jfan wrote:He made his point by implying that Creighton has no reason being in the BE over VCU because of our lack of tournament success. I totally disagree and don't understand the necessity of bashing a current member to make an argument about VCU. The only area that Creighton is lacking is our past tournament success. Apparently ending up in the top 25 the three years before 2015 and the huge fan support (over 17,000 per game in a 14-19 year) mean nothing. I could go on with many other reasons why Creighton was a great fit for the BE, but I suspect it wouldn't matter!
jfan wrote:He made his point by implying that Creighton has no reason being in the BE over VCU because of our lack of tournament success. I totally disagree and don't understand the necessity of bashing a current member to make an argument about VCU. The only area that Creighton is lacking is our past tournament success. Apparently ending up in the top 25 the three years before 2015 and the huge fan support (over 17,000 per game in a 14-19 year) mean nothing. I could go on with many other reasons why Creighton was a great fit for the BE, but I suspect it wouldn't matter!
Butlerfan28 wrote:
I disagree. A couple public schools would move the needle significantly for the Big East because it would help them break out of their niche. If a conference comprised entirely of small like minded institutions was such a good idea why was the Big East originally: Providence, St John's, U Conn, Syracuse, Rutgers, Seton Hall and Boston College. It was a diverse institution at the time. Gavitt understood, as does most CEO's, that diversity increases interest. People don't want to do business with entities they can't relate to. Gravitt understood this fact. Something our current Presidents and half this board don't seem to get.
Remember the U.S. is even more secular now then in the 70's so a conference of all Catholic schools ( and 1 that looks like a Catholic School) makes even less sense now than it did then. And it didn't make sense then either.
Bill Marsh wrote:Butlerfan28 wrote:
I disagree. A couple public schools would move the needle significantly for the Big East because it would help them break out of their niche. If a conference comprised entirely of small like minded institutions was such a good idea why was the Big East originally: Providence, St John's, U Conn, Syracuse, Rutgers, Seton Hall and Boston College. It was a diverse institution at the time. Gavitt understood, as does most CEO's, that diversity increases interest. People don't want to do business with entities they can't relate to. Gravitt understood this fact. Something our current Presidents and half this board don't seem to get.
Remember the U.S. is even more secular now then in the 70's so a conference of all Catholic schools ( and 1 that looks like a Catholic School) makes even less sense now than it did then. And it didn't make sense then either.
I don't disagree with your point. But I do want to correct one error. Rutgers was not an original member of the Big East. They were not admitted until 1995, 16 years after the conference was founded. Georgetown was the 7th original member and was left off your list. For all practical purposes, Villanova was also a founding member, but had to wait to join because they were obligated to give the Eastern 8 a year's notice that they were leaving. So, UConn was the only public school in the original group. Syracuse is private and non-Catholic, much like Butler - although bigger than Butler.
As for the Big East schools all being small, not exactly. DePaul (25,000) and St. John's (21,000), for example, have enrollments similar to many state universities. As for their appeal being limited to Catholics, the enrollments of these schools has changed along with the demographics that you mention. The student bodies are not as Catholic as they once were.
I do agree that one of the challenges before them is to figure out how to broaden their appeal.
Butlerfan28 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Butlerfan28 wrote:
I disagree. A couple public schools would move the needle significantly for the Big East because it would help them break out of their niche. If a conference comprised entirely of small like minded institutions was such a good idea why was the Big East originally: Providence, St John's, U Conn, Syracuse, Rutgers, Seton Hall and Boston College. It was a diverse institution at the time. Gavitt understood, as does most CEO's, that diversity increases interest. People don't want to do business with entities they can't relate to. Gravitt understood this fact. Something our current Presidents and half this board don't seem to get.
Remember the U.S. is even more secular now then in the 70's so a conference of all Catholic schools ( and 1 that looks like a Catholic School) makes even less sense now than it did then. And it didn't make sense then either.
I don't disagree with your point. But I do want to correct one error. Rutgers was not an original member of the Big East. They were not admitted until 1995, 16 years after the conference was founded. Georgetown was the 7th original member and was left off your list. For all practical purposes, Villanova was also a founding member, but had to wait to join because they were obligated to give the Eastern 8 a year's notice that they were leaving. So, UConn was the only public school in the original group. Syracuse is private and non-Catholic, much like Butler - although bigger than Butler.
As for the Big East schools all being small, not exactly. DePaul (25,000) and St. John's (21,000), for example, have enrollments similar to many state universities. As for their appeal being limited to Catholics, the enrollments of these schools has changed along with the demographics that you mention. The student bodies are not as Catholic as they once were.
I do agree that one of the challenges before them is to figure out how to broaden their appeal.
Thanks for the correction. I wasn't a fan at the time so I was going back and forth between here and Wikipedia. But clearly the Big East was and continued to be a diverse mix of public and private.
stever20 wrote:Also should say that it wouldn't have been a either/or situation with VCU and Creighton. I think the presidents if VCU had been private would have found a way to get them in the league. The question to me would the league have stopped at 10 with Xavier, Butler, and VCU- or would they have gone to 12 with Creighton and I'm going to assume SLU.
Xudash wrote:stever20 wrote:Also should say that it wouldn't have been a either/or situation with VCU and Creighton. I think the presidents if VCU had been private would have found a way to get them in the league. The question to me would the league have stopped at 10 with Xavier, Butler, and VCU- or would they have gone to 12 with Creighton and I'm going to assume SLU.
Interesting scenario and question.
My only contribution to it would be to point out that there was that speculation that Fox would true-up it's deal if the BE stepped out with 12 teams.
Who knows.
HoosierPal wrote:ESPN Data says Dayton is your 'hot spot' candidate.
ESPN published their ratings by market. Dayton finished 7th. Sure those TV's were on The Ohio State U games, Dayton games, Cincy games, etc,. but people in Dayton are watching basketball on TV. That is what Fox Sports 1 should want, VIEWERS. Raleigh-Durham is Tobacco Road, KC is KU and Mizzou, Charlotte heavily ACC (a twist of Davidson perhaps?) and Memphis is Memphis. Sure it's ESPN data, but show me other data that says Dayton is not a TV basketball hot spot.
Louisville’s 13th Year as Top Market Sets Record for Highest Season Average of Any Market
ESPN telecasts in Louisville averaged a metered market-leading 5.9 rating, its 13th straight year at the top and the largest regular-season average for the sport on ESPN in any market on record. Greensboro, with a 3.0 average rating, ended the season with the second highest rating for the fourth consecutive year. Raleigh-Durham (2.7) and Kansas City (2.4) – which were tied for second last season — were the third and fourth top markets, respectively this year. The remaining top 10: Columbus (2.1), Cincinnati (1.9), Dayton (1.9), Indianapolis (1.8), Charlotte (1.8) and Memphis (1.8).
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