GoldenWarrior11 wrote:http://www.nhregister.com/sports/20170311/sunday-gravy-sorting-through-possible-tom-moore-replacements-at-quinnipiac
Athletic director Greg Amodio was hired two years ago to get men’s basketball on par with Quinnipiac’s other revenue-driving sports. The school elevated to the MAAC in 2014, with the intention to make itself attractive for another upgrade. School president John Lahey has said he believes there’s Big East potential here.
Quinnipiac believes they are a long-term candidate for the Big East. They are already an associate member for Field Hockey.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:http://www.nhregister.com/sports/20170311/sunday-gravy-sorting-through-possible-tom-moore-replacements-at-quinnipiac
Athletic director Greg Amodio was hired two years ago to get men’s basketball on par with Quinnipiac’s other revenue-driving sports. The school elevated to the MAAC in 2014, with the intention to make itself attractive for another upgrade. School president John Lahey has said he believes there’s Big East potential here.
Quinnipiac believes they are a long-term candidate for the Big East. They are already an associate member for Field Hockey.
Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:http://www.nhregister.com/sports/20170311/sunday-gravy-sorting-through-possible-tom-moore-replacements-at-quinnipiac
Athletic director Greg Amodio was hired two years ago to get men’s basketball on par with Quinnipiac’s other revenue-driving sports. The school elevated to the MAAC in 2014, with the intention to make itself attractive for another upgrade. School president John Lahey has said he believes there’s Big East potential here.
Quinnipiac believes they are a long-term candidate for the Big East. They are already an associate member for Field Hockey.
I don't live too far from Quinnipiac. It's been amazing to watch their transformation over the years from a small college to one with a total enrollment now of 9,000 and 6500 undergrads. Over the years they've added both a medical school and a law school. Their facilities are first rate.
I don't see them as in the future of the Big East, but they are a first rate school and I wouldn't put a ceiling on their potential. They remind me of Tufts academically although on a lesser scale. Forty years ago, Tufts was a small college, known as a safety school for kids who couldn't get into Harvard. If you're going to live in someone else's shadow, Harvard's is not a bad one. But Tufts is now an elite research university in its own right, one of the best in the country. Quinnipiac, down the road from Yale, is growing in that same direction. Plus they boast an Irish Heritage Museum with lots of great exhibits on the Great Starvation in Ireland.
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