Hall2012 wrote:It's important to note that those 8 straight tournament "sellout" you mention were all forced sellouts. Tickets never went on sale to the general public. Because of the massive size of the conference, all of the available tickets to the tournament were given out in the allotments to each school and were thus considered sold whether each school could get rid of them or not, thus making the tournament "sold out" as far as the conference and the garden were concerned before a single ticket ever went on sale.
If any team failed to sell its full allotment, it's remaining tickets were offered to schools that did sell out, and then the school had to eat the cost of any remaining tickets.
So, as the ball mentioned, they were sold out ticket-wise, but not butts in seats - wise. The garden was only at capacity for the final and when either Uconn or Syracuse played.
TheBall wrote:Not even a little bit concerned about the big ten in 2018. I look at that as a way to increase college hoops vibe in early March and will actually help the big east tourney among casual fans. New York city is unique in that it doesn't have a finite amount of fans. It is all about buzz. If the big ten tourney increases the buzz, then so be it, we benefit.
I'm not holding my breath on uconn, but they are one of the few teams I would actually consider. They are not going to stay in conference of Americans for longer than they have to, and the footballs five aren't knocking down their door. In five years they max out in their divorce settlement, and anything is possible. Conference of Americans is not their long term goal, and if the footballs five don't come calling then anything is possible. But I am not banking in them, just noting they are not off the table.
The conference should not expand just to expand. And adding teams like St. Louis or umass or even vcu constitutes expansion just for the sake of expansion. I am against that.
Big ten is looking to have a east coast tournament two or three times a decade. And that includes dc. They are never going to give the long term commitment that the big east has. I am comfortable knowing that. I don't think the sky is falling here, as I don't think the acc and big ten are committed enough to the northeast to really pose a long term threat. Embrace them as partners who can increase overall interest in northeast hoops, but at the end of the day their home bases are elsewhere.
As far as gonzaga, sign them up if it works. I would love it. Add st Mary's and BYU and St. Louis if need be. I am not against that. But again, I'm not sure if that is likely logistically possible.
But all this conference realignment is out of our control. Mental masturbation. Let's enjoy what we have, the rest is out if our control.
Bill Marsh wrote:Hall2012 wrote:It's important to note that those 8 straight tournament "sellout" you mention were all forced sellouts. Tickets never went on sale to the general public. Because of the massive size of the conference, all of the available tickets to the tournament were given out in the allotments to each school and were thus considered sold whether each school could get rid of them or not, thus making the tournament "sold out" as far as the conference and the garden were concerned before a single ticket ever went on sale.
If any team failed to sell its full allotment, it's remaining tickets were offered to schools that did sell out, and then the school had to eat the cost of any remaining tickets.
So, as the ball mentioned, they were sold out ticket-wise, but not butts in seats - wise. The garden was only at capacity for the final and when either Uconn or Syracuse played.
That's true and it's a fair point. But as far as the bean counters at the Garden were concerned, they were all sell outs. If it takes more teams to be able to give teams allotments like they do in a football bowl game, then they need to get more teams. Apparently 10 teams is too few for them to be able to do that. The Garden is going to want them to pull their weight or they'll eventually turn to one of the other suitors. They can probably fill championship week with the ?ACC and the Big Ten in alternating years.
RDinNY wrote:It has aways been near impossible to get BET tickets in years past. I've contacted the St. john's ticket office and have always been told that their tickets are all gone. I would end up buying from scalpers or from fans whose team had lost early (if that wasn't us). Last year, I couldn't attend, so I don't know what the ticket situation was but there have always been plenty of St. John's fans in attendance.
Hall2012 wrote:RDinNY wrote:It has aways been near impossible to get BET tickets in years past. I've contacted the St. john's ticket office and have always been told that their tickets are all gone. I would end up buying from scalpers or from fans whose team had lost early (if that wasn't us). Last year, I couldn't attend, so I don't know what the ticket situation was but there have always been plenty of St. John's fans in attendance.
If they do it anything like Seton Hall ( and I assume it's similar) they only sell BET tickets to season ticket holders at a minimum donation level. They also sell them all in November and early December, so if you're waiting until February to contact them they've either sold out themselves or already shipped their leftovers to another school.
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