MUBoxer wrote:
boxing at the MGM is far more prestigious now. Someone from NYC can argue all they want about this one but I spent 15yrs of my 29 boxing and we weren't dreaming of fighting in NYC.
I guess it depends. I think Wembly is the most famous sporting/concert venue. If someone were to say indoor only for all levels of basketball the Staples center takes the cake. You walk by statues of George Mikkan, Kareem, Magic, Shaq, West, Baylor, eventually Koby, not to mention the associations logo is Jerry West. So if one accepts that NBA is greater than college in terms of popularity its likely there.
Bogg wrote:I dunno man, the Big East 1-seed and the Big East champion have won the national title with the same frequency. If on some emotional level you think additional wins in February are more meaningful than wins and trophies in March, that's cool I guess. Seems like Bearcat thinking, but maybe it's a Cincinnati thing. Logically, I prefer championships to not-championships.
Bogg wrote:I dunno man, the Big East 1-seed and the Big East champion have won the national title with the same frequency. If on some emotional level you think additional wins in February are more meaningful than wins and trophies in March, that's cool I guess. Seems like Bearcat thinking, but maybe it's a Cincinnati thing. Logically, I prefer championships to not-championships.
ThrowDownDBrown wrote:Bogg wrote:I dunno man, the Big East 1-seed and the Big East champion have won the national title with the same frequency. If on some emotional level you think additional wins in February are more meaningful than wins and trophies in March, that's cool I guess. Seems like Bearcat thinking, but maybe it's a Cincinnati thing. Logically, I prefer championships to not-championships.
I prefer success in the real tournament, the one people actually watch and remember. To improve your chances at success in the real tournament you need to get as good of a seed as possible. A regular season conference championship has a much larger impact on your seed then the conference tournament. Conference tournament results are forgotten in less then a week when the real March Madness starts.
XUFan09 wrote:Bogg wrote:I dunno man, the Big East 1-seed and the Big East champion have won the national title with the same frequency. If on some emotional level you think additional wins in February are more meaningful than wins and trophies in March, that's cool I guess. Seems like Bearcat thinking, but maybe it's a Cincinnati thing. Logically, I prefer championships to not-championships.
First off, the Big East tournament champion who won the national championship was also 2nd place in the regular season, the exception I already said I would make. Also, quite frankly, they were seeded like the regular season champion because they had injuries during the conference season that the Committee accounted for and they would have likely been co-champions or outright champions without those injuries.
Also, not from Cincinnati, dude. Just spent four years there. I'm from St. Louis where I've experienced my fair share of actual championships. And I have no idea where you're from, so I'm not saying you haven't experienced those yourselves, but that's my priority. Quite simply, everything is a distant second to the NCAA tournament with a chance at a championship. Additional wins in February improve one's chances there, period. If in this hypothetical scenario, you want to take the guaranteed consolation prize (a trophy for 10 power-conference teams out of 353 total teams) but with a likely reduced chance at the real prize, that's up to you.
Because that's what the debate comes down to. No matter what, no team has a good chance at the real national prize. So, do you choose the scenario where you still maximize your chances at that national prize but at the expense of a regional prize? Or, do you choose the scenario where you get a regional prize but at likely somewhat reduced to significantly reduced odds at the national prize. I choose the former. You choose the latter.
ThrowDownDBrown wrote:Bogg wrote:I dunno man, the Big East 1-seed and the Big East champion have won the national title with the same frequency. If on some emotional level you think additional wins in February are more meaningful than wins and trophies in March, that's cool I guess. Seems like Bearcat thinking, but maybe it's a Cincinnati thing. Logically, I prefer championships to not-championships.
I prefer success in the real tournament, the one people actually watch and remember. To improve your chances at success in the real tournament you need to get as good of a seed as possible. A regular season conference championship has a much larger impact on your seed then the conference tournament. Conference tournament results are forgotten in less then a week when the real March Madness starts.
DeadHeadHoya wrote:bums me out the BE newbies don't care about MSG i've been to the tourney like 10 times and its always great and to me its the BE championship. the players, the teams, the coaches...its what its all about guys
Django wrote:DeadHeadHoya wrote:bums me out the BE newbies don't care about MSG i've been to the tourney like 10 times and its always great and to me its the BE championship. the players, the teams, the coaches...its what its all about guys
Have you gone since realignment? I don't think so, because if you did you would know that a Hoya fan claiming Creighton fans don't care about the Big East Tournament is hilarious. I've also been to the tournament and Creighton had one of the highest turnouts, most visible, most vocal, and we had to travel the farthest, buy plane tickets, etc. etc. Georgetown's turnout was bad. About the same as DePaul's.
FriarJ wrote:Do Fox pay for Xavier, Creighton, and Butler or did they pay for the BET? Put another way how much did Fox value the BE name and the BET? Based upon the responses here it sounds like the C7 overvalued the name and MSG.
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