ohiohsbball wrote:Apples to Oranges.
....and no they do not and nor is the A10 a threat. If anything, the two strengthen each other because we need to break the perception that only schools that play football can be called "major."
cm5yz6 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:muskienick wrote:But, Bill, the trouble is that 10 other programs must make annual trips to Gonzaga also. And, as I have been reminded on this board, a school can't simply join another conference for basketball (like it can for football). It must join the new Conference in all the sports it sponsors that the joined Conference sponsors in League play. As I understand it, that means the volleyball, baseball, soccer, etc. teams must travel to Spokane as well. I can understand why not all 10 current AD's were jumping for joy at that prospect! (The $4 million of TV money would be gone in no time paying for transportation, lodging, meals, etc.)
The NCAA requirement is that a conference sponsor a minimum 6 teams for men and 6 teams for women, two of which must be team sports for each. That means that the lineup could look like this:
basketball
soccer
cross country
track & field
swimming
golf
Only basketball and soccer would have to make trips for a regular schedule of games. The other sports decide their conference championships at a tournament each year without having to play a regular schedule of competition. Dual meets and the like are scheduled on an individual basis.
The actual impact is very minimal. Two men's teams and two women's teams have to make the trip. If the schedule is broken up by divisions, the East coast schools would skip the trip once every 3 years and you'd still get an 18 game schedule. Do the other sports need to play an 18 game schedule? If any of the teams besides men's basketball can live with a 16 game schedule, which was the standard for decades, the East Coast schools could skip the Spokane trip once every other year. For the schools from the Midwest, this really isn't much different that the old Big East schools having to make a trip to Miami every year. (Chicago to Spokane is 1500 air miles.)
One trip a year max to Spokane for each of 4 teams is to much to handle? That's got to be a bad joke.
The Big East is absolutely bonkers if expansion doesn't include Gonzaga as priority #1 now that we know that Gonzaga is perfectly willing to take on the travel burden. Institutionally they're a perfect fit. They've just gone to their 16th consecutive NCAA tournament and have won 10 tournament games in the last 10 years. Among current Big East members, only Butler and Villanova has won more tournament games than that in the past decade.
The Big East should add Gonzaga and VCU and be done with it. They would strengthen the conference, upgrade its profile, and expand its markets. Seems like a no brainer to me.
Wow, quite a big F U to all baseball, lacrosse, tennis, volleyball, field hockey, and softball players and fans.
Michael in Raleigh wrote:
The A-10 is not a threat to the Big East. It's vice versa. Every single member of the Atlantic 10 would join the Big East if it could because of the BE's far greater name recognition, its far greater TV package, its historic, renowned tournament at Madison Square Garden, and because of the association with college basketball household names.
I wouldn't worry so much about what the general public thinks. My perception is that most people think the BE is better. Those who don't are fickle. They'll be persuaded otherwise the second two BE teams make the Sweet 16 and the A-10 fails to make it out of the first weekend.
BEX wrote:Dayton, GMU, Duquense, Fordham, Bono, Davidson?
BEX wrote:Dayton went 6th in the A-10 playing these teams.
BEX wrote:Good thing they didn't face St. Joe's in the Dance.
BEX wrote:ND and Gonzaga sound good.
BEX wrote:Dayton, GMU, Duquense, Fordham, Bono, Davidson? should get their own $500 million deal and stop bugging us on the BE board. Dayton went 6th in the A-10 playing these teams. Good thing they didn't face st. Joe's in the Dance.
ND and Gonzaga sound good.
ohiohsbball wrote:ohiohsbball wrote: Apples to Oranges.
....and no they do not and nor is the A10 a threat. If anything, the two strengthen each other because we need to break the perception that only schools that play football can be called "major."
I disagree. How is that apples to oranges? Oregon is on the West coast to strengthen an East coast football league. The same with Gonzaga to an East coast basketball league. The only difference I see is a sh!t tone of money for football with not so much for basketball. Granted the example was a little extreme, but the concept is the same.
As far as the A10, say what you want but yes it is a threat. I know it is only one year, and in the next five years may not be a threat at all, but right now yes it is. The A10 was represented quite well in the NCAA especially with Dayton in the elite 8. I want both leagues to do well, because I agree with you...I want non football leagues to be considered "major." My point is that if the BE wants to be the only elite basketball only conference, they need to squash the A10. In year one, that didn't happen and if the A10 has another year or two of more success, what happens if the "mothership", aka ESPN throws some money to the A10; they are already making a little bit of splash with the announcement of the deal they struck with the ACC. Not making a push for either league, just saying if the BE wants to be the major basketball only league, there is still work to do.
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