marquette wrote:That's another thing. For the B1G to take over New York I feel like Rutgers (which, as we all know, isn't actually a NYC school) would have to become absolutely dominant in either basketball or football. It's the only thing I can see bringing loads of fans out to games. That's just unlikely. Which current B1G school is going to stumble and allow Rutgers to take their place? Ohio State? Michigan? Michigan State? Hell, Wisconsin? I don't see that happening in the near future. The B1G absolutely has a large alumni base in New York City, but way more wind up in Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, Cleveland/Columbus/Cincinnati. A lot even wind up right here in Milwaukee (trust me, I have to deal with them all the time). Even after a decade of alienating Midwest fans to build a fanbase in NY, what hapens when they want to rotate every other year with Chicago? Or every 3 with Chicago/Indianapolis/NY all in the mix? Seems like pissing money and the goodwill of fans down the drain for very little gain. Then again, what is conference realignment if not an abandonment of tradition in pursuit of short term gains?
marquette wrote:JOPO wrote:marquette wrote:I think MSG wants longer commitments than the B1G would be willing to give. And no, the B1G can't abandon the midwest for a decade, the bulk of the fanbase would freak out.
Not to mention that Rutgers doesn't even show up for their own home games. Anyone looking for BET tickets prior to their departure knew they could always reach out to RU and South Florida and be able to get seats. I don't see the Big 10 pissing off their entire conference to pacify a school that doesn't travel well and doesn't really belong in their conference to begin with.
(this post is not directed at you, you just got me thinking with this)
That's another thing. For the B1G to take over New York I feel like Rutgers (which, as we all know, isn't actually a NYC school) would have to become absolutely dominant in either basketball or football. It's the only thing I can see bringing loads of fans out to games. That's just unlikely. Which current B1G school is going to stumble and allow Rutgers to take their place? Ohio State? Michigan? Michigan State? Hell, Wisconsin? I don't see that happening in the near future. The B1G absolutely has a large alumni base in New York City, but way more wind up in Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, Cleveland/Columbus/Cincinnati. A lot even wind up right here in Milwaukee (trust me, I have to deal with them all the time). Even after a decade of alienating Midwest fans to build a fanbase in NY, what hapens when they want to rotate every other year with Chicago? Or every 3 with Chicago/Indianapolis/NY all in the mix? Seems like pissing money and the goodwill of fans down the drain for very little gain. Then again, what is conference realignment if not an abandonment of tradition in pursuit of short term gains?
78 friar wrote:The Big East conference is under contract to MSG until when, 2025? With the recruiting that's been done by our teams, the recruiting that will be done in the future, the coverage and PR provided by Fox, the cities that we have, etc., etc., its going to take an awful lot to displace the Big East from MSG. The interest level is soaring here in Providence despite a few personnel setbacks, and I seem to sense the same thing from other schools as well, both new and old to the conference. Nearly 12,000 attended opening night despite the fact that the game was televised, was at an inconvenient time, and for the most part, snuck up on the average fan. The opportunity is there to do what the Big East did for ESPN 30 years ago with the Monday night games, Wednesday night games, etc. Before the Big East, ESPN was looked at as as some sort of Network joke. The Big East legitimized ESPN and the rest is history. Hopefully the same thing happens with Fox Sports. Old habits are die hard but it doesn't take much to watch Fox instead of ESPN for sports news and programming. Again, we are all small schools that need the cities and states to support and back the schools. The Friars owned Rhode Island, St. Johns owned NY, Villanova owned Philly, Seton Hall owned Jersey. Win these cities and states back and the there's no way to go but up. Somewhere it was written, the City is the Game and the Game is the City.
JOPO wrote:marquette wrote:JOPO wrote:
Not to mention that Rutgers doesn't even show up for their own home games. Anyone looking for BET tickets prior to their departure knew they could always reach out to RU and South Florida and be able to get seats. I don't see the Big 10 pissing off their entire conference to pacify a school that doesn't travel well and doesn't really belong in their conference to begin with.
(this post is not directed at you, you just got me thinking with this)
That's another thing. For the B1G to take over New York I feel like Rutgers (which, as we all know, isn't actually a NYC school) would have to become absolutely dominant in either basketball or football. It's the only thing I can see bringing loads of fans out to games. That's just unlikely. Which current B1G school is going to stumble and allow Rutgers to take their place? Ohio State? Michigan? Michigan State? Hell, Wisconsin? I don't see that happening in the near future. The B1G absolutely has a large alumni base in New York City, but way more wind up in Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, Cleveland/Columbus/Cincinnati. A lot even wind up right here in Milwaukee (trust me, I have to deal with them all the time). Even after a decade of alienating Midwest fans to build a fanbase in NY, what hapens when they want to rotate every other year with Chicago? Or every 3 with Chicago/Indianapolis/NY all in the mix? Seems like pissing money and the goodwill of fans down the drain for very little gain. Then again, what is conference realignment if not an abandonment of tradition in pursuit of short term gains?
If the Big Ten is banking on Rutgers being relevant in anything other than losing the Big East has absolutely nothing to worry about! And you are right, RU is NOT a NYC school, they are a central Jersey school halfway between NYC and Philly and neither market is exactly fighting to lay claim to them (much like another central Jersey school - Monmouth University, no offense to Hawk fans).
JOPO wrote:Honestly, the Big Ten doesn't need Rutgers to get people in NJ to watch Big Ten football. People were already doing that before. I personally prefer SEC football but would occasionally tune into a Big Ten game to watch maybe Penn State or watch Michigan get hammered. Now? Forget it. I have no interest in the Big Ten and probably won't watch any of it. The Big Ten basically added a 1AA school, who wants to watch that on a regular basis? It's fine if you want to watch a 1AA league but I expected better from the Big Ten because they typically are not a 1AA league.
Yes, it was fun to watch Appalachian State kick the crap out of Michigan but that isn't going to happen on a regular basis and Appalachian State has no delusions about their place in the football pecking order and aren't joining the Big Ten anytime soon. Do you really want to see weekly match-ups between the Big Ten and Appalachian State? Don't you think there is a reason the Big Ten will no longer allow their schools to schedule 1AA schools? Because they just admitted one for all sports!
ChelseaFriar wrote:Time Warner Cable in NYC has been carrying the Big Ten Network for a number of years (before Rutgers joined). I actually didn't know until someone told me when the Rutgers news came out, despite the fact that I've had Time Warner NYC for a decade. I've never watched a game on the network.
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