Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The biggest mistake the AAC made, in adding C-USA members in Houston, SMU, East Carolina, Memphis, UCF, and Tulane, was creating a brand and image that did not separate itself from Conference USA. They used a similar color scheme, logo, and branding in creating a new identity, and casual fans immediately thought of C-USA (including former C-USA teams in Cincinnati and USF). They should have taken the Metro Conference name and created a new branding. This is a big reason why they are not seriously considered a power conference in football.
What was the alternative?
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The biggest mistake the AAC made, in adding C-USA members in Houston, SMU, East Carolina, Memphis, UCF, and Tulane, was creating a brand and image that did not separate itself from Conference USA. They used a similar color scheme, logo, and branding in creating a new identity, and casual fans immediately thought of C-USA (including former C-USA teams in Cincinnati and USF). They should have taken the Metro Conference name and created a new branding. This is a big reason why they are not seriously considered a power conference in football.
What was the alternative?
Resurrect the Metro Conference. An overwhelming majority of current AAC schools are in big metropolitan cities (Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Tulsa, Cincinnati, Orlando, Tampa, Memphis, Philadelphia). It would have separated themselves from the C-USA branding and eliminated any connection/stigma to that conference. They would have done a much better job arguing they are a power conference with a branding and name that didn't sound like Conference USA 2.0.
Bill Marsh wrote:With the exception of East Carolina, isn't that what they did?
shizzle787 wrote:If schools start dropping the sport en masse in the next two decades, would the conference want to reserruct the OBE+5 relative newbies if that happened:
UConn, Syracuse, Pitt, and BC joining the current 10.
Would you guys get over dumping the round robin format?
kayako wrote:shizzle787 wrote:If schools start dropping the sport en masse in the next two decades, would the conference want to reserruct the OBE+5 relative newbies if that happened:
UConn, Syracuse, Pitt, and BC joining the current 10.
Would you guys get over dumping the round robin format?
I think the worst case for college FB is a somewhat diminished standing in the sports world. Less lucrative, but it won't collapse to the point where schools abandon B1G and ACC, which are fine basketball conferences anyway.
But to answer your question, I don't value the double round robin as much as others around here, so I'd take UConn back without too much hesitation. BC and Pitt can remain irrelevant in their current conferences. I'd have to think long and hard about Syracuse, but I can probably be talked into it. Given your time frame of 20 years, though, these rivalries will have lost a lot of luster. I know we're kind of lacking in national profile right now with Georgetown sucking, but Creighton, Xavier, and Butler are trending up nicely in terms of recruiting, and they'll be firmly established as national players by then, IMO. I think if UConn wants to come back, it's sooner the better for both parties.
EMT wrote:Are any of these school relevant in 20 years?
BC hasn't been relevant since Al Skinner was forced out.
UConn has to see if they can succeed in the AAC in a post Calhoun era.
Syracuse has to survive the post Boeheim era and is not a good fit for the ACC.
Pitt was traditionally successful recruiting tri-state area kids and now plays no tri-state schools.
EMT wrote:kayako wrote:shizzle787 wrote:If schools start dropping the sport en masse in the next two decades, would the conference want to reserruct the OBE+5 relative newbies if that happened:
UConn, Syracuse, Pitt, and BC joining the current 10.
Would you guys get over dumping the round robin format?
I think the worst case for college FB is a somewhat diminished standing in the sports world. Less lucrative, but it won't collapse to the point where schools abandon B1G and ACC, which are fine basketball conferences anyway.
But to answer your question, I don't value the double round robin as much as others around here, so I'd take UConn back without too much hesitation. BC and Pitt can remain irrelevant in their current conferences. I'd have to think long and hard about Syracuse, but I can probably be talked into it. Given your time frame of 20 years, though, these rivalries will have lost a lot of luster. I know we're kind of lacking in national profile right now with Georgetown sucking, but Creighton, Xavier, and Butler are trending up nicely in terms of recruiting, and they'll be firmly established as national players by then, IMO. I think if UConn wants to come back, it's sooner the better for both parties.
Are any of these school relevant in 20 years?
UConn has to see if they can succeed in the AAC in a post Calhoun era.
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