Hall2012 wrote:What does this give the Big East other than the potential for embarrassment?
gtmoBlue wrote:While this BE / WCC conversation is entertaining, it primarily BENEFITS the WCC and whomever plays the Zags gets the sole bump in RPI/SOS.
If the BE plays a Leftcoast Challenge...it should be against our Fox stablemate - the PAC 12. I'd rather have a shot at one of the upper half of the PAC 12 than Pacific or Pepperdine.
maxpowers wrote:Hall2012 wrote:What does this give the Big East other than the potential for embarrassment?
I admit the matchups favor the BE, especially our mid-range teams versus theirs. The BE may win 90% of the games, making this a non-starter for the WCC.
The ideal West Coast partner would be the Pac 12, right? Elite programs, prominent players, huge fanbases. But a tournament arrangement with the Pac 12 will never happen in today’s landscape.
The football 5 conferences are too chicken to schedule too many games against other major conferences because they risk exposing themselves as weak if their teams underperform.
Major conferences just don’t have the courage to face major competition like us. We have the Gavitt Games and…that’s it. The BE has an opportunity to strike out a different direction.
Because the BE enjoys a strength advantage over the WCC, the BE leadership could take the lead in forming such a partnership. There’s a more realistic shot such a partnership could work.
Advantages for the BE:
1. If each BE team substitutes its 200+ RPI cupcakes (we all have them) with ~150 average RPI WCC opponents, multiplied by all the games, the BE realizes a big improvement in its RPI, even when we lose a portion of those games. Teams would be seeded by their preseason projections to create some relative balance in competition.
-This season, St. John’s lost to Delaware State (RPI 337), DePaul lost to Illinois-Chicago (RPI 257), Butler lost to Indiana State (RPI 198). Would it be devastating for the BE if they lost instead to last place Pepperdine (RPI 235)?
2. Like Jim Harbaugh scheduling Michigan football satellite camps in Florida, the BE plants its flag on the West Coast every other year. It’s a great showcase in front of West Coast recruits. Message: The BE has its roots in the East, but national prominence.
3. We earn respect because our teams don’t dodge what others perceive as inferior competition. We earn our reputation by playing anyone, anytime, anywhere. That’s great for the state of college basketball.
4. The proximity of our teams to their conference rivals strengthens competition in the league. You’re rooting for your conference rivals to win for the conference standing, but you know you will be slugging it out a few weeks later in conference play.
Advantages for the WCC:
1. Gain in prestige from the improved competition. Gonzaga fans would not need to make the case they deserve a #1 overall seed in the NCAA despite weak conference competition because they would have this early-season opportunity to prove they earned it. The same goes for every other WCC team in consideration for the tourney.
2. The WCC gains the same benefit of recruiting East Coast kids though I assume the effect would be much less.
3. The WCC gains access to better competition without having to rely on the cooperation of the Pac 12.
Another example:
Villanova participates in the Philadelphia Big 5 each year where they face teams like LaSalle (RPI 86) and Penn (RPI 177). Sometimes, there’s a huge disparity between the best and worst teams. They do it anyway because it’s a fun tradition that has produced epic battles. The unpredictability makes it interesting. I think the novelty of Big East powers facing the underdogs from the West each year would produce some great games.
MUPanther wrote:http://www.fanragsports.com/cbb/rothstein-files-30-thoughts-college-basketball-heats/
"UConn will heavily explore joining another league in the offseason: The Huskies have battled injuries this season en route to a 10-12 record, but their overall cache as a program also isn’t quite what it was when they were operating in the old Big East. Kevin Ollie led UConn to a national title in 2014, but the Huskies’ brand still belongs on a bigger stage. Sources have told FanRag Sports that UConn has consistently looked into joining the Big East as a basketball only member as long as it could find another home for its football program....."
MUPanther wrote:http://www.fanragsports.com/cbb/rothstein-files-30-thoughts-college-basketball-heats/
"UConn will heavily explore joining another league in the offseason: The Huskies have battled injuries this season en route to a 10-12 record, but their overall cache as a program also isn’t quite what it was when they were operating in the old Big East. Kevin Ollie led UConn to a national title in 2014, but the Huskies’ brand still belongs on a bigger stage. Sources have told FanRag Sports that UConn has consistently looked into joining the Big East as a basketball only member as long as it could find another home for its football program....."
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