NJRedman wrote:I've been to Lincoln Park, no way would a 10K seat arena would fit there. The area isn't built for that.
DemonLS wrote:Sorry but the United Center is WAY too big of a facility to host a college basketball game. It is massive. DePaul has played 5 or so games there over the years. They were quiet except for the games against Duke and Florida.
Yes, I loved Alumni Hall because I grew up watching games there as a child. But it was outdated. Fantastic home court advantage though.
As I always share, for this conference to be at its best, St. John's and DePaul need to elevate their programs. If they do, the media will take their 2 programs and this conference to bigger heights.
Chicago is the greatest sports town in this country.
notkirkcameron wrote:Demon22 wrote:notkirkcameron wrote:I can't feel too bad for DePaul. Over the past 30 years, between hiring Joey Meyer, tearing down Alumni Hall, turning down the Finkl Steel site in favor of getting into bed with Rahm to build a trojan horse for a casino in the city limits cough cough I mean shiny new stadium, retaining Purnell, not firing their joke of an athletic director, so many of their wounds are self-inflicted.
This is so dumb.
1. Joey Meyer made the Tournament in seven of his first eight years, and was National Coach of the Year in 1987. Hiring him was undoubtedly NOT a mistake. Perhaps you could argue that they kept him too long at the end out of respect for Coach Ray, but he was absolutely the right hire at the time.
2. I loved Alumni Hall. I spent more time there than any other building on campus when I was a student. But the place was a dump. Not even close to being a bad idea to replace it.
3. The Finkl Steel site was and is an environmental disaster. Whoever purchases the site is probably looking at $40 million just to clean it up on top of the expense of purchasing the property before a shovel even hits the ground. DePaul is looking at a $75 million investment at McCormick Place. They'd have been looking at an investment of more than $300 million at Finkl Steel. It would have put the financial stability of the entire University at risk.
I personally cannot claim to have been to Alumni Hall, but the issue here is not Alumni Hall itself, it's the land where Alumni Hall once stood. If I seem annoyed, it's because I've heard DePaul fans many times complain that the reason why they can't get recruits or win games is because students won't come to the games because they're all the way out in Rosemont, but DePaul is stuck because there's nowhere on campus with enough land to build an arena. Well, whose fault is that?
A hypothetical parallel is the Cubs. Imagine the Cubs tore down Wrigley Field, and moved their games to Sox Park. But then, imagine the Cubs redeveloped the land where Wrigley Field is now, to be exclusively condos. If the Cubs then whined that their attendance was suffering because of the move, and whined about there not being enough open land in Lakeview to build a major league baseball stadium closer to their fanbase, no one would feel sorry for them at all. Their problem is one of their own making.
If I recall correctly, the land where Alumni Hall once stood, that's where DePaul's Student Center now is. You can literally build a student center anywhere. It can be big, small, it can be multiple stories to have a small footprint in a dense neighborhood like Lincoln Park, but a basketball arena NEEDS a footprint big enough to put a basketball court and stands down. When DePaul tore down Alumni Hall, they should have announced they were building an 8-10k athletics facility on its site, and that DePaul would play at the United Center in the interim. Yes, they built McGrath, but not on the same site, and it's a much smaller gym shoehorned into a small piece of real estate.
Instead, they stuck it out in Rosemont waaaaay past its sell-by date, and for their new arena, have found one of the few places in the Chicago area that may even be MORE inconvenient than Rosemont, where students are STILL a half hour away from campus by public transit. There seems to have been very little vision in the move, and even less in how to return DePaul to Lincoln Park.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:DePaul could easily turn it around with the proper leadership in place. As long as Jean Lenti-Ponsetto is the university AD, and Oliver Purnell continues to act as Head Coach, the mens basketball program will continue to finish in last place in the Big East.
If DePaul opens their new arena with those two still in place, it will be a disaster. They need leadership to create a spark for the program that has not been felt in quite some time. It is mind-boggling to me that one of the largest catholic universities in the world cannot put a decent basketball program on the court.
falcon wrote:DePaul and SJU are both run by the Vincentian Fathers, who are not very adept at operating a modern university. The problems are not confined to the athletic dept.
notkirkcameron wrote:DePaul is really good at "being in Chicago"...
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