mpwalsh8 wrote:stever20 wrote:
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I think St John's is much more of a flagship over Marquette- just because of the long term history. Marquette's been a fantastic add- taking nothing away from them. Don't know if we would have been as bold as we were had they not been what they had been the past several years. But fact is when folks think Big East and specifically the C7, they think of St John's, they think of Nova, and they think of Georgetown.
That may be the case in the northeast but it isn't the case where I live down here in ACC country (Raleigh). Basketball IQ is pretty high here and based on the people I interact with Marquette is more well known than St. John's is. I believe that is because for the last 10 years Marquette has been pretty much of a fixture in the Top 25, the NCAA tournament, their Final 4 and Elite 8 runs, and Dwayne Wade. MU is down this year and people notice It.
XUFan09 wrote:mpwalsh8 wrote:stever20 wrote:
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I think St John's is much more of a flagship over Marquette- just because of the long term history. Marquette's been a fantastic add- taking nothing away from them. Don't know if we would have been as bold as we were had they not been what they had been the past several years. But fact is when folks think Big East and specifically the C7, they think of St John's, they think of Nova, and they think of Georgetown.
That may be the case in the northeast but it isn't the case where I live down here in ACC country (Raleigh). Basketball IQ is pretty high here and based on the people I interact with Marquette is more well known than St. John's is. I believe that is because for the last 10 years Marquette has been pretty much of a fixture in the Top 25, the NCAA tournament, their Final 4 and Elite 8 runs, and Dwayne Wade. MU is down this year and people notice It.
Same here in Richmond, VA. Same with when I lived in St. Louis, MO, or Pittsburgh, PA. People know the recent winners more than anything. The fact that SJU is a bubble team doesn't really affect people's perception of the Big East, as that's an above-average year for SJU recently. The fact that Marquette isn't even on the Bubble, though, affects people's perceptions.
Hall2012 wrote:SJHooper wrote:
1. 2011: we also beat Duke and we were nowhere near as good as Duke. So who cares?
2. Only teams with 9 tourney appearances need to pick a small window to focus on because their overall program is very weak.
3. Totally different Big East now
4. Who cares? The rest of the country has surpassed NYC as the premier talent pool for ballers. Back in the day NYC was a real hot spot for recruits. Now there are great players all over the country. By the way, since you brought it up: you literally had to pimp a player out through his coach to get him. Your program promised IW's coach a position on the staff for the sole reason of signing IW. IW made it obvious he wanted to go to SJ until the eleventh hour when his coach demanded that Lavin take him with IW as a package deal. We did not stoop to that level, so we said go ahead to SHU. And there he is. SHU needed to pimp a player out to get him. Draw your own conclusions. This is also the same Seton Hall fanbase that creeped out Kyle Anderson who raised an eyebrow and walked away.
I'm finished with the SHU v. SJU thing though. People know it's not even close overall. 9 vs. 28. That says it all. We are the 7th winningest program in the country. We fell on hard times the past 2 decades mostly, but we are clearly on the way back up. Enjoy your day. Once you get to double digits in tourney appearances we can continue this.
Oh you're back on this again- "wahhhhhhh nobody can possibly beat the almighty St. John's (on the court or in recruiting) without cheating." Now let's point out something that you conveniently left out. That IW was leaning heavily towards SHU until that last minute visit to SJU (the day before he was going to decide). Then speculation was that he changed his mind to SJU during that visit (wonder how much $$$ he was offered). So either that speculation was wrong and he didn't change his mind, or he changed it back afterwords because he chose SHU. He never "made it obvious he wanted to go to SJ." Seton Hall was a finalist in his recruitment the entire time, long before any mention of Morton joining the SHU staff came up, so your claim about that being "the sole reason of signing IW" is just an obvious sign of your jealousy and ignorance.
Bill Marsh wrote:Perhaps the perception of Marquette in the Northeast is different because despite its success in the NCAA tournament, Marquette has not been a factor in the Big East tournament where they were one and done during the three years when they went on to make runs to the Sweet 16 and beyond. Never made it to the Big East tournament finals. Made it to the semis only once. Losing record in total during 8 BE tournaments. That's the week when BE fans are paying close attention to each other.
notkirkcameron wrote:Edrick wrote:Chicago is a terrible college sports town.
Listen to this all day long, Ill give you a cookie if you can string together 1 hour of college sports talk in 24 hours.
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/station/670-the-score/
I'll disagree with this. Chicago is a great college sports town....just none of the teams happen to be in Chicago. Chicago is kind of like Boston where there's a lot of colleges, but none are really that great at anything. When your city's D1 teams are DePaul, UIC, Chicago State, Loyola Chicago, and Northwestern (Evanston), then can you really blame people for not turning out?
Chicago is, and always will be a Big Ten expat and alumni town. Walk around the north side on any given Saturday afternoon and you'll see the Buckeye alums stumbling out of their packed bars and the Wolverines, Spartans, Hawkeyes, Illini, and Hoosiers stumbling out of theirs. Notre Dame of course is a beast all itself.
Frank the Tank wrote:notkirkcameron wrote:Edrick wrote:Chicago is a terrible college sports town.
Listen to this all day long, Ill give you a cookie if you can string together 1 hour of college sports talk in 24 hours.
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/station/670-the-score/
I'll disagree with this. Chicago is a great college sports town....just none of the teams happen to be in Chicago. Chicago is kind of like Boston where there's a lot of colleges, but none are really that great at anything. When your city's D1 teams are DePaul, UIC, Chicago State, Loyola Chicago, and Northwestern (Evanston), then can you really blame people for not turning out?
Chicago is, and always will be a Big Ten expat and alumni town. Walk around the north side on any given Saturday afternoon and you'll see the Buckeye alums stumbling out of their packed bars and the Wolverines, Spartans, Hawkeyes, Illini, and Hoosiers stumbling out of theirs. Notre Dame of course is a beast all itself.
Yes, this is true. Chicago is definitely a pro sports town first and foremost, but it would also be a grave mistake to lump it in with NYC and Boston where college sports are a blip on the radar. The sheer numbers of Big Ten alums here alone (remember that even out-of-state Big Ten schools often send enough grads to just Chicago annually that would be larger than the entire graduating classes at many private schools) are enough to fuel entire neighborhoods of bars on the North Side and drive media coverage, plus Notre Dame is a short drive away and is treated as a local team with all of the Subway Alums. DePaul actually was the biggest winter sports team in town during the '70s and early-'80s, but the last decade definitely hasn't been kind. The new arena will be a good asset, but they definitely need to win with how much sports competition is in town.
The irony is that during the period that the DePaul basketball program has gone downward, the profile of DePaul as an overall school in Chicago has risen dramatically. DePaul's main Lincoln Park location has become a massive asset - kids that would have commuted 30 years ago now all want to live there because it's one of the best pound-for-pound locations for a college in the country (and that's increasingly being the case near DePaul's South Loop campus, too, which has gone from a "meh" neighborhood to one with gleaming high-rises and college students everywhere). One would hope that the basketball program can tap into that overall institutional energy. DePaul is essentially what St. John's would be if you moved it to NYU's location.
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