Bill Marsh wrote:Jet915 wrote:What a mess UCONN football is, after giving Diaco an extension last year and raising his buyout from 800K to 3.4 million, he gets fired.
UConn seems anxious for its football program to get back to being competitive again. Even desperate. The last 2 coaches have been fired in 3 years or less. Doing that once is unusual. Doing it twice is unheard of. They really want to be positioned for a conference upgrade. Not having a football program that is competitive is a deal killer.
Equally important is attendance. UConn's early years in Big East Football routinely saw sell outs with average attendance at 40,000. For the third year in a row, average attendance was under 30,000 in 2016. Rumors here in Connecticut have been that season ticket sales are lagging even behind last year's pace. I think the AD felt he had to do something to revive flagging interest. No school has been hurt more by the demise of the old Big East than UConn.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Many like to compare Rutgers and UConn within the realignment process, and while both schools do have similar comparisons in some regards (Northeast schools, former Big East schools, weak football programs), there are most definitely criteria that bumped and elevated Rutgers over UConn for the Big Ten expansion in 2011. For starters, Rutgers is an AAU school, a major requirement for acceptance into the B1G. While Nebraska is no longer an AAU member, they were when they were invited, and there are even quotes from prominent officials stating had Nebraska not been AAU, they were unlikely to be accepted in 2010. The B1G values academics at a high level, and while Rutgers has an overall weak athletics program - both current and historical - they brought the AAU label with them when they were invited, something UConn did not and does not have.
Rutgers, similar to UConn, but larger in size and state, is a national land grant university. Rutgers has over a $1 billion in endowment - over double that of UConn. They exceed them in alumni and student enrollment. They also have a much stronger recruiting area than UConn, as New Jersey is a rich and fertile area for basketball and football - just look at Michigan and Jabrill Peppers.
Finally, Rutgers allowed the B1G to market itself and gain access to the NJ/NY market for the B1G channel and content. Fans can argue until the apocalypse that Rutgers isn't a New York team, but the reality is that their new TV contract and exposure says otherwise. Along with Maryland, the B1G started to be shown in homes in New York City and Washington D.C. (thanks to Maryland), and allowed them to have the richest and most lucrative TV deal in history with both ESPN and Fox, thanks to the newfound access that Rutgers and Maryland allowed.
This is why Rutgers was a home run addition to the B1G, and why UConn will never be a member of the B1G. UConn does not meet the requirements for admission into the B1G (AAU), nor do they bring a large and contiguous state, nor would they would bring any additional bump in exposure or media money as the B1G's TV deal already accounts for New York/Northeast.
The long-term affect of B1G members - including and eventually Nebraska/Maryland/Rutgers - earning nearly $50 million annually for their conference affiliation and TV deals, and UConn only making $1.7 million as part of the AAC/ESPN deal, the reality of football programs being left behind and left for dead is very real. Add in the fact that Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh, West Virginia, Boston College, St. Johns, Villanova, Georgetown, Seton Hall and Providence all will be making more in TV money for the foreseeable future, and the expected outcome for UConn athletics (but mostly just football) is bleak to say the least.
FenwayFriar wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Jet915 wrote:What a mess UCONN football is, after giving Diaco an extension last year and raising his buyout from 800K to 3.4 million, he gets fired.
UConn seems anxious for its football program to get back to being competitive again. Even desperate. The last 2 coaches have been fired in 3 years or less. Doing that once is unusual. Doing it twice is unheard of. They really want to be positioned for a conference upgrade. Not having a football program that is competitive is a deal killer.
Equally important is attendance. UConn's early years in Big East Football routinely saw sell outs with average attendance at 40,000. For the third year in a row, average attendance was under 30,000 in 2016. Rumors here in Connecticut have been that season ticket sales are lagging even behind last year's pace. I think the AD felt he had to do something to revive flagging interest. No school has been hurt more by the demise of the old Big East than UConn.
Bill, I assume with the re-hire of Edsall today this is what you were talking about by re-energizing the fan base. Not being a UConn fan or Conn. resident, I would assume Edsall is a home run hire. He basically made the UConn football program and of course brought them to their infamous BCS Bowl. As Bill has been saying for a while, this hire certainly means UConn football ain't going anywhere soon and they're nowhere close to thinking about shutting down their FBS football program.
GumbyDamnit! wrote: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.
You are right that it wasn't Osbourne's swan song but it was his 1st NC. And absolutely that was a very good Nebraska team. The sentiment in PA was that he was given some consideration because of the fact that he was a great coach and had never won a NC. And no the PSU Def was not "poor" at all. Results below vs the ranked teams they faced that year:
#14 USC - 38-14
@ # 5 Michigan - 31-24
# 21 OSU - 63-14
# 12 Oregon (Rose Bowl) - 38-20
That team averaged 48.7 pts per game and scored quickly. Their D was on the field for a lot of possessions. So averaging 18 PPG against them vs the best teams they played is not poor IMO. It has always been some sour grapes for PSU fans b/c it was the 4th time that PSU went undefeated and were denied the NC (Pres Nixon of all people declared Texas NC one year when PSU and Texas were both undefeated). So, full disclosure as a long time PSU FB fan, there are def some feelings of being slighted in the process before.
It would have been a lot of fun seeing those teams meet in '94. Another reason why the Playoff system change was so important.
Bill Marsh wrote:They were hardly in the lawsuit by themselves.
Bill Marsh wrote: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.
gtmoBlue wrote:My point being: Other top tier conferences have and probably will continue to "work the system" whether for the benefit of football or basketball. The Big East should enhance its' NCAA payouts by adding a couple of teams to boost the middle and help our case, as other conferences have done.
Yeah, yeah, just because Delany and the B1G jump off a bridge with Rutgers and Nebraska doesn't necessitate the BE doing likewise...I get it. But me and Br. Jelinek don't like the idea of leaving NCAA bucks on the table, that could go into Big East coffers.
I sure as hell didn't intend to start a football topic subthread, so youse guys can can the F5 chatter.
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