SJHooper wrote:Look at schools like Creighton, Villanova, Butler, etc. pretty homogeneous student populations and they all rally around their basketball teams. Again, no one said it was a good or bad thing, just saying it's a factor.
DudeAnon wrote:Interesting thread. I somewhat agree with your points. But here would be my own.
1) Winning is the biggest factor. It is very hard to continually support a losing program, thats just how it is.
2) Ease of access. Xavier's arena is on campus and a 15 minute walk max for every student on campus.
3) Quality of opponents. Xavier has always had great attendance but the fact that we average a sellout now is definitely a testament to playing in The Big East.
As far as your diversity comment. While it might be a small factor negatively impacting athletics I think most schools would kill to have the international and diverse population that St. Johns does.
BluejayBuff wrote:SJHooper wrote:Look at schools like Creighton, Villanova, Butler, etc. pretty homogeneous student populations and they all rally around their basketball teams. Again, no one said it was a good or bad thing, just saying it's a factor.
When you say "homogeneous student populations," do you mean that they are all similar or that they all stick around after school or what? I can't speak for all of CU nation, but I can tell you firsthand that students at Creighton only show up in droves when the team is top 25, playing a good team, and/or it isn't finals week. It's a pretty common complaint amongst some Bluejay fans that CU students don't support the teams enough.
As far as CU goes, having a world-class venue that does fairly well to update technologies in the arena helps. It also helps to serve alcohol, have a moderately exclusive restaurant in the venue, and have a very large contingent of well-off alumni in the area that purchase a huge amount of season tickets. As with all arenas, season tickets are always counted as present for the attendance count. I believe the season ticket numbers are up to 15,000+. We average just over 17,000.
SJHooper wrote:When I say homogeneous I mean Creighton is presumably 80%+ white students who were born here, have parents who were born here, grandparents who were born here, and have pretty common backgrounds mostly centered in the midwest. PC is the same but more focused in the northeast. I know I felt more connected to Marist (which had a student body much more similar to where I grew up) than St. John's in terms of school culture. Everyone has their preferences and I'm not one to judge either way, but my point is that there are communication, values, and cultural breakdowns when your student body is very diverse. Growing up in this country, college basketball is a big deal if you go to a big name basketball school. The less assimilated you are, the less likely you are to embrace college hoops IMO. From my experiences as well (again not all, don't want to stereotype) but strictly anecdotal, the international students seem more focused on their academics and then going home. They don't seem to "stick around" as much for basketball games so I guess that's part of what I was trying to say bluejaybuff.
SJHooper wrote:As per the diversity comment, I don't think there's any question it negatively affects school pride and attendance. The question is how much. It's great to be able to boast an international presence, however within our diverse student body, many come from low income areas and are the first to attend college in their family. Many receive Pell grants which I believe are given to us by the government to attract students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. This is our lifeblood and we rely on those grants. The flipside is that academically we suffer because of it. This is why whenever you see the Big East academics rankings, we will always be at the bottom. Our university is more focused on attracting those populations to get as much grant money as possible as opposed to seeking the most qualified students. As I've said before, SJ is very easy to get into as an undergrad, but our graduate programs are very competitive.
BluejayBuff wrote:SJHooper wrote:When I say homogeneous I mean Creighton is presumably 80%+ white students who were born here, have parents who were born here, grandparents who were born here, and have pretty common backgrounds mostly centered in the midwest. PC is the same but more focused in the northeast. I know I felt more connected to Marist (which had a student body much more similar to where I grew up) than St. John's in terms of school culture. Everyone has their preferences and I'm not one to judge either way, but my point is that there are communication, values, and cultural breakdowns when your student body is very diverse. Growing up in this country, college basketball is a big deal if you go to a big name basketball school. The less assimilated you are, the less likely you are to embrace college hoops IMO. From my experiences as well (again not all, don't want to stereotype) but strictly anecdotal, the international students seem more focused on their academics and then going home. They don't seem to "stick around" as much for basketball games so I guess that's part of what I was trying to say bluejaybuff.
Gotcha - thanks for clarifying.
For the record, CU is 72-74% white, depending on the year.
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