XUFan09 wrote:"Mid-major" is often a patronizing term, a label that Xavier worked hard to remove in the media when they were still in the A10 because it hurt them on the recruiting trail (and that includes a couple players with whom they now, ironically enough, share a conference).
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... r.tourney/
Winners don't like being the David versus Goliath, the "little engine that could." That makes it sound like they're lucky to be there.
Bill Marsh wrote:XUFan09 wrote:"Mid-major" is often a patronizing term, a label that Xavier worked hard to remove in the media when they were still in the A10 because it hurt them on the recruiting trail (and that includes a couple players with whom they now, ironically enough, share a conference).
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... r.tourney/
Winners don't like being the David versus Goliath, the "little engine that could." That makes it sound like they're lucky to be there.
I'm not sure what the point is. Do majors and mid majors come and go, changing their status as their programs rise and decline? There are very few programs that don't do that.
If a program is a winner, the record speaks for itself and there is no need to worry about the label. If winning is what defines a programs status, then why not use a term that refers to that, such as "perennial tournament team", or "nationally ranked", or perennial 20 game winner?
Bill Marsh wrote:XUFan09 wrote:"Mid-major" is often a patronizing term, a label that Xavier worked hard to remove in the media when they were still in the A10 because it hurt them on the recruiting trail (and that includes a couple players with whom they now, ironically enough, share a conference).
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... r.tourney/
Winners don't like being the David versus Goliath, the "little engine that could." That makes it sound like they're lucky to be there.
I'm not sure what the point is. Do majors and mid majors come and go, changing their status as their programs rise and decline? There are very few programs that don't do that.
If a program is a winner, the record speaks for itself and there is no need to worry about the label. If winning is what defines a programs status, then why not use a term that refers to that, such as "perennial tournament team", or "nationally ranked", or perennial 20 game winner?
BillikensWin wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:XUFan09 wrote:"Mid-major" is often a patronizing term, a label that Xavier worked hard to remove in the media when they were still in the A10 because it hurt them on the recruiting trail (and that includes a couple players with whom they now, ironically enough, share a conference).
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... r.tourney/
Winners don't like being the David versus Goliath, the "little engine that could." That makes it sound like they're lucky to be there.
I'm not sure what the point is. Do majors and mid majors come and go, changing their status as their programs rise and decline? There are very few programs that don't do that.
If a program is a winner, the record speaks for itself and there is no need to worry about the label. If winning is what defines a programs status, then why not use a term that refers to that, such as "perennial tournament team", or "nationally ranked", or perennial 20 game winner?
The point is that mid-major is an insulting, embarrassing term to those that it is forced on. There will be no need to worry about the label when it goes away.
XUFan09 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:XUFan09 wrote:"Mid-major" is often a patronizing term, a label that Xavier worked hard to remove in the media when they were still in the A10 because it hurt them on the recruiting trail (and that includes a couple players with whom they now, ironically enough, share a conference).
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... r.tourney/
Winners don't like being the David versus Goliath, the "little engine that could." That makes it sound like they're lucky to be there.
I'm not sure what the point is. Do majors and mid majors come and go, changing their status as their programs rise and decline? There are very few programs that don't do that.
If a program is a winner, the record speaks for itself and there is no need to worry about the label. If winning is what defines a programs status, then why not use a term that refers to that, such as "perennial tournament team", or "nationally ranked", or perennial 20 game winner?
There is when the label is forced upon the team repeatedly despite the record, simply due to its conference affiliation. It simply needs to go away. I'm not concerned with its origins in the 1970s, because that doesn't matter. Today, right now, it is demeaning to good programs, not to mention the fact that it is lazy reporting. It's way too often used as a subtle way to justify big-conference biases.
LeMoyne00 wrote:As the regulation and governance of the NCAA begins to change, I think we're going to begin hearing the talking points from the power leagues and ESPN that mid-major is any conference without football. They'll want to change the NCAA payouts much like they've rigged the football payouts.
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