milwaukeejedi1 wrote:"Fraschilla said the new Big East has done pretty well under difficult circumstances, but he thinks that other than Creighton’s Doug McDermott and a few other players, there is little star power in the league.
“It looked like a league in transition, in terms of players,” Fraschilla said. “I think the potential is there to be a very solid league. Certainly never where it was. It can be a top seven or eight league, even a top six. But this year I thought it would be a transition because there are not many great players in the league. Ultimately that well be how the league is determined in the future. Can Marquette get back to where they have been? Can Georgetown? Can Xavier get back to a level they have been at for a decade and a half. There is opportunity for the league to grow and get better.”
So, according to Fran, the Big East is worse than (or will be not as good as)the SEC, AAC, and A-10. Ridiculous!
http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/sports/248911331.html
XUFan09 wrote:Edrick wrote:XUFan09 wrote:At first I thought this would be another "chip-on-shoulder" thread, but that's actually legitimately BS what they are saying. I'm not surprised that they are saying it, but wow, way to stray from reality. The old Big East was better than the new, but the future of the AAC isn't looking nearly as good as the future of the Big East.
No it wasn't....
http://kenpom.com/blog/index.php/weblog ... he_numbers
Current Big East fans love to post this, while missing the point that Ken Pomeroy is trying to make: The Big East still deserves attention. And I agree with that. He says, "This isn’t the only way to evaluate conference strength, but it does shed some light on the relative merits of the new and old configurations." You know what's another way to judge conference strength? The number and quality of tournament teams, and that's how people really judge conferences. Syracuse vs. Creighton is a wash this year (though not historically). Louisville vs. Xavier isn't even close. Neither is Pitt vs. Butler. UConn and Cincinnati are good too.
It has to be nice not playing god-awful Rutgers and South Florida, but the top of the conference took a big hit. This is a much more well-rounded conference, but the old Big East never had to worry about the possibility of only sending 20% or 30% of its conference to the tournament.
XUFan09 wrote:Add Creighton, take away Syracuse, Pitt (regular season warriors), and Louisville. And this is Villanova's fourth Kenpom top 10 team of the past decade, so that's a wash. Overall, that's a collective hit.
And the quality of those tournament teams matters. Last year there were seven single-digit seeds from the Big East. Seven again the year before. Then ten, then eight, then seven, then seven, then six (and so on). Barring a conference tournament run, this year will have only two single-digit seeds.
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