Bluejay wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:They were hardly in the lawsuit by themselves.
True, but they were the lead voice. I have no problem bringing the suit, but it isn't a wise choice if you are going to apply for membership in that conference in the future.Bill Marsh wrote:As for fool's gold, it worked for Rutgers, a team that was 1-11 and drew only 19,000 fans at home as recently as 2002. And that season was no exception. They were a program that never mattered in the history of college football or in the Big East before UConn joined the football conference, and so were more or less at the same point back then.
You sort of sound like my kids. Just because somebody else does something, it doesn't mean it is the right thing to do and it certainly doesn't mean it is the right thing for you to do. UConn doesn't bring to the table some of the things that Rutgers brought to the table; it is a false comparison when taking the entirety of the two schools into account.
Basically, UCONN gambled and lost. Which is essentially what I said before.
Jet915 wrote:UCONN basketball loses by 16 at home to Houston.....
MUPanther wrote:UConn had 12 points at halftime.
Hall2012 wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:My point being: Other top tier conferences have and probably will continue to "work the system" whether for the benefit of football or basketball. The Big East should enhance its' NCAA payouts by adding a couple of teams to boost the middle and help our case, as other conferences have done.
Yeah, yeah, just because Delany and the B1G jump off a bridge with Rutgers and Nebraska doesn't necessitate the BE doing likewise...I get it. But me and Br. Jelinek don't like the idea of leaving NCAA bucks on the table, that could go into Big East coffers.
I sure as hell didn't intend to start a football topic subthread, so youse guys can can the F5 chatter.
But it also means a couple more schools to split those tourney units with. If that extra school we get in the dance makes a nice run, then sure, it'll work out great! But if they go 1 and done (and let's be honest, if this school wouldn't have made it if not for us adding "free wins" to the conference, that's the likely scenario), our 10 schools will just end up losing money by having 2 more heads to feed. And if we don't get that extra team in at all? More money down that drain.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Noble commentary, JP. Unfortunately, the Big East will not lower its conference standards simply to stack the deck for the league to possibly get an additional team or two into the tournament.
What would St. Bonaventure add to the conference? It's not basketball prestige. It's not a strong fan base. It's not a big new arena. It's not a brand name coach. It's not a large endowment for the university. It's not a nationally ranked academic university. It's not a history of success in the NCAA Tournament. It's definitely not a big city campus.
Let's say that the Big East did want to rig the system to mathematically increase the odds of sending more teams to the tournament. If that was the case, they would undoubtedly look at schools like Richmond, Fordham, Davidson, Boston University, Northeastern, Dayton and Saint Louis ahead of a school like St. Bonaventure. Each of those schools brings stronger school endowments and larger athletic budgets, not to mention (in many cases) historically stronger basketball programs.
If/when the Big East expands, new schools will add value by elevating the conference by basketball play, academics and commitment to long-term sustained success - definitely not programs that will be expected to lose in conference play to just help out the teams above them.
Hall2012 wrote:I see what you're saying JP, but you're missing another point. Let's assume SBU goes 3-15 in league play as you said. Chances are, at least 1 of those 3 wins is going to come against that same type of Big East bubble team (a 6th or 7th place team, right? Since the whole point is to try to get an extra bid or 2?). So while you're scenario is certainly possible, the opposite could also be true. A bubble team that would otherwise be in the dance could put up a stinker of a game and end up replacing what would be an acceptable loss to CU or X with a resume destroying loss to SBU.
That's why you see so much frustration with DePaul and St. John's on this board. We don't say "oh goodie, they stink so 4 free wins to boost our NCAA resume." We know damn well that, though they're struggling, they have enough talent that on their day (or an opponent's off day) they're capable of beating just about anyone in the league. We all play enough "nothing to gain, everything to lose" games in OOC play, so the goal is to minimize the number of them we need to worry about in league play.
Example: 2013-14 Seton Hall
gtmoBlue wrote:My point being: Other top tier conferences have and probably will continue to "work the system" whether for the benefit of football or basketball. The Big East should enhance its' NCAA payouts by adding a couple of teams to boost the middle and help our case, as other conferences have done.
Yeah, yeah, just because Delany and the B1G jump off a bridge with Rutgers and Nebraska doesn't necessitate the BE doing likewise...I get it. But me and Br. Jelinek don't like the idea of leaving NCAA bucks on the table, that could go into Big East coffers.
DeltaV wrote:The BIG is probably the top conference in the country when you combine football and basketball reputation; they can absorb a few 'huh?' picks without hurting their credibility. Us, on the other hand? 10 private schools, dwarfed in enrollment, cash, and media publicity...you add a definite 'mid major' program or two and you'll see that national championship good-will evaporate quickly.
The round-robin is a strength. The Big East name, when you take the core C7 schools, and the 'mid major-power' adds (Xavier was never really a MM, even though they played in the A10, and Creighton and Butler proved themselves as well), keeps us labeled as a power conference. Except for Gonzaga, a non-factor due to geography, there are no other mid-major powers to add. If any mids do go on a multi year tear (I would consider that to be 3-4 years in a row as a single digit seed, and at least two Sweet 16s), then I think they would be worth while opening the discussion of expansion. But we're not the BIG10...we can't just expand for the sake of expanding and expect it to not hurt our reputation.
DudeAnon wrote:We can debate the merits of expanding vs not expanding. But the reality is there is 0% chance St. Bonaventure would ever be added. It would be the single worst expansion choice in conference realignment history.
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