GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Wichita State always made sense for the American for plenty of reasons. They are within their footprint, they would balance the football-only membership of Navy, they provide a strong and reliable basketball program, and they would help balance out the lesser (historically) of the AAC programs (Tulane, ECU, USF, UCF, Houston, SMU). UConn, Temple and Cincinnati may not like additional travel, but at least their basketball interests are being protected with such an addition. Frankly, I think they should nab Wichita State and VCU - although the latter may not get a substantial raise going from the A-10 to the AAC, which may prevent such a move - but those two schools definitely fit the conference's identity and geography.
This would absolutely not affect the Big East into making an expansion move. We have like-minded schools, which the American does not, with each school having a clear focus on men's basketball, which the American clearly does not. Wichita State helps buffer some of the weaker basketball programs - the same programs that the C7 wanted no part of when the Big East was undergoing a radical shift. My guess is that UConn, Cincinnati and Temple put their foot down on adding a strong non-football member in order to boost conference strength and RPI.
The American would expand only if ESPN said they would give them financial incentive to do so. If each AAC school was going to receive the same amount of money as this current contract, my guess is that they would stand pat. My guess is that their new deal will pay somewhere between $3-$5 million per football school, with probably a prorated portion for Wichita State (perhaps in the $1.5 range).
Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Wichita State always made sense for the American for plenty of reasons. They are within their footprint, they would balance the football-only membership of Navy, they provide a strong and reliable basketball program, and they would help balance out the lesser (historically) of the AAC programs (Tulane, ECU, USF, UCF, Houston, SMU). UConn, Temple and Cincinnati may not like additional travel, but at least their basketball interests are being protected with such an addition. Frankly, I think they should nab Wichita State and VCU - although the latter may not get a substantial raise going from the A-10 to the AAC, which may prevent such a move - but those two schools definitely fit the conference's identity and geography.
This would absolutely not affect the Big East into making an expansion move. We have like-minded schools, which the American does not, with each school having a clear focus on men's basketball, which the American clearly does not. Wichita State helps buffer some of the weaker basketball programs - the same programs that the C7 wanted no part of when the Big East was undergoing a radical shift. My guess is that UConn, Cincinnati and Temple put their foot down on adding a strong non-football member in order to boost conference strength and RPI.
The American would expand only if ESPN said they would give them financial incentive to do so. If each AAC school was going to receive the same amount of money as this current contract, my guess is that they would stand pat. My guess is that their new deal will pay somewhere between $3-$5 million per football school, with probably a prorated portion for Wichita State (perhaps in the $1.5 range).
For the last 10 years, Wichita State has been the strong and reliable program that you describe. But that has been totally the creation of Gregg Marshall. He's not going to be there forever. Mark Turgeon turned the program around before Marshall, but it wasn't a great program until Marshall got there. Before Turfeon it was a bad program - 127-192 record from 1989-2002. So what do they bring when they're going through an extended drought as they did then?
FenwayFriar wrote:
On an unrelated note, I have a question for Stever. I have an honest question that maybe other people have too? Being relatively new to the site (just about a year), I never got the background of your enthusiasm for the AAC. Being a Georgetown fan, how did you become a fan of the AAC? I'm genuinely curious, but if you don't feel the need to answer, that's fine as well. And this was not trying to be snarky at all; I've just been been wondering for a little while so figured I'd ask!
FenwayFriar wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Wichita State always made sense for the American for plenty of reasons. They are within their footprint, they would balance the football-only membership of Navy, they provide a strong and reliable basketball program, and they would help balance out the lesser (historically) of the AAC programs (Tulane, ECU, USF, UCF, Houston, SMU). UConn, Temple and Cincinnati may not like additional travel, but at least their basketball interests are being protected with such an addition. Frankly, I think they should nab Wichita State and VCU - although the latter may not get a substantial raise going from the A-10 to the AAC, which may prevent such a move - but those two schools definitely fit the conference's identity and geography.
This would absolutely not affect the Big East into making an expansion move. We have like-minded schools, which the American does not, with each school having a clear focus on men's basketball, which the American clearly does not. Wichita State helps buffer some of the weaker basketball programs - the same programs that the C7 wanted no part of when the Big East was undergoing a radical shift. My guess is that UConn, Cincinnati and Temple put their foot down on adding a strong non-football member in order to boost conference strength and RPI.
The American would expand only if ESPN said they would give them financial incentive to do so. If each AAC school was going to receive the same amount of money as this current contract, my guess is that they would stand pat. My guess is that their new deal will pay somewhere between $3-$5 million per football school, with probably a prorated portion for Wichita State (perhaps in the $1.5 range).
For the last 10 years, Wichita State has been the strong and reliable program that you describe. But that has been totally the creation of Gregg Marshall. He's not going to be there forever. Mark Turgeon turned the program around before Marshall, but it wasn't a great program until Marshall got there. Before Turfeon it was a bad program - 127-192 record from 1989-2002. So what do they bring when they're going through an extended drought as they did then?
I mean, you could have said the same thing about Butler once Stevens left. Stevens put Butler on the map. The BE took a chance on Butler right when Stevens was leaving for the Celtics. And Holtmann wasn't even their first choice to succeed Stevens. So they've had two head coaches since Stevens left and have proven they are here to stay. Obviously no two situations are exactly the same, but I don't think you can not take a quality school just because one day they might not be what they are today because of a coaching change. I think it would be a great move for the AAC and would clearly be one to make UConn, Cincy, Temple, and Memphis happy. Now that UConn and Cincy are starting to realize that getting out of the conference for a F5 conference is going to be extremely difficult, I'm sure they had some demands to make the basketball conference stronger.
On an unrelated note, I have a question for Stever. I have an honest question that maybe other people have too? Being relatively new to the site (just about a year), I never got the background of your enthusiasm for the AAC. Being a Georgetown fan, how did you become a fan of the AAC? I'm genuinely curious, but if you don't feel the need to answer, that's fine as well. And this was not trying to be snarky at all; I've just been been wondering for a little while so figured I'd ask!
UConn
UConn has been an absolute mess this season. They lost to Wagner and Northeastern at home in their first two games. They barely escaped Loyola Marymount with a win. They went 1-2 in the Maui Invitational, with the one win coming in a closer-than-it-should’ve-been win over Chaminade. If that wasn’t enough, UConn has also been devastated by injury, with two starters – McDonald’s all-american point guard Alterique Gilbert and Terry Larrier, who was their best player at the start of the year – going down with season-ending injuries. This was a team that entered the season with a legitimate case to be considered a top 25 team and is, in all likelihood, going to end the year with a win over a potentially NIT-bound Syracuse team in Madison Square Garden being the highlight of their year.
This is how bad things have gotten for UConn: When I was at the game at MSG, a UConn fan told me that he would consider this season a success “if UConn shows up as a bad loss when they show Syracuse’s NCAA tournament résumé.” For a team that has won two of the last six national titles, that’s quite a fall from grace.
The Atlantic 10
Outside of the major six conferences, the Atlantic 10 is up there as one of the best. The A10 looked like it was on its way to another banner year when the preseason poll included both Rhode Island and Dayton. Currently, both teams find themselves outside the top-25, but more importantly, the conference as a whole finds itself with an underwhelming non-conference résumé. The A-10 is slightly above the American Athletic Conference for seventh place in the Conference RPI rankings, while KenPom rates the A10 as the eighth toughest league.
Rhode Island landed an early-season victory over No. 24 Cincinnati on a neutral floor, but the Rams have lost three out of four, all on the road, to Valparaiso, Providence and Houston. Dayton has been plagued by injuries to forwards Kendall Pollard and transfer Josh Cunningham, which contributed to a 2-2 start. The Flyers have won five straight since, but Dayton could enter conference player with its best out of league win being against Northwestern or New Mexico, neither team pegged to land an at-large bid at this point. And it’s not just the team’s that began the season ranked. VCU, another A-10 power, hasn’t looked up to par, dropping back-to-back games against Illinois and Georgia Tech.
With a few weeks before conference play begins, the A-10 is lacking signature wins. Three years after receiving six bids, an all-time high for the conference, the A-10 is on pace to have, at best, half that amount this upcoming March.
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