Hall2012 wrote:I don't necessarily disagree with anything he said, despite the potshots at Seton Hall and St. John's who, let's be honest, would both wipe the floor with UConn in their program's current state. Despite what some of us may think of them, UConn is still a premier college basketball brand with a large following and that brings value to the Big East. They'll likely give us a little ratings boost on FS1 and we know they'll help pack MSG for the BET. I questioned the future of their program in a previous post, and to answer my question, I think they can still revive it, especially with the Big East. It brings back old rivalry games for the C7 and adds games against an exciting, new, high profile opponent for the other 3. I think these are all positives, both for us and them.
The other thing it does is add an instant "villain" to the conference. A lot of us still hold grudges against them for their role in destroying the old Big East
and we know their fans will come in here with the attitude that (despite secretly popping champagne at news of the invite) they're too good for this league and just settling because they got screwed by the F5. It could start to break up the kumbaya brotherhood attitude around here, and I'm honestly not sure if all this would be a good thing or a bad thing.
However, if we do accept them, we need to require 2 things:
1. They commit to this league as a final destination. Whether it be through a massive buyout clause or something else, we need to know they're committed and won't go campaigning for an F5 invite once expansion rumors start popping up again. Even if they ultimately don't get in to another league and stay, active campaigning (and even just submitting a bid) to join another league is simply bad PR for our league.
Bill Marsh wrote:Hall2012 wrote:I don't necessarily disagree with anything he said, despite the potshots at Seton Hall and St. John's who, let's be honest, would both wipe the floor with UConn in their program's current state. Despite what some of us may think of them, UConn is still a premier college basketball brand with a large following and that brings value to the Big East. They'll likely give us a little ratings boost on FS1 and we know they'll help pack MSG for the BET. I questioned the future of their program in a previous post, and to answer my question, I think they can still revive it, especially with the Big East. It brings back old rivalry games for the C7 and adds games against an exciting, new, high profile opponent for the other 3. I think these are all positives, both for us and them.
The other thing it does is add an instant "villain" to the conference. A lot of us still hold grudges against them for their role in destroying the old Big East
I'm curious. What did UConn do in destroying the old Big East.
and we know their fans will come in here with the attitude that (despite secretly popping champagne at news of the invite) they're too good for this league and just settling because they got screwed by the F5. It could start to break up the kumbaya brotherhood attitude around here, and I'm honestly not sure if all this would be a good thing or a bad thing.
However, if we do accept them, we need to require 2 things:
1. They commit to this league as a final destination. Whether it be through a massive buyout clause or something else, we need to know they're committed and won't go campaigning for an F5 invite once expansion rumors start popping up again. Even if they ultimately don't get in to another league and stay, active campaigning (and even just submitting a bid) to join another league is simply bad PR for our league.
This is precisely the reason why UConn should not be allowed anywhere near the new Big East.
Barley wrote:It's as simple as this:
UConn needs the Big East.
The Big East doesn't need UConn.
Xudash wrote:The UCONN fan base is an interesting lot. Went to The Boneyard to check their reaction to the article.
You have to hand it to them - some of them think highly of themselves. They'll save the BE.
Hall2012 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Hall2012 wrote:I don't necessarily disagree with anything he said, despite the potshots at Seton Hall and St. John's who, let's be honest, would both wipe the floor with UConn in their program's current state. Despite what some of us may think of them, UConn is still a premier college basketball brand with a large following and that brings value to the Big East. They'll likely give us a little ratings boost on FS1 and we know they'll help pack MSG for the BET. I questioned the future of their program in a previous post, and to answer my question, I think they can still revive it, especially with the Big East. It brings back old rivalry games for the C7 and adds games against an exciting, new, high profile opponent for the other 3. I think these are all positives, both for us and them.
The other thing it does is add an instant "villain" to the conference. A lot of us still hold grudges against them for their role in destroying the old Big East
I'm curious. What did UConn do in destroying the old Big East.
and we know their fans will come in here with the attitude that (despite secretly popping champagne at news of the invite) they're too good for this league and just settling because they got screwed by the F5. It could start to break up the kumbaya brotherhood attitude around here, and I'm honestly not sure if all this would be a good thing or a bad thing.
However, if we do accept them, we need to require 2 things:
1. They commit to this league as a final destination. Whether it be through a massive buyout clause or something else, we need to know they're committed and won't go campaigning for an F5 invite once expansion rumors start popping up again. Even if they ultimately don't get in to another league and stay, active campaigning (and even just submitting a bid) to join another league is simply bad PR for our league.
This is precisely the reason why UConn should not be allowed anywhere near the new Big East.
Actively campaigning for an invite to another league. West Virginia leaving was whatever, who cares, but once UConn started begging for an ACC invite- that's what really got the ball moving and forced everyone to start exploring other options. The fact that they got rejected by every league they begged to join doesn't mean they weren't part of the problem.
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