stever20 wrote:NJRedman wrote:A couple of observations.
4. The 20 game round robin does not hurt our chances to get NCAA bids. Replacing dregs with UConn is a win for us. The committee has constantly shown they reward those teams that challenge themselves during the season. Thats why Gonzaga is the #4 one seed and Nova is the overall #1.
Maryland in 2014 finished 17-15 in the ACC. had the #10 SOS in the country. Do you know what that got them? Nothing- not even a NIT bid. So how does the committee reward teams like that? Like it or not, your win-loss record matters. Until the committee starts to take teams like Maryland in 2014, I think you are wrong.
crussomd wrote:I will repeat my previous statements that I think we should tread extremely carefully breaking up the all private school league we currently have. Unless presented with the perfect opportunity down the road after crazy realignment shakeouts (Duke, WF, ND) we should stay at 10. There is some merit to the argument to UCONN adding value to MSG and at renewal time for fox contract. However, they add instability even with a $50million exit fee and change our brand image. This should be considered carefully more than short term gain. Do you know what the best additions to the Big east would be? Gtown and St Johns being perennially good and tourney teams each year.
NJRedman wrote:stever20 wrote:NJRedman wrote:A couple of observations.
4. The 20 game round robin does not hurt our chances to get NCAA bids. Replacing dregs with UConn is a win for us. The committee has constantly shown they reward those teams that challenge themselves during the season. Thats why Gonzaga is the #4 one seed and Nova is the overall #1.
Maryland in 2014 finished 17-15 in the ACC. had the #10 SOS in the country. Do you know what that got them? Nothing- not even a NIT bid. So how does the committee reward teams like that? Like it or not, your win-loss record matters. Until the committee starts to take teams like Maryland in 2014, I think you are wrong.
Every year is different. Criteria isn't set in stone, do such and such and you get in outside of winning your conference tournament. Each year the criteria shifts. It's clear RPI and SOS matter. Wins against dregs aren't very valuable outside of the number of wins. There is no guarantee a 19-13 Maryland with RPI and SOS drop playing two 200+ RPI teams would have made the NCAA.
gosports1 wrote:am the only one from the original BE not interested in bringing UConn back? If they dropped FB , maybe. Id much rather see Stjohns return to prominence and PC,SJU and Georgetown become more appealing to the recruits heading to UConn
Dave wrote:Counter to most of the comments here, I'd rather have a reasonable exit fee. Maybe $10M - $25M which is really high for basketball. I'm not sure a GOR is fully effective for the Big East.
The Big East does not sponsor football, so I don't know how we can claim a GOR on UConn football. Big East TV is $4.xM per year. Our FS1 deal is unprecedented. In the oBE there was always argument over the split in TV money between the football schools and basketball schools because the TV contracts were for bothe sports. The basketball schools had a smaller annual cut than our current deal.
So a GOR would be a gray area as a P5 contract would be for both Football and Basketball. We could argue the GOR value, but gray areas are not good for settlements. Would a GOR only be good for a basketball cut that would be valued as $4.xM per year or less.
When the C-7 exited the old Big East there was a $110M pool of funds to be distributed. The C-7 took $10M plus the Big East name plus the BET contract with MSG. The (soon to become AAC) kept $100M. There really wasn't an exit fee for us as we exercised a mass exit clause. WVU paid a $20M exit fee. Rutgers $11.5M. Pitt and Cuse $5M each. Ville $11M. That was with football, the higher value. Notre Dame's exit fee was $2.5M. I think the AAC currently has a $10M exit fee (includes football). Missouri and Texas A&M paid $12.5M each to exit the Big 12. This history is just for perspective.
If UConn exited for a P5 they would be getting like $30M a year from a new conference. I think a basketball GOR or exit fee must be reasonable with some type of market relevance to be fully enforceable. It would prevent UConn for leaving for any conference except a P5. This is just the reality of the food chain.
I don't think a GOR is a good fit for our situation, and a $50M exit fee that some have thrown around is just too unprecedented to be reasonable. Let's welcome home our UConn brothers. We left them, not the other way around.
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