booyah wrote:Alright - you articulate why BU is a bad fit, outside of their performance which I conceded, and agree would have to improve before they were a candidate.
tsmithohio1234 wrote:"" big wins against the nations best teams year after year ""
VCU UD Richmond beat multiple ranked teams on a regular basis every year.
The bottom feeder BE teams that you mention had the luxury of playing Syracuse, Pitt, Ucon, Louisvellle et all at home
UD VCU Richmond don't get the chance, they have to get their ranked wins on the road or neutral sites. Ranked teams don't play away games these teams
Look at UD record against BCS schools over past 10 years, it is something like 15 - 6.
Edrick wrote:Southern Illinois (circa 2008) was more attractive than any of these "candidates" that people are bandying about...
http://www.bbstate.com/teams/SIU/tournament
Since 2007, SIU is 83-115. This year they are 2-8 and such a dumpster fire their coach said this last night...
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketb ... after-loss
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You simply do not consider programs that lack institutional fit because it is MORE LIKELY than not that they are Southern Illinois than something like Memphis, long term, who have basketball success at a public school without major football.
Being a school like UMass (seriously?) or VCU should (and by all indications do) automatically disqualify them. And there's just not requisite quality programs that fit.
Of course expansion is something that you look at, you just don't do so until there are programs that actually add to the quality of your league AND maintain the conference identity.
tsmithohio1234 wrote:they are getting recognition and going to the tournament because the soft lower half of the A10 provides them with enough wins to have a good record. Big East teams just as good were getting buried in the
What are you talking about are you serious. You are saying that the committee only looks at number of wins and not RPI, strength of schedule, home vs away games...
How many times have we seen BE ACC and B10 teams make the tournament with 15-19 wins and double digit losses, while mid majors with 25+ wins are left out
Bill Marsh wrote:
You're making my point for me. Butler has no rivalries with the other Big East members except for Xavier because they haven't ever played them. The more you play your conference rivals, the more intense a rivalry becomes. That's why double round robin is so important to building a conference. You play EVERY other conference member at home EVERY year. Your fans get to see them and cheer against them EVERY year. When a league breaks into divisions as it does in 12 team leagues, that doesn't happen.
When you look back a decade from now, you'll find that Hoya fans will be fired up for Butler. And Butler fans will be chomping at the bit in anticipation of the game vs the hated Providence Friars. It ain't there now, but it will be.
Sactowndog wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:
You're making my point for me. Butler has no rivalries with the other Big East members except for Xavier because they haven't ever played them. The more you play your conference rivals, the more intense a rivalry becomes. That's why double round robin is so important to building a conference. You play EVERY other conference member at home EVERY year. Your fans get to see them and cheer against them EVERY year. When a league breaks into divisions as it does in 12 team leagues, that doesn't happen.
When you look back a decade from now, you'll find that Hoya fans will be fired up for Butler. And Butler fans will be chomping at the bit in anticipation of the game vs the hated Providence Friars. It ain't there now, but it will be.
Rivalries have as much to do with geographic proximity as frequency. When you bump into the other schools graduates and have to listen to their smack that enhanced the rivalry. When your fighting for recruits in your own backyard that plays into the rivalry. Providence is too far away to be a real rival of Butler. A compact western and eastern division would enhance rivalries both between teams and across divisions.
anXUfan wrote:Sactowndog wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:
You're making my point for me. Butler has no rivalries with the other Big East members except for Xavier because they haven't ever played them. The more you play your conference rivals, the more intense a rivalry becomes. That's why double round robin is so important to building a conference. You play EVERY other conference member at home EVERY year. Your fans get to see them and cheer against them EVERY year. When a league breaks into divisions as it does in 12 team leagues, that doesn't happen.
When you look back a decade from now, you'll find that Hoya fans will be fired up for Butler. And Butler fans will be chomping at the bit in anticipation of the game vs the hated Providence Friars. It ain't there now, but it will be.
Rivalries have as much to do with geographic proximity as frequency. When you bump into the other schools graduates and have to listen to their smack that enhanced the rivalry. When your fighting for recruits in your own backyard that plays into the rivalry. Providence is too far away to be a real rival of Butler. A compact western and eastern division would enhance rivalries both between teams and across divisions.
I completely agree with Bill on this. The Big East brand - tough ass basketball top to bottom - needs to be reinforced before any expansion should be considered. Rivalries draw eyeballs, and rivalries require familiarity.
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