gtmoBlue wrote:Seriously, I'd take SLU, St Bonnie, and the Zags today!
Gopher+RamFan wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:Seriously, I'd take SLU, St Bonnie, and the Zags today!
St Bonnie? What?
It's a shame that VCU doesn't get more looks, having gone to the Tournament 11 out of the last 15 years with 5 different coaches. A $2 Million/year media rights contract (not including what they get from the Conference); always the top attendance at Conference Tournaments; institutional buy-in of basketball from the President on down, $25 Million practice facility; 31,000 students and another 13,000 employees - and in fertile recruiting grounds (which may have been the reason Georgetown was against the move); $1.8 Billion endowment; ranked #80 of all public institutions academically (156th overall), and an East Coast metropolitan city ranked as the 55th Designated Market Area - just next to the Peninsula cities which rank 42nd (and where many students and recruits come from).
I get that some believe the public school designation is a non-starter, and if it is - so be it. But it's strange seeing some support for schools like SBU, Denver, Loyola-Chicago over the years I've been on this board (2013). Rant over, the Big East doesn't need to expand anyway.
Gopher+RamFan wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:Seriously, I'd take SLU, St Bonnie, and the Zags today!
St Bonnie? What?
It's a shame that VCU doesn't get more looks, having gone to the Tournament 11 out of the last 15 years with 5 different coaches. A $2 Million/year media rights contract (not including what they get from the Conference); always the top attendance at Conference Tournaments; institutional buy-in of basketball from the President on down, $25 Million practice facility; 31,000 students and another 13,000 employees - and in fertile recruiting grounds (which may have been the reason Georgetown was against the move); $1.8 Billion endowment; ranked #80 of all public institutions academically (156th overall), and an East Coast metropolitan city ranked as the 55th Designated Market Area - just next to the Peninsula cities which rank 42nd (and where many students and recruits come from).
I get that some believe the public school designation is a non-starter, and if it is - so be it. But it's strange seeing some support for schools like SBU, Denver, Loyola-Chicago over the years I've been on this board (2013). Rant over, the Big East doesn't need to expand anyway.
adoraz wrote:
I'd definitely want VCU over teams like the Bonnies, Dayton and St. Louis.
On December 13, 2018 GoldenWarrior11 wrote:
https://www.cbssports.com/college-baske ... oint-woes/
On December 12, 2018 Matt Norlander wrote:
If expansion came to be in the Big East, Val Ackerman said going to 11 would be most ideal and "very workable" because it could allow the double round-robin intra-league scheduling to remain in place. Going to 12 or more schools would eliminate that.
The Catholic-school angle is also not insignificant. Butler, which is private and of similar makeup to the other nine, is the only non-Catholic institution in the Big East. There's also a high level of camaraderie and morale among the membership now, something that Ackerman noted wasn't there right before the old Big East fissured, when the league was bigger.
MUBoxer wrote:NJRedman wrote:You realize that saying Omaha is in the same neck of the woods as Milwaukee is distance wise the same as saying NYC is in the same neck of the woods as Raleigh.
gtmoBlue wrote:Hell, rather have Bayhiim & cheating S'Cuse back before VCU. Luv ya 'Raz, but da Virginians are not an institutional fit.
NJRedman wrote:MUBoxer wrote:You realize that saying Omaha is in the same neck of the woods as Milwaukee is distance wise the same as saying NYC is in the same neck of the woods as Raleigh.
Yes, but everything is further apart out there compared to out here. We have 5 major cities in the space between you and every other midwestern school besides DePaul and in that distance we have like 3
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