by xubrew » Wed Feb 05, 2014 2:09 pm
A couple of thoughts after reading this thread.....
-It's not the number of teams a league gets into the NCAA Tournament, it's the percentage of teams. In a nine team format, the ACC would routinely send four or five, and occasionally six teams to the NCAA Tournament. Since going out to 12, and now 15, they haven't gotten anywhere close to that high a percentage of teams in. They may be getting more teams in, and they may get more money as a whole, but each school actually takes home less once it's divided up. Five pizzas for twelve people is actually less pizza per person than four pizzas for nine people. So, if it's NCAA Tournament credits, and NCAA Tournament accessibility (IE, the statistical chances of your team making it) that you're concerned about, expansion actually hasn't helped anyone. Ever. Where is the evidence??
The ACC?? It's good now, but a smaller percentage of teams make it now than they did before.
The Big Ten?? At best, it's the same as it was as an eleven and ten team league.
The Pac Twelve?? It's worse.
The Mountain West?? It's worse. With 8 teams in the league, they sent 4 teams. With nine teams in the league, they sent 5 teams. Now that they've expanded, they're substantially worse.
The Big Twelve?? The basketball has actually gotten better since they went to a ten team format.
The SEC?? They're no better at 14 than they were at 12. A smaller percentage of teams make it.
the Atlantic Ten?? Their heyday as a conference was when they actually had ten teams. As a twelve team league, they never sent more than five, and they only did that once. They typically only got three in. As a fourteen team league, they were worse, and as a sixteen team league, they did send five teams, but that was still less than 1/3rd of the teams.
If expansion is such a great idea, then where is the evidence of that?? Why aren't their any examples where a conference is significantly better off in basketball after expanding out to more than ten teams?? At best, there are a few examples of where conferences are the same, and even that is debatable.
There is an actual mathematical study that the ideal number is nine. When you don't play everyone in your conference twice, the impact each team has on the overall power ratings goes down significantly. It's 16 league games among teams that played 13 OOC games. If you play fewer than that, you don't maximize the number of games that can give you the boost. If you play more than that, then you beat up on yourself a little bit because it's two less OOC games for each team to establish themselves. I forget the exact study, but it was interesting. I don't think it makes THAT big of a difference, but the point is that there is no reason in the world to go beyond ten teams.
If we were to invite anyone, it would have to be someone that is better than the current status quo of the conference. Basically, the percentage of teams that make the NCAA Tournament would have to go up, not just the number. Gonzaga and VCU are the only teams I can think of that meet that standard, but even with them you're reducing the number of home and homes, which reduces the mathematical impact that each team has on the league, so would it really make things better??
Gonzaga is also a continent away. I'm not saying that disqualifies them completely, but it is something that isn't ideal.
VCU, I like, because if you look at the programs that have built themselves up and stayed built up, they all have something in common. (San Diego State, Butler, Xavier, Kansas State, Colorado (sort of), are the ones that come to mind. It was a progression. Over time, they've continued to progress as a program. VCU really started to improve around 2001. Everyone talks about the Final Four run as a flash in the pan, and I guess I can see that to a point, but in reality I think VCU had better teams in 2008-09, 2011-12 and 2012-13 then they did during the Final Four year, at least if you look at the entire season. VCU seemed to be good during the year, then get to the NCAA as a low seed, then take their opponents to the wall, but never get over the hump. In the Final Four year, they actually weren't as good as some of their previous years, but I guess Karma decided to even itself out for them. I guess what I'm saying is that even if you overlook the FF run, they've still improved and still show more evidence of continuing to improve than all the other candidates (minus maybe Wichita).
Richmond?? I think Chris Mooney is solid. I'm not sure Richmond is.
SLU?? Admittedly, I'm not sure about them. Maybe they'll stay good, but I can't help but think it was more Majerus than it was a strong athletic department, especially (at least this is how I understand it) the athletic department was kind of bullied into hiring him in the first place. I also think Jim Crews has a history of digressing programs rather than progressing him, and after these seniors are gone, I'm not entirely convinced that they'll continue to be good. I'm not convinced that they'll be bad, but I'm just not convinced they'll be good. That's a very long winded way of saying I don't know.
Dayton?? Dayton has power conference resources in a non-power conference, and can't even finish in the top half of it. Everything about them is great.....except their leadership, which is a very bad area to be lacking. They can't figure out what's wrong, as obvious as it is. They just don't know how to hire coaches. They're like a man who is sitting their with his thumb up his ass, but yet can't figure out why his ass is always sore. I really did enjoy the rivalry Xavier had with them, but until they can get their leadership in order, I can't argue that they'll be good for the league, ESPECIALLY if it means going out beyond ten and taking a mathematical hit.
Wichita?? I'm not completely sold on their staying power, but I'm more sold on them than anyone else. Still, I'm not sold enough to want them.
There is no reason to expand. There are no examples of it helping a league do anything other than be able to stage a championship football game. In every single example, the basketball has either declined, or at the very best stayed the same, and even that is a rarity.
No thanks. To anyone. If two schools leave the Big East, then we should think about adding one more, but unless that happens, there is no reason to do it.
Having said all that, Expansion seems to be so much of a fad, that the people in charge don't sit down to think about how it hasn't really helped anybody else. So, it wouldn't shock me if the BE made a huge mistake, and decided to expand.