TheHall wrote:NJRedman wrote:TheHall wrote:I just don't believe that the conference has gone down so much that we need a finished product or "perfect" school to consider for expansion and that's a good thing because there aren't any out there at the moment. In the new Big East, if a school becomes a bottom dweller its not just on that school it's on the conference too. Everyone is working to get this league back to the top & $$ doesn't seem to be an issue. Every member's ability to recruit, hire big time coaches, be seen on tv, get corporate support, & overall cash flow is increased entering the BE. Thinking that Gonzaga is going to fail if they have all those new assets & support just seems like chicken little fear mongering.
Personally I don't think any of the main schools being discussed will fail or cause the league to fail. This has just been a conversation about who would help the most for me. The conversation you seem to be having is who is at risk of failing the most. A fair point but the conference has to be bold to come out on top in the long run not fearful IMO.
Chicken little fear mongering? You must not have a job where tough choices must be made. Risk assessment is definitely an important thing to do in the business world. There are risks adding a school that is on the west coast for a conference who is NE/Mid-west based. If you can't understand that then i'm just wasting my breathe trying to have this conversation.
The value of an expansion candidate is about how much value they bring to the league even when they have a down stretch. Anyone can bring value when they are winning but the truly valuable bring value when they are losing. Everyone has down periods even the blue bloods like UCLA, UNC and UK. Thats the issue we are talking about, thats what you are failing to grasp. The Zags will have a big increase in travel and competition, those are big factors they would have to deal with. You writing them off as just people "hating" "fear mongering" or being a "chicken little" just shows how little you understand of the expansion process.
Even if SLU struggles they bring a top level media market with them which makes our TV contract more valuable. Even if Dayton struggles they still bring a big fan base who will travel to NYC for the BET and are also in a good size TV market. If VCU struggles they have a fan base who can easily travel to the BET and brings in the Richmond/VA TV market. So i'll ask again, what does Gonzaga bring to the table if they struggle?
Not sure how old you are but the Big East was founded on being bold, it was greed that took down the old league not poor risk assessment. Going with FOX vs. ESPN was bold. Gonzaga has been relevant through the past 2 decades coming out of the WCC of all places, through multiple coaches, plenty of BE squads can't say that. The Zags belong in the conversation.
Btw as an IE I don't usual make decisions off of risk assessment ("worst case" planning), but instead risk/reward based on a certain level of confidence...Like what if SJU never gets it turned around in the BE's largest market. That had to be on FOX's risk/reward model. They probably figured well at least Seton Hall increases their chances to be successful there too
NJRedman wrote:TheHall wrote:NJRedman wrote:
Chicken little fear mongering? You must not have a job where tough choices must be made. Risk assessment is definitely an important thing to do in the business world. There are risks adding a school that is on the west coast for a conference who is NE/Mid-west based. If you can't understand that then i'm just wasting my breathe trying to have this conversation.
The value of an expansion candidate is about how much value they bring to the league even when they have a down stretch. Anyone can bring value when they are winning but the truly valuable bring value when they are losing. Everyone has down periods even the blue bloods like UCLA, UNC and UK. Thats the issue we are talking about, thats what you are failing to grasp. The Zags will have a big increase in travel and competition, those are big factors they would have to deal with. You writing them off as just people "hating" "fear mongering" or being a "chicken little" just shows how little you understand of the expansion process.
Even if SLU struggles they bring a top level media market with them which makes our TV contract more valuable. Even if Dayton struggles they still bring a big fan base who will travel to NYC for the BET and are also in a good size TV market. If VCU struggles they have a fan base who can easily travel to the BET and brings in the Richmond/VA TV market. So i'll ask again, what does Gonzaga bring to the table if they struggle?
Not sure how old you are but the Big East was founded on being bold, it was greed that took down the old league not poor risk assessment. Going with FOX vs. ESPN was bold. Gonzaga has been relevant through the past 2 decades coming out of the WCC of all places, through multiple coaches, plenty of BE squads can't say that. The Zags belong in the conversation.
Btw as an IE I don't usual make decisions off of risk assessment ("worst case" planning), but instead risk/reward based on a certain level of confidence...Like what if SJU never gets it turned around in the BE's largest market. That had to be on FOX's risk/reward model. They probably figured well at least Seton Hall increases their chances to be successful there too
Bold and reckless are not the same thing. Adding teams willy nilly is not the way to successfully run a conference. You continue to dodge my questions. What does Gonzaga bring to the table if they struggle in the Big East? Past results are not a indication of future success, especially when you are trying to compare the WCC to the BE.
stever20 wrote:travel is not just distance. It's time zones. St John's plays a Thursday night game in Spokane, they have 0% chance of getting back for a Friday class. St John's plays at Dayton or SLU even- and there's a pretty solid chance the kids are back in time for the class.
NJRedman wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:NJRedman wrote:
Don't you see that you're proving my point for me? The Zags would have to take on the burden of that travel and look at what that did to WVU who isn't nearly a far from the Big XII as the Zags are from the BE. They could easily falter and struggle dealing with all that travel. That is a legit concern and a realistic possibility.
Yes, I agree that it's a legitimate concern for Gonzaga, but that doesn't explain why it's such a big concern for a St. John's fan or for the rest of the league.
As for the Zags, they're willing to do it because they already have to fly everywhere they go and therefore they have their own charter for all their teams because they have long distances currently. They also have to add extra trips right now to the Midwest, the South, and the East to improve their strength of schedule, something which would not be an issue with a Big East schedule.
The thing which I'm having a hard time getting you to see is that air miles are not the same as road miles. The longest trip facing the Zags is Providence, which is less than 2400 miles. At 600 mph in the air, it's the same amount of time in the air as a 240 mile trip by bus from NYC to Syracuse - without traffic. No one would complain about a bus trip to Syracuse and it was routinely done for years by many NYC teams - not to mention that aside from a nearby school like Colgate, Syracuse had to bus all its teams long distances forever because there was no one else close to them. Think about the distances Maine had to bus every single one of their teams forever. It takes 3 hours just to get out of the state when you drive south from Orono. And all of this was done for more than half a century from such places before they laid a single mile of interstate highway, making such trips twice as long.
I'm not saying that long distance travel isn't an issue for Gonzaga. It is. But it's an issue for them right now and they're doing it in a mid major conference with mid major revenue. Half the conference is already more than a 1000-1200 miles away from them in Southern California.
I'm sure that Gonzaga knows that their are many ways of scheduling to lessen the impact of the worst of such travel, e.g. play 2-3 road games on the same trip and include women's games in that same trip, schedule the longest trips around vacations and holidays, schedule divisional play so road trips to all East Coast schools don't occur every year.
Why do I care? Well because I'd rather have a team who can contribute to the league. If the Zags can't handle the travel and become a bottom dweller than that brings zero value to the league. They aren't in a big market, aren't in a great recruiting ground, aren't in a city full of conference alum and will bring very few fans to the BET. Where is the upside in have a Zags team that struggles? If they struggle then we can't count on all that past success they've had. I don't know why you are saying the milage didn't work for WVU but it will for the Zags. It's not just the miles but time zones. Traveling north and south is not even close to the same as traveling east and west.
The best options for the conference if/when it chooses to expand are SLU, Dayton and VCU. The Zags just aren't in the cards now, and won't be until 4 or 5 fellow west coast private schools get their acts together and raise their profile enough for a full on western wing can be a legitimate option.
DudeAnon wrote:I just can't get over adding a school from the West Coast to the "Big EAST" and I think most school AD's feel the same way.
BillikensWin wrote:I will give Bill credit...he does have some good info...just very negative at times.
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