stever20 wrote:
Temple to me hasn't been a Great BB school. They're on that next level. they got to the elite 8 5 times from 88-01, but never could break thru. They're a really good program, and really haven't had much of a decline.
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stever20 wrote: It's really not shown itself in the freshmen recruiting. I mean, this year only 5 top 50 recruiting classes. Good, but not great.
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Xavier4036 wrote:stever20 wrote: It's really not shown itself in the freshmen recruiting. I mean, this year only 5 top 50 recruiting classes. Good, but not great.
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So the Big East having 4 teams (or 40% of their conference) in the Top 25 "good, but not great", I am curious what you would classify the AAC having ZERO teams as?
GumbyDamnit! wrote:stever20 wrote:UConn really has had 1 bad class. Kind of hard to make broad generalizations about them just off of that.
Temple to me hasn't been a Great BB school. They're on that next level. I mean, they remind me somewhat of Xavier in that they got to the elite 8 5 times from 88-01, but never could break thru. They're a really good program, and really haven't had much of a decline.
AS far as your supposition about guys wanting to be top dogs. I think that's part of why the transfer market has been so strong for the Big East. It's really not shown itself in the freshmen recruiting. I mean, this year only 5 top 50 recruiting classes. Good, but not great.
I think the AAC this season gets a huge boost with Wichita. They took Kentucky to the wire last year. And with how much better the AAC is than the MVC- not to mention that Wichita will see the bad teams only once- they're going to be so much more battle tested going into the tourney- along with the vastly improved SOS.. And the AAC is able to schedule where top teams all get to avoid the bottom teams. Getting 4 or 5 teams in the tourney next year is very possible. they're going to be able to have the final standings where you have 7 or 8 teams finishing with winning records.
Just when I thought you and I were having a reasonable conversation... So yet again, everything is going to magically fall in place for the AAC and you feel that the BE has not done as well recruiting. WTF are you talking about? In the Rivals, Scout and ESPN Top 25 Team Recruiting rankings the BE has 4 teams included. The AAC has ZERO!!!! How about players? In the last 4 recruiting cycles the AAC has brought in 14 Top 100 players for 12 programs (that includes WSU). Or 0.29 recruits per school per year. Good, right? The BE, who has not been able to "show itself in the freshmen recruiting" has brought in 32 for 10 teams or 0.80 per team. So you can say that the BE is 2.75x more effective recruiting those freshmen than the AAC is. Wow. That's not even close.
RE: Temple. From 1984 to 2001 they made the tournament 17 out of 18 years and won 23 tournament games. Show me a team not named UNC or Duke that came close to that over that same period of time. They are also top 10 all-time in wins. The 7 years prior to the AAC they made it 6 times. But since they've gotten to the AAC: once--a quick first round exit. So maybe you need to reconsider what "decline" means.
What else you got?
EMT wrote:
The BE on a per team basis probably stacks up well against the other P6 conferences.... How come he never speaks of the A10 even though they outperform the AAC every year.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:EMT wrote:
The BE on a per team basis probably stacks up well against the other P6 conferences.... How come he never speaks of the A10 even though they outperform the AAC every year.
The last 4 years recruiting cycles ESPN Top 100 players (# of top 100 players per school per year on average):
1. SEC - 1.42
2. ACC - 1.33
3. PAC12 - 1.20
4. B1G10 - 0.98
5. B12 - 0.88
6. BE - 0.80
7. AAC - 0.29
8. A10 - 0.14
The one thing that skews the # is the one-and-done phenomenon. Duke and UK, as examples, attract a lot of the one and done guys. Of the 28 guys they collectively brought to campus in classes 2014-16, 18 of them have already turned pro. So there is this misconception that year after year class rankings is the end all, be all.
The best case I can make for the anti-1&done is the 2016 Nova Wildcats vs the 2016 UK Wildcats. Nova had 4 classes in the 15-25 range one after the other. UK had 4 classes in the top 2. But the Nova guys (Hart, Jenkins, Arch & Ochefu) stayed for 3 and 4 years while the UK guys were mostly Frosh. The effectiveness of recruiting strategy does not factor in length of stay of the athlete. Looking at a 4 year class recruiting rankings and making a determination of overall team strength is a mistake IMO, and it is the key metric that Stever keeps looking at. If the one-and-dones are mostly going to the UK, Duke, Arizona, UCLA, Kansas, TX, LSU, etc. teams, those conferences are going to have inflated recruiting team rankings b/c there is a need to replenish the shelves every year. The BE and every other school not willing to get into a one-&-done arms race with the blue bloods, have found a way to compete against these teams that can pluck 5 start players right off the tree: mature balanced teams that have developed their talent over a # of years. I love what this conference is doing with talent acquisition and development.
FriarJ wrote:I'm not sure what we are arguing about here. It's obvious to everyone that the AAC is solidly positioned to be a Top 3 Mid major conference fighting it out with the A10 and the Mountain West.
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