stever20 wrote:Tulsa was added I think in large part due to geography. They had for a western division Houston, SMU, Tulane, and Memphis. Navy as a 5th possibly. In the east- they had for sure Temple, ECU, Cincy, and UConn. The 2 Florida schools as well. Tulsa made it easier in splitting the divisions. That's why Tulsa got the slot over UMass. The divisions would have been 1000 times harder with UMass quite frankly. Also the fact that Tulsa football was at the time of getting added MUCH stronger than UMass(who was coming off a 1-11 season, while Tulsa won C-USA). Timing matters in things like this!
Bill Marsh wrote:stever20 wrote:Tulsa was added I think in large part due to geography. They had for a western division Houston, SMU, Tulane, and Memphis. Navy as a 5th possibly. In the east- they had for sure Temple, ECU, Cincy, and UConn. The 2 Florida schools as well. Tulsa made it easier in splitting the divisions. That's why Tulsa got the slot over UMass. The divisions would have been 1000 times harder with UMass quite frankly. Also the fact that Tulsa football was at the time of getting added MUCH stronger than UMass(who was coming off a 1-11 season, while Tulsa won C-USA). Timing matters in things like this!
Substitute UMass for Tulsa and here are the divisions;
UMass
UConn
Temple
Navy
East Carolina
Cincinnati
Houston
SMU
Memphis
Tulane
South Florida
Central Florida
No problem. Frankly these divisions make more sense than what they have now and help out the Northeastern schools who are out on an island after they lost Rutgers.
HoosierPal wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:With all due respect, that's ridiculous. An Oklahoma kid is not going to play football at Temple because it's in the same conference as Tulsa. On top of that, OU, OK State, and Tulsa are all betting to those kids before Temple has a shot at them. Oklahoma's not that big a state. There's a limit to how many recruits they can pump out. Texas is the real recruiting hot bed and Tulsa does nothing for getting the AAC in there that Houston and SMU haven't already accomplished.
Worse yet, Tulsa is a bad football school because it's enrollment is only 3000 and it's attendance averages only 20,000. That's not what any major football conference is looking for. Given the size of the school and the size of its market, there's little chance for them to do much better than that.
My friend, you need to review the culture of football in the south. Football is life in Oklahoma/Texas/Louisiana. Families buy season tickets to pee wee football, middle school football, freshman football, JV football and HS football. There are ample numbers of high level football players in OK to supply many, many college teams. An Oklahoma kid WILL play in USF because he can come home at least twice. He will play at ECU because he can come home at least twice. He will take the offer from Houston because he is close to home. Memphis, sure his folks and friends can come see him play. OK, OK State, and all the Texas P5 schools take the first tier. The second and third tier are there and some are game changers. Matt Forte from Slidell LA is a prime example. He had Tulane, and basically no one else offer him a scholarship.
The list of players born in Oklahoma that have played in the NFL is too long to count. Tulsa alone has had well over 100 alumni drafted in the NFL (yes many likely weren't from OK).
Tulsa was a great addition to the AAC. It's all about football.
HoosierPal wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:With all due respect, that's ridiculous. An Oklahoma kid is not going to play football at Temple because it's in the same conference as Tulsa. On top of that, OU, OK State, and Tulsa are all betting to those kids before Temple has a shot at them. Oklahoma's not that big a state. There's a limit to how many recruits they can pump out. Texas is the real recruiting hot bed and Tulsa does nothing for getting the AAC in there that Houston and SMU haven't already accomplished.
Worse yet, Tulsa is a bad football school because it's enrollment is only 3000 and it's attendance averages only 20,000. That's not what any major football conference is looking for. Given the size of the school and the size of its market, there's little chance for them to do much better than that.
My friend, you need to review the culture of football in the south. Football is life in Oklahoma/Texas/Louisiana. Families buy season tickets to pee wee football, middle school football, freshman football, JV football and HS football. There are ample numbers of high level football players in OK to supply many, many college teams. An Oklahoma kid WILL play in USF because he can come home at least twice. He will play at ECU because he can come home at least twice. He will take the offer from Houston because he is close to home. Memphis, sure his folks and friends can come see him play. OK, OK State, and all the Texas P5 schools take the first tier. The second and third tier are there and some are game changers. Matt Forte from Slidell LA is a prime example. He had Tulane, and basically no one else offer him a scholarship.
The list of players born in Oklahoma that have played in the NFL is too long to count. Tulsa alone has had well over 100 alumni drafted in the NFL (yes many likely weren't from OK).
Tulsa was a great addition to the AAC. It's all about football.
Bill Marsh wrote:
I thought that I'g go to a current recruiting list (ESPN 2015) to see if your theory holds water. Here's what I found:
1. Of the top 40 recruits, not a single one is from Oklahoma.
2. There is only 1 recruit from Oklahoma in the top 75.
3. There are only 2 recruits from Oklahoma in the top 150.
4. There are only 5 in the top 300,
5. Three of those 5 have already committed. Predictably, 2 are going to OU and the other to OK State.
6. None are going to Tulsa nor to any other AAC school.
They AAC needed to bring in Tulsa to get a shot at 5 of the top 300 recruits, only one of whom is even in the top 75? As evidenced by the choices these recruits have made so far, they aspire to play for OU, OK State, the Big XII in that order.
You're ignoring the basic structural elements that make Tulsa a poor choice for any sport, elements that won't change:
1. Their enrollment is only 3000
2. They average only 20,000 fans for football.
3. They average only 4500 fans for basketball.
4. They sit in a small market.
5. They're 3rd in the pecking order in a relatively small state.
Regardless of the football choices the AAC has made, this discussion was about basketball and how good the AAC is with the addition of Tulsa. There is no doubt that regardless of what they do in football, Tulsa does little for the conference in basketball and that UMass would have done a lot more.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote: The American Athletic Conference is just a rehash of Conference USA (same colors, same imagery, same schools) - and the casual viewer does not care if they are on TV or not.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Bill, great research and viewpoints. Great commentary.
Stever, if media markets and exposure is really going to "elevate" new schools to the AAC/OBE, explain to me why Tulsa is ranked DEAD LAST in AAC recruiting for 2015? Isn't the notion of playing more on TV supposed to raise the level of competition for the program? ZERO 5-stars. ZERO 4-stars. ZERO 3-stars. I'm assuming that the 8 recruits they do have are 2-stars and 1-stars, since they don't come up on their rivals recruiting page.
And it's not just Tulsa. The CONFERENCE has ZERO 5-star, and just THREE 4-star recruits in the 2015 class. Let's go back to 2014, and make sure it's not just a one-year exception - yep, ZERO 5-stars and just five 4-stars recruits.
Face it, the conference will not recruit better athletes simply because they are on TV more. The XFL (which similarly had media markets in Chicago, New York and Los Angeles) was on NBC in prime time in the spring of 2001, not facing competition from the NFL or NCAA - and they still failed because the audience did not care about the product. The American Athletic Conference is just a rehash of Conference USA (same colors, same imagery, same schools) - and the casual viewer does not care if they are on TV or not.
Bill Marsh wrote:I thought that I'g go to a current recruiting list (ESPN 2015) to see if your theory holds water. Here's what I found:
1. Of the top 40 recruits, not a single one is from Oklahoma.
2. There is only 1 recruit from Oklahoma in the top 75.
3. There are only 2 recruits from Oklahoma in the top 150.
4. There are only 5 in the top 300,
5. Three of those 5 have already committed. Predictably, 2 are going to OU and the other to OK State.
6. None are going to Tulsa nor to any other AAC school.
They AAC needed to bring in Tulsa to get a shot at 5 of the top 300 recruits, only one of whom is even in the top 75? As evidenced by the choices these recruits have made so far, they aspire to play for OU, OK State, the Big XII in that order.
You're ignoring the basic structural elements that make Tulsa a poor choice for any sport, elements that won't change:
1. Their enrollment is only 3000
2. They average only 20,000 fans for football.
3. They average only 4500 fans for basketball.
4. They sit in a small market.
5. They're 3rd in the pecking order in a relatively small state.
Regardless of the football choices the AAC has made, this discussion was about basketball and how good the AAC is with the addition of Tulsa. There is no doubt that regardless of what they do in football, Tulsa does little for the conference in basketball and that UMass would have done a lot more.
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