Bill Marsh wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:Postby GoldenWarrior11 » Tue Dec 27, 2016 10:23 am
Noble commentary, JP. Unfortunately, the Big East will not lower its conference standards simply to stack the deck for the league to possibly get an additional team or two into the tournament.
The B1G has done this over and over...Penn St, Rutgers, Nebraska. The ACC added BC, to go along with their regular bottom dwellers. PAC-12 added Colorado. It's happening all over in Basketball for the sake of Football gaining a team or 2. What's so different in the BE emulating our major brethren to work the system?
We average 5 teams a year for the NCAAs. What is sooo terrible in milking the bids for 7 a year? That's an extra 500,000 to 600,000 USD/year (by 2020) for 6 years. That's free money we're talking about. It's insurance money...doesn't cost the conference a dime. I never heard of Jesuits walking away from a dollar, especially a free one!
BC was not a bad basketball program when the ACC recruited them. In fact they went to the tournament in back to back seasons, the 2 years before they ACC came calling and were BE champs and a top ten team in 2001. After they were in voted to join the ACC, they went to the tournament 5 of the next 6 years and were a top ten team again in their first season in the ACC. They've fallen on hard times in recent years, but that's been due more to the ill advised decision to fire Al Skinner and poor hiring choices with the 2 coaches that followed him.
BC is a perfect example of the fallacy in Scmack'a argument. There are no guarantees that any program will continue to be either a winner or a loser. St John's, for example, was one of the best and most consistent programs in college basketball for 50 years. They've declined in the last 10-12 years, but who could have predicted that? OTOH, Butler was a nobody in college basketball for as long as St John's was a somebody, but in the last 10-15 years, they've been a very consistent winner. Who ups have predicted back to back trips to the finals for them and that they would have come within a whisker of winning it all?
All a conference can do is bring in the best programs they can and hope for the best. Everyone will eventually have their ups and downs.
Devil's Advocate wrote:Off topic, but Osborne's final season was 97. In 94 Nebraska was the National Champion because they were really good, and probably got more votes than PSU because Penn St.'s defense was poor.
Bill Marsh wrote: No school has been hurt more by the demise of the old Big East than UConn.
Devil's Advocate wrote:Off topic, but Osborne's final season was 97. In 94 Nebraska was the National Champion because they were really good, and probably got more votes than PSU because Penn St.'s defense was poor.
Bluejay wrote:Bill Marsh wrote: No school has been hurt more by the demise of the old Big East than UConn.
This is probably true, but most of their wounds are self inflicted.
UConn fell for fools gold when it had a little football success (in what was, if we are completely honest, a bad football conference). In retrospect, UConn hurt their hoops program's long term prospects by falling for the football bug.
By suing (or leading the threats to do so) the schools that were the initial BE departures to the ACC, UConn created long term bad blood that worked against them when they sought out ACC membership themselves.
Yes, UConn has suffered. However, they are hardly innocent bystanders.
Bill Marsh wrote:Bluejay wrote:Bill Marsh wrote: No school has been hurt more by the demise of the old Big East than UConn.
This is probably true, but most of their wounds are self inflicted.
UConn fell for fools gold when it had a little football success (in what was, if we are completely honest, a bad football conference). In retrospect, UConn hurt their hoops program's long term prospects by falling for the football bug.
By suing (or leading the threats to do so) the schools that were the initial BE departures to the ACC, UConn created long term bad blood that worked against them when they sought out ACC membership themselves.
Yes, UConn has suffered. However, they are hardly innocent bystanders.
They were hardly in the lawsuit by themselves. And there's no evidence at this point that their basketball program has been hurt by the decision to add football.
As for fool's gold, it worked for Rutgers, a team that was 1-11 and drew only 19,000 fans at home as recently as 2002. And that season was no exception. They were a program that never mattered in the history of college football or in the Big East before UConn joined the football conference, and so were more or less at the same point back then.
DudeAnon wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Bluejay wrote:
This is probably true, but most of their wounds are self inflicted.
UConn fell for fools gold when it had a little football success (in what was, if we are completely honest, a bad football conference). In retrospect, UConn hurt their hoops program's long term prospects by falling for the football bug.
By suing (or leading the threats to do so) the schools that were the initial BE departures to the ACC, UConn created long term bad blood that worked against them when they sought out ACC membership themselves.
Yes, UConn has suffered. However, they are hardly innocent bystanders.
They were hardly in the lawsuit by themselves. And there's no evidence at this point that their basketball program has been hurt by the decision to add football.
As for fool's gold, it worked for Rutgers, a team that was 1-11 and drew only 19,000 fans at home as recently as 2002. And that season was no exception. They were a program that never mattered in the history of college football or in the Big East before UConn joined the football conference, and so were more or less at the same point back then.
I literally do not follow College Football one iota, but hasn't Rutgers football been around forever whereas UCONN just started their program like 15 years ago?
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