Bill Marsh wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:Dayton makes absolutely no sense to me. It would be the same as having St Joes or GW or URI join. We already have a team that covers the (Southern) OH market in X. Fox is going to want us to bring in new markets. So as "ready for prime time" that Dayton thinks they are (although their resume is seriously lacking much March success) it makes absolutely no sense to bring them on geographically. SLU makes the most sense along with someone like a UMASS over a Dayton.
You can't just write off a school that draws 12,000 to its games as making no sense.
Very underrated in many of these discussions is the importance of rivalries to generate interest. Having 2 schools in close proximity could work to intensify interest in the region and thereby overcome the advantage that the Cincy Bearcats have in size and identity with the area. I don't see the proximity of UNC, Duke, and NC State being a problem for the ACC. Nor do I see the UCLA/USC and Cal/Stanford pairings being a problem in the PAC-12. The SEC seems to do just fine with Alabama/Auburn. Same ith KU/K State in the Vig XII.
The other factor being ignored is that neither Xavier nor Dayton are local commuter schools. They draw their students regionally, so they don't simply share the Cincinnati/Dayton market. If they did, then they'd immediately be in Trouble because U Cincinnati is bigger than either of them and has a more prominent local presence. A good Dayton program would enhance TV ratings, they wouldn't simply be redundant of what Xavier already brings.
There's no denying that there are issues with a Dayton candidacy, but issues with market overlap are way overblown and are really a non-issue.
Bostonspider wrote:The main issues I heard about market overlap, and this was from UR's president, was that XU did not want them in the league. They wanted the SW Ohio market to themselves, as they felt it was advantageous to the University as a whole. Better for basketball, branding and admissions if they were the only school in the better conference. But who really knows what is true.
booyah wrote:Agree with that generally- St. Louis is a perfect fit marketwise/institution.
UMass has a more attractive market compared to VCU but less bball success and football aspirations. My vote is still BU - much less bball history, but perfect institutional fit, would become the second highest ranked academic institution after Gtown (go hoyas), private, no football, reinforces our presence in New England which we really need. This year, would be better than Depaul, Setonhall, and Butler by RPI - also significantly better than BC with a decent new stadium. Attendance is the big issue with them.
Bill Marsh wrote:Bostonspider wrote:The main issues I heard about market overlap, and this was from UR's president, was that XU did not want them in the league. They wanted the SW Ohio market to themselves, as they felt it was advantageous to the University as a whole. Better for basketball, branding and admissions if they were the only school in the better conference. But who really knows what is true.
Someone better tell XU that they don't have the SW Ohio market to themselves. U Cincinnati is already there and Ohio State has a big presence, not to mention Kentucky. Dayton would help XU, not hurt them.
bmorex wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Bostonspider wrote:The main issues I heard about market overlap, and this was from UR's president, was that XU did not want them in the league. They wanted the SW Ohio market to themselves, as they felt it was advantageous to the University as a whole. Better for basketball, branding and admissions if they were the only school in the better conference. But who really knows what is true.
Someone better tell XU that they don't have the SW Ohio market to themselves. U Cincinnati is already there and Ohio State has a big presence, not to mention Kentucky. Dayton would help XU, not hurt them.
I don't think anyone is saying that Xavier has the SW Ohio market to themselves. However, there is a clear competitive advantage of being the only Big East school in the area. Adding Dayton would limit that.
Why do you say Dayton would help us?
GoldenBat wrote:Just as an idea, not saying that it's feasible or desired. But what about thinking outside of the box; think outside the country really. What about adding the best team from Canada: Carleton. They're the best team North and they can clearly compete with NCAA teams. In fact, they beat Wisconsin and competed very well against Syracuse (lost in overtime) this summer. It would open up a huge market and would probably be the best addition in terms of team quality we could add. There are some serious players that are coming out of Canada these days and we could capitalize on having Carleton in our conference.
Found this article that may be worth reading on the idea: http://www.ottawasun.com/2013/08/23/car ... ire-centre
Just a thought. It may not be feasible at all, but I don't think it's that wild of an idea.
Bostonspider wrote:The wanted the SW Ohio market to themselves, within the Big East... Not claiming the have the whole market to themselves, but within the conference they do and have no desire to share it. Similar to Georgetown versus GW, or Villanova versus St. Joe's.
Bill Marsh wrote:booyah wrote:Agree with that generally- St. Louis is a perfect fit marketwise/institution.
UMass has a more attractive market compared to VCU but less bball success and football aspirations. My vote is still BU - much less bball history, but perfect institutional fit, would become the second highest ranked academic institution after Gtown (go hoyas), private, no football, reinforces our presence in New England which we really need. This year, would be better than Depaul, Setonhall, and Butler by RPI - also significantly better than BC with a decent new stadium. Attendance is the big issue with them.
I agree that any expansion plans need to include expanding the league's presence in the East. I like the Boston market as a partner for Providence, which is currently on an island, but BU is not the answer. They are a jockey school and Boston is a hockey town on the collegiate level. BU averaged only 750 in home attendance last year for basketball. Yes, that's not a misprint or a typo. You can't manufacture net rest where none exists.
Frankly, it's too bad that Siena didn't maintain the momentum they had about 5 years ago. Even with a series of disappointing seasons, they averaged 6300 in home attendance last year. They are the only game in town in the state capitol where they get a lot of support. They have far and away the best attendance of any private school in the East north of the amazon-Dixon line. And no one else is even remotely close.
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