CrawfishBucket wrote:Savannah Jay wrote:The point is...fans don't really care that much about anything but football and basketball.
What fans? Would you say SEC fans don't care? Or Big 12 fans for that matter?
The optics of being a major conference includes being competitive during most every season of competition.
Savannah Jay wrote:CrawfishBucket wrote:Savannah Jay wrote:The point is...fans don't really care that much about anything but football and basketball.
What fans? Would you say SEC fans don't care? Or Big 12 fans for that matter?
The optics of being a major conference includes being competitive during most every season of competition.
LSU, NCAA attendance leader for 20+ years, averaged about 10,000 fans a game for baseball and 101,000 for football. Enrollment is about 31,000.
Texas is usually the biggest draw in the Big 12, and they don't get 5k per baseball game. They get 98,000 to football games. Enrollment is about 50,000.
So yes, I would say that most fans don't really care. Those are huge state schools that draw huge numbers for football, and only a small fraction of that number for baseball even though they are national championship caliber programs (in 2010, South Carolina won the national championship and averaged 6,700 fans a game).
CrawfishBucket wrote:Savannah Jay wrote:CrawfishBucket wrote:What fans? Would you say SEC fans don't care? Or Big 12 fans for that matter?
The optics of being a major conference includes being competitive during most every season of competition.
LSU, NCAA attendance leader for 20+ years, averaged about 10,000 fans a game for baseball and 101,000 for football. Enrollment is about 31,000.
Texas is usually the biggest draw in the Big 12, and they don't get 5k per baseball game. They get 98,000 to football games. Enrollment is about 50,000.
So yes, I would say that most fans don't really care. Those are huge state schools that draw huge numbers for football, and only a small fraction of that number for baseball even though they are national championship caliber programs (in 2010, South Carolina won the national championship and averaged 6,700 fans a game).
Think broader.
We've entered the world of conference networks. You don't think the Longhorn Network gets any mileage from Longhorn baseball and their tradition?
College sports media is evolving and Olympic sports content is becoming more pronounced.
To live an die on being relevant in one sport is not big time. Writing off WBB and baseball is tantamount to chopping an arm off in this day and age.
Think what you want to think though bro.
ArmyVet wrote:I'm glad someone raised the topic. I would be fully in favor of the Big East changing the non-revenue sports to "club" sports. Let the P5 have their bloated athletic departments and give 100+ scholarships and have the non FBS football schools focus on 3-4 sports each.
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