_lh wrote:UCONN has only been DIA since 2002. If they can't get into a P5 or P4 conference, UCONN can't play a lower version of football? Seems silly to continue to throw bad money after bad money.
DudeAnon wrote:_lh wrote:UCONN has only been DIA since 2002. If they can't get into a P5 or P4 conference, UCONN can't play a lower version of football? Seems silly to continue to throw bad money after bad money.
Is it possible you are overestimating the costs of operating a high-major football team? UCONN very well could be running a profitable operation regardless of their conference affiliation.
Bill Marsh wrote:
My comments about Notre Dame football joining the ACC were originally made in response to XUdash's post about a move to a 4 x 16 format. Under these conditions, there is little doubt that Notre Dame would have to move its football to a conference. Because of contractual commitments, this conference would be the ACC.
Without a 4 x 16 format, anything's possible, so I have no argument with any of your comments in this post.
Travel would not be for all non-football sports. That's not the way it works. It would only be for a handful. This has been discussed on this board several times before.
No to St Mary's. Gonzaga has access to a bigger arena, which would have to be a requirement if they were added. Gonzaga has achieved a stature that generates viewership beyond their immediate market. Moreover, they are not a commuter school which only has followers in their immediate metro area. Like all Big East schools they draw their student body regionally and they have alumni concentrations regionally - especially in Seattle. Home/home doesn't do anything for the Big East as a conference other than to guarantee a good OOC game here or there.
Inevitably??? The ACC and Notre Dame thought that the need for ND to place its football in a conference is a realistic enough possibility that they wrote that contingency into their contract. If/when that happens, UConn is the logical choice as #16.
Even if UConn doesn't make it to the F5, they are still a football school and the Big East doesn't sponsor football. I don't see a marriage here unless things change drastically.
Bluejay wrote:I do not think Notre Dame will ever join a conference. The only reason they did their little deal with the ACC was for bowl access. I think bowls have jumped the shark as I will discuss below. First, however, if Notre Dame is somehow forced to join a conference, I see them joining the Big 10, not the ACC. The Big 10 just makes more sense geographically and has more historical rivals (Michigan, MSU, Purdue).
As to bowls, we just saw the first example of top tier players skipping bowl games to avoid injury. McCaffrey and Fournette said no thanks to their respective bowl games. That trend will only get larger and larger outside of the Playoff games. With big stars skipping bowl games and TV money dropping or remaining stagnant, interest in bowl games will continue to wane. Interest is already significantly down in any bowl game that isn't part of the playoff. Stadiums are sitting nearly empty as more and more the games simply do not matter.
With bowl games becoming less and less significant, Notre Dame's forced assimilation into a conference also seems less likely.
DudeAnon wrote:_lh wrote:UCONN has only been DIA since 2002. If they can't get into a P5 or P4 conference, UCONN can't play a lower version of football? Seems silly to continue to throw bad money after bad money.
Is it possible you are overestimating the costs of operating a high-major football team? UCONN very well could be running a profitable operation regardless of their conference affiliation.
kayako wrote:adoraz wrote:Really? I haven't read anywhere they'd want to bring a bunch of schools. If that's true, disregard my above post. If it's only 1 other school I'd gladly take them, but absolutely no more than that.
They are not dumb enough to just make an open demand like that, but their stance on this issue seems obvious to me. This is Few's quote just 2 months ago...
“I actually think the Big East is positioned, if they want, to expand,” Few told William C. Rhoden of the New York Times last March. “If they wanted to expand nationally, I think that would be really, really crafty, and they could be a national basketball-only conference.”
_lh wrote:UCONN has only been DIA since 2002. If they can't get into a P5 or P4 conference, UCONN can't play a lower version of football?
_lh wrote:DudeAnon wrote:_lh wrote:UCONN has only been DIA since 2002. If they can't get into a P5 or P4 conference, UCONN can't play a lower version of football? Seems silly to continue to throw bad money after bad money.
Is it possible you are overestimating the costs of operating a high-major football team? UCONN very well could be running a profitable operation regardless of their conference affiliation.
Possible? Yes, but not according everything I have been reading on multiple sites and articles all over the web. Savanah Jay elaborated on it as well.
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