LeMoyne00 wrote:UMass is most likely headed to the Sun Belt. That is where the homeless football programs go. Especially considering their horrid football situation 2-22 the last two years, a home stadium with porta johns and home away from home games over an hour away in Foxboro where they average 15,000 (highly inflated btw). That dumpster fire of a football program does not sound like AAC material.
Bill Marsh wrote:
Worth pointing out the other threat is the ACC tournament at Barclays in 2017-18, posing direct competition to the Big East tournament. With an average of 14,500 in this year's tourney, the conference tournament needs bigger numbers and with 2 premium tournaments in the same week, attracting local fans will be a bigger challenge. One way to boost attendance is to add membership - perhaps growing even to 14. Dayton has to be considered a very viable candidate under these circumstances because they travel well and because their success in the next 2-3 years projects very well.
notkirkcameron wrote:LeMoyne00 wrote:UMass is most likely headed to the Sun Belt. That is where the homeless football programs go. Especially considering their horrid football situation 2-22 the last two years, a home stadium with porta johns and home away from home games over an hour away in Foxboro where they average 15,000 (highly inflated btw). That dumpster fire of a football program does not sound like AAC material.
The MAC has UMass football through 2015.
UMass' football contract with Gillette Stadium only requires them to play 4 games per year at Foxboro through 2016, and its on-campus football stadium is undergoing renovations which should be complete in 2018, and UMass already plays at least one home game on campus each year. It would be the smallest football stadium by capacity in the American, but when you consider the attendance of its other programs, it's not as big a disparity as you think.
UMass' on-campus stadium currently has capacity for 17,000.
AAC's average football attendance
East Carolina: 43,985
UCF: 42,084
South Florida: 34,702
Cincinnati: 31,771
Connecticut: 30,932
Memphis: 28,537
Houston: 24,256
Temple: 22,473
Tulsa: 19,893
SMU: 18,725
Tulane: 19,747
Even in the American, a sold-out on-campus UMass would have the lowest average attendance in the league.
However, their attendance would not be that different from Tulane, SMU, Tulsa, and Temple, four other schools the OBE/American added for football.
It wouldn't surprise me if UMass dropped down to FCS, but it also wouldn't surprise me if they went to the American.
notkirkcameron wrote:Madison Square Garden Capacity for Basketball (19,812). So despite a collection of small private schools, 5 of which are from west of the Alleghenys, roughly 3 out of every 4 seats at the Garden sold for the Big East Tournament.
HoosierPal wrote:notkirkcameron wrote:Madison Square Garden Capacity for Basketball (19,812). So despite a collection of small private schools, 5 of which are from west of the Alleghenys, roughly 3 out of every 4 seats at the Garden sold for the Big East Tournament.
I'm not sure if you consider 75% good or bad. The Big 10 here in Indy pretty well was a 100% sellout, averaging 18,599 in a building that seats 18,165.
notkirkcameron wrote:HoosierPal wrote:notkirkcameron wrote:Madison Square Garden Capacity for Basketball (19,812). So despite a collection of small private schools, 5 of which are from west of the Alleghenys, roughly 3 out of every 4 seats at the Garden sold for the Big East Tournament.
I'm not sure if you consider 75% good or bad. The Big 10 here in Indy pretty well was a 100% sellout, averaging 18,599 in a building that seats 18,165.
Remember, Northwestern is the smallest school in the Big Ten, with an enrollment of 14,988. If Northwestern were in the Big East, it would be the fourth-largest school in the league, behind only DePaul, St. John's, and Georgetown.
So with that in mind, a centrally-located conference tournament in a league with 12 teams, 11 of which are giant state schools with large enrollments vs. a conference tournament in the second-easternmost city in the league made up of 10 teams, all of which are private schools with small enrollments?
The real story there is that the Big Ten, despite having all those advantages, only outdrew the Big East by what amounts to, in-stadium, a couple sections.
HoosierPal wrote:
So I am STILL not sure if you consider 75% good or bad.
You showed me two pieces of fruit, both grow from trees, both have high nutritional value, and both are good for you.
HoosierPal wrote:notkirkcameron wrote:Madison Square Garden Capacity for Basketball (19,812). So despite a collection of small private schools, 5 of which are from west of the Alleghenys, roughly 3 out of every 4 seats at the Garden sold for the Big East Tournament.
I'm not sure if you consider 75% good or bad. The Big 10 here in Indy pretty well was a 100% sellout, averaging 18,599 in a building that seats 18,165.
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