enamored with the idea of staying at 10. It's simply more competitive that way.
To make your proposition that it's a virtual mathematic impossibility for the 10 member BE to get 7 bids, you make this proposal following on the heels of a 2015 tournament in which the 10 member B12 actually got bids. In light of that reality, why do you think that anyone would actually buy your argument?
DudeAnon wrote:Its an imprecise art that at its best creates a two-tier conference. At its worst, its awful.
Take a look at Dayton's schedule in the 14 member A-10. Here are the juggernauts they see twice: Duquesne, La Salle, St. Bonnies, Saint Louis and Rhode Island. Meanwhile, they missed out on: Davidson, GW, VCU, St. Josephs, UMASS and Richmond.
Dayton is arguably their best school and I could easily argue they have the exact opposite schedule you would hope for.
stever20 wrote:What the A10 is doing is pure mid-major. Trying to pump up their teams with as many wins as possible....
What major conferences do is the logic that the AAC is using....
SMU, Cincy, UConn, and Tulsa all play each other 2x. If you add Temple to those 4- all play each other 2x except SMU and Temple miss each other a 2nd time. That's what the Big East would do. Trying to get the best matchups possible for TV and also limiting the impacts of weaker teams.
Bill Marsh wrote:JP, from reading your stuff, I can only conclude that you are a professional con man in the real world. You have consistently pushed the argument that the BE is capped at 6 bids in a 10 team league when they could get to 7-8 bids in a 12 team league.
Bill Marsh wrote:Why is 7 of 12 better than 6 of 10?
It isn't. 6 of 10 = 60%. 7 of 12 = 58%.
8 of 12 (66%) is only fractionally better than 6 of 10, so no big gain there either.
Bill Marsh wrote:The 1-2 extra bids could just as easily go to the new teams, meaning no new bids for current members since the new members, now with increased resources, would compete as hard as they could to benefit from the new affiliation.
It's the old bait and switch. Take in the Sisters of the Poor so we can become doormats, only to find that this same Trojan Horse wants to kick our butts after they get inside the walls.
What you've ignored is the increased difficulty in rising to the top with increasing numbers. All of us Big East fans experienced that. When. There were 7-9 members in the '80's, PC and SH could both rise from the bottom to reach the F4 within the first decade of league competition. No one was locked in as a bottom feeder.
However, as the league grew to 12-16 members, it became a 2-tiered conference and it was next to impossible for those in the lower half to become competitive with those in the upper half. No one wants to go back to that. It's why so many are enamored with the idea of staying at 10. It's simply more competitive that way.
Bill Marsh wrote:To make your proposition that it's a virtual mathematic impossibility for the 10 member BE to get 7 bids, you make this proposal following on the heels of a 2015 tournament in which the 10 member B12 actually got bids. In light of that reality, why do you think that anyone would actually buy your argument?
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