adoraz wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:If Georgetown allows it, then let VCU in on the basis that they won't create an FBS football team.
kayako wrote:adoraz wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:If Georgetown allows it, then let VCU in on the basis that they won't create an FBS football team.
As long as VCU is willing to commit more money to basketball than others. I don't like this institutional fit narrative.
adoraz wrote:
I view FBS vs non-FBS as the biggest threat to the Big East, not private vs public. I get what you mean, but I don't think it should be a deal breaker (just as it shouldn't be one for UConn- even though they have FBS football... sort of).
If Georgetown allows it, then let VCU in on the basis that they won't create an FBS football team.
On another note, it is surprising the AAC has not invited VCU. If they really cared about basketball they would have added Gonzaga and VCU. Wichita St was a nice gesture, but not a great move with much better candidates available.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
[https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/court-report-mark-few-continues-to-go-after-mark-emmert-figuring-out-kentuckys-3-point-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.
What schools make for ideal candidates? The rumor mill has consistently put out a litany of programs, many of them currently in the A-10, such as Saint Louis, Dayton, Richmond, VCU, Rhode Island, Davidson and Saint Joseph's.
Ackerman said any school up for consideration would have to check a lot of boxes before entering into real discussion.
"Geography would be important," she said. "Commitment to basketball would probably be the No. 1 thing, the notion that they would be additive as it relates to our basketball prospects. Are they going to help secure our chances every year of getting into the NCAA Tournament? Possible No. 2: Would they help us with our tournament? Would they bring fans to Madison Square Garden?"
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.
Gopher+RamFan wrote:
VCU doesn't have an FCS [football] program, not even a club team.
Gopher+RamFan wrote:Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
[https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/court-report-mark-few-continues-to-go-after-mark-emmert-figuring-out-kentuckys-3-point-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.
BTW, this is a ‘Saint Louis‘ thread – not a ‘VCU’ thread.
What schools make for ideal candidates? The rumor mill has consistently put out a litany of programs, many of them currently in the A-10, such as Saint Louis, Dayton, Richmond, VCU, Rhode Island, Davidson and Saint Joseph's.
Ackerman said any school up for consideration would have to check a lot of boxes before entering into real discussion.
"Geography would be important," she said. "Commitment to basketball would probably be the No. 1 thing, the notion that they would be additive as it relates to our basketball prospects. Are they going to help secure our chances every year of getting into the NCAA Tournament? Possible No. 2: Would they help us with our tournament? Would they bring fans to Madison Square Garden?"
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.
On June 23, 2019 in Post # 67 gtmoBlue wrote:
Nice post Fieldhouse...
Your points regarding the early exit from AAC requirements and the money, also the remote possibility of the entry being blocked are appropo.
Give me the Zags and SLU.
On June 23, 2019 herodotus wrote:
SLU would pretty much be the only team that could punch all of the boxes (unless Duquesne becomes a power after being dead for 45 years).
I'll be rooting for St. Louis and Duquesne to dominate the A10. Just in case we might need to call one of them up to the big leagues.
On March 19, 2019 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Saint Louis would bring down the conference averages of the Big East's most important numbers:
Saint Louis 2014-15 Final RPI Ranking: 273
Saint Louis 2015-16 Final RPI Ranking: 207
Saint Louis 2016-17 Final RPI Ranking: 247
Saint Louis 2017-18 Final RPI Ranking: 138
Saint Louis 2018-19 Mar. 19 NET Ranking: 103
Saint Louis Five-year Average Ranking: 194 ...... Saint Louis 2018-19 Average Home Attendance: 6,890
Saint Louis was picked to finish in first place in 2018-19 in the October 2018 Atlantic 10 Coaches and Media Poll. To their credit, the Billikens won the Atlantic 10 Tournament, but that was more a result of the Atlantic 10 collectively having a very bad season rather than Saint Louis having a very good team. The 2019-20 season looks to be another rebuilding year for Travis Ford, who is now struggling on the recruiting trail.
In a city of 2,800,000 people, in a season when the Billikens were predicted to win the Atlantic 10 Championship (and did), the Billikens still averaged fewer than 7,000 fans per game (and more than 3,500 empty seats per game). The Billikens will always be second to the Missouri Tigers in the St. Louis college sports TV market. It is quite probable that the apathy shown towards Billikens basketball at the Chaifetz Arena turnstiles is reflected in the viewership of Billikens basketball on TV.
St. Louis never has been and never will be a ‘college basketball’ city. The size of the media market is of little consequence when the market has little interest in college basketball in general, and little interest in the Saint Louis Billikens in particular.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------On March 20, 2019 prebilliken wrote:
(5) SLU likely won't take a step back next year as Jordan Goodwin and Hashan French return, plus they add three highly touted recruits and a JC transfer who is eligible immediately.
Conference Rank: #6 in Atlantic 10
Saint Louis had a disappointing 2018-19 regular season, failing to win 20 games and going 10-8 in a down year for the Atlantic 10. Getting back to the postseason could be an uphill climb for the Billikens.
Coach: Travis Ford. Record: 52-50 at Saint Louis, 397-307 overall.
Key Departed Players:
Javon Bess, Forward, 15.3 ppg
Tramaine Isabell, Guard, 13.7 ppg
D.J. Foreman, Forward, 6.1 ppg
Dion Wiley, Guard, 4.5 ppg
Key Returning Players:
Jordan Goodwin, Junior, Guard, 10.5 ppg
Hasahn French, Junior, Forward, 9.3 ppg
Key New Players:
Javonte Perkins, Junior, Forward, (Junior College transfer)
Yuri Collins, Freshman, Guard (presently ranked #214 by 247 Sports)
Terrence Hargrove, Freshman, Forward (presently ranked #317 by 247 Sports)
Gibson Jimerson, Freshman, Guard (presently ranked #449 by 247 Sports)
Jimmy Bell, Freshman, Center (presently ranked #453 by 247 Sports)
Madani Diarra, Freshman, Center (not listed in the 247 Sports prospect database)
Projection:
Juniors Jordan Goodwin and Hasahn French will be the foundation for the Billikens this season. Goodwin and French had strong sophomore seasons, with each starting 35 games and playing more than 30 minutes per outing. Javonte Perkins could be the most important addition for Saint Louis as an experienced forward from junior college. Perkins has good size at 6-7 and was a high-level shooter in junior college. Five freshmen also join the Billikens this season. Point guard Yuri Collins is the highest ranked of the group as a top-250 recruit. There isn’t a lot of returning production for Saint Louis, but the potential is there for the Billikens to be in the top half of the Atlantic 10 standings this season.
Projected Postseason Tournament: None
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