Husky_U wrote:Sounding like the AAC is gonna stay at 11 members and move to a full round robin.
Losers: Everyone in the AAC not named ECU/Tulane for having to play each of those NET dregs twice a year.
Husky_U wrote:Sounding like the AAC is gonna stay at 11 members and move to a full round robin.
Losers: Everyone in the AAC not named ECU/Tulane for having to play each of those NET dregs twice a year.
X Hoops 19 wrote:Yeah, so 8 of 20 conference games will be against ECU, Tulane, Tulsa, and South Florida. Talk about having to navigate a mine field where you can’t afford to have an off night for at least 40% of your conference schedule.
X Hoops 19 wrote:Husky_U wrote:Sounding like the AAC is gonna stay at 11 members and move to a full round robin.
Losers: Everyone in the AAC not named ECU/Tulane for having to play each of those NET dregs twice a year.
Yeah, so 8 of 20 conference games will be against ECU, Tulane, Tulsa, and South Florida. Talk about having to navigate a mine field where you can’t afford to have an off night for at least 40% of your conference schedule.
stever20 wrote:I guess my position with the AAC with Uconn levaing is that UConn last 5 years hasn't performed well at all- only made tourney 1 time- and the league still got on average 3 bids per year. So I don't see how losing a program that went 38-25 OOC the last 5 years is really going to damage the AAC that much.
My position is that it's far more of a positive for the Big East than it is a negative for the AAC. UConn will probably improve in the Big East(though I think they would have still given Hurley being around). For the AAC you're still going to find these old CUSA programs like UCF, Houston, Memphis, etc. with a lot more money and they've taken advantage of that. 4 of the 6 programs from CUSA have made the tourney in their first 5-6 years(the 2 that haven't ECU and Tulane are going into year 6). I don't see that changing.
I would argue that the thing that has the potential to hurt the AAC far more than UConn leaving is Cronin leaving Cincy.
One other thing. I've seen folks mention that the AAC might go round robin and so teams having to play the bad teams twice. I'd argue with the NET that means far less now than it used to. The concept of RPI killers where it'd be better to lose to a better team than beat a bad team- is gone.
stever20 wrote:X Hoops 19 wrote:Husky_U wrote:Sounding like the AAC is gonna stay at 11 members and move to a full round robin.
Losers: Everyone in the AAC not named ECU/Tulane for having to play each of those NET dregs twice a year.
Yeah, so 8 of 20 conference games will be against ECU, Tulane, Tulsa, and South Florida. Talk about having to navigate a mine field where you can’t afford to have an off night for at least 40% of your conference schedule.
Is that the same USF team that could be a tier 1 road game this year(they return a lot from the team last year that did pretty darn well)? Or Tulsa where they finished last year #94 in the NET?
Tulsa was #94 last year, and USF was #99. UConn was #95.
X Hoops 19 wrote:I was referring to 4 historically irrelevant programs that might have outlier seasons every now and again, but will always revert back to irrelevancy due, in large part, to the conference in which they play.
I can tell you for a fact that UC fans are NOT happy with the thought of those 4 teams taking up such a significant portion of their conference schedules for the foreseeable future.
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