GoldenWarrior11 wrote:UConn's struggles with recruiting should not be surprising. They play in a national non-power conference. No one in the Northeast cares about playing teams in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee, et al. When they were in the Big East, they were able to use the regionality of the conference, and the geographic rivals, to incite excitement and intrigue for all of the teams. No matter how you cut it, Houston, SMU, Tulane, ECU, Tulsa, USF, and UCF doesn't inspire excitement for fans or recruits. Even if you give it ten years, it won't be able to sell.
UConn very much needs the Big East brand to rebound and get back to elite status. Sadly, it appears they have sold their soul for the unlikely chance for football to carry them into a power conference. That, too, doesn't look likely anytime in the near future.
In the meantime, we shall enjoy our successful and strong basketball conference. Let that other one figure out a new marketing slogan or another way to get included in the club.
Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:UConn's struggles with recruiting should not be surprising. They play in a national non-power conference. No one in the Northeast cares about playing teams in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee, et al. When they were in the Big East, they were able to use the regionality of the conference, and the geographic rivals, to incite excitement and intrigue for all of the teams. No matter how you cut it, Houston, SMU, Tulane, ECU, Tulsa, USF, and UCF doesn't inspire excitement for fans or recruits. Even if you give it ten years, it won't be able to sell.
UConn very much needs the Big East brand to rebound and get back to elite status. Sadly, it appears they have sold their soul for the unlikely chance for football to carry them into a power conference. That, too, doesn't look likely anytime in the near future.
In the meantime, we shall enjoy our successful and strong basketball conference. Let that other one figure out a new marketing slogan or another way to get included in the club.
"News of my demise has been greatly exaggerated." - Mark Twain
No doubt that UConn had a bad year, but how do we explain the fact hat they had a top 10 recruiting class just a year ago?
ConnersvilleBulldog wrote:UConn's recruiting class ranking in the 5 years since moving to the AAC:
2017: 76
2016: 8
2015: 39
2014: 44
2013: 40
The top 10 class is more of an outlier now, than a norm.
ConnersvilleBulldog wrote:UConn's recruiting class ranking in the 5 years since moving to the AAC:
2017: 76
2016: 8
2015: 39
2014: 44
2013: 40
The top 10 class is more of an outlier now, than a norm.
Bill Marsh wrote:ConnersvilleBulldog wrote:UConn's recruiting class ranking in the 5 years since moving to the AAC:
2017: 76
2016: 8
2015: 39
2014: 44
2013: 40
The top 10 class is more of an outlier now, than a norm.
So is #76.
Are you saying that top 40 recruiting classes are a bad thing? And let's not forget that they got some quality transfers during those years as well.
MullinMayhem wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:
"News of my demise has been greatly exaggerated." - Mark Twain
No doubt that UConn had a bad year, but how do we explain the fact hat they had a top 10 recruiting class just a year ago?
I think it's more than just a bad year. Hasn't UConn finished middle of the pack in the AAC several years now?
The fact that they had a top 10 class a year ago can be explained by this: the closer UConn was to the Big East era, the better they were.
If you are a winning program and then you drop off a few years,
you will still get your share of recruits from the leftover prestige fresh in their heads, but eventually it drops off completely if you don't keep winning. What we're seeing with UConn is the effect of prioritizing football which sacrificed their basketball program. The AAC is a prestige drain for basketball.
Some will say anything makes sense if you have the chance to make more money,
but UConn is finding out the hard way that the school-conference fit actually does matter to an extent.
There's a sort of poetic justice about that...in a greedy world sometimes greed backfires. UConn fit perfectly in the Big East geographically and had its choice of tri-state recruits all while winning constantly at a high level. They tried to fix something that was not broken and they got burned. That is why their recruiting dropped off...
my suspicion is that Ollie was never a great coach, he had the right players leftover from the Big East days and rode the momentum.
That's not to take all credit from Ollie,
he's a decent coach but certainly not a great one and certainly should not be given all the credit for the championship their first year in the AAC.
I figured UConn would go into a downward spiral after joining the AAC, but I don't think anyone could have expected how rapidly it's happening.
Geographic fit matters, prestige matters, and conference brand matters. Other programs in conference matter.
That has been made clear if you look at the recruiting results and school-conference fit.
Bill Marsh wrote:ConnersvilleBulldog wrote:UConn's recruiting class ranking in the 5 years since moving to the AAC:
2017: 76
2016: 8
2015: 39
2014: 44
2013: 40
The top 10 class is more of an outlier now, than a norm.
So is #76.
Are you saying that top 40 recruiting classes are a bad thing? And let's not forget that they got some quality transfers during those years as well.
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