Bostonspider wrote:Oh, I am not doubting the Bluejays have a stronger basketball resume right now, though I would not discount a colleged owned 10,000 seat arena compared to a rented 18,000 seat civic arena. I just think that SLU is a "basketball school" as well. I think the hiring of Majerus, coupled with the building of Chaifetz, put them on that level.
aughnanure wrote:yorost wrote:Jet915 wrote:K, let's just talk about basketball.
NCAA tournament bids: 18 for Creighton (8 in last 15), 7 for SLU (3 in last 15)
Fan Support: 17,000 fans a game for Creighton (12,000 season ticket holders), 6-7K for SLU
Facilities: 18,500 NBA style arena for Creighton, 10,000 College Arena for SLU
There is no way SLU beats Creighton in any aspect related to basketball period.
If you're going to count your own NCAA bid from 1941, you should be mentioning older NIT bids. The further you go back the stronger the NIT was, and in the 40's it might have been the stronger tournament than the NCAA's. Creighton has 2 pre-75 (at large introduction) NIT bids while St. Louis has 11. Creighton did have an additional NIT bid in the short period after, where the NCAA+NIT still represented less bids than the NCAA has today.
I'd love to get a comprehensive data set on postseason bids and the schools eligible in each season. It's a curious question as to how prestigious any individual bid should be.
Might have been is the key phrase. Only once did the Helms Athletic Foundation choose an NIT champ over the NCAA and often teams played in both. Still, by the 60s there was no argument about which was the real tournament, and probably not even much in the 50s.
yorost wrote:
Might have been is the key phrase. Only once did the Helms Athletic Foundation choose an NIT champ over the NCAA and often teams played in both. Still, by the 60s there was no argument about which was the real tournament, and probably not even much in the 50s.
yorost wrote:
As I said, the further you go back the closer it gets. The clear changeover took place during the early 50's, but the chosen champion just isn't the point. The point is strength of field and how many bids were available (vs how many teams were eligible, i.e. DI today). If you took the past NCAA/NIT situation and applied it today, the NCAA's would get Indiana (assumed AQ) while the NIT could get Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ohio St and any other B1G team they thought worthy of a bid. It might leave the NCAA's as a the tournament for choosing the champion, but not as a dominant tournament over the NIT as it is today. Even into the 70;s the NIT was getting top rated teams in its tournament. The changes in 71 (cannot turn down NCAA) and 75 (allow multi bids from a conference) marked the true downgrade of the NIT, but even until the early 80's the two tournaments still represented less bids than the NCAA offers today (though I'm not sure on the eligible team comparison).
aughnanure wrote:yorost wrote:
As I said, the further you go back the closer it gets. The clear changeover took place during the early 50's, but the chosen champion just isn't the point. The point is strength of field and how many bids were available (vs how many teams were eligible, i.e. DI today). If you took the past NCAA/NIT situation and applied it today, the NCAA's would get Indiana (assumed AQ) while the NIT could get Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ohio St and any other B1G team they thought worthy of a bid. It might leave the NCAA's as a the tournament for choosing the champion, but not as a dominant tournament over the NIT as it is today. Even into the 70;s the NIT was getting top rated teams in its tournament. The changes in 71 (cannot turn down NCAA) and 75 (allow multi bids from a conference) marked the true downgrade of the NIT, but even until the early 80's the two tournaments still represented less bids than the NCAA offers today (though I'm not sure on the eligible team comparison).
Your one example from the 1970s is Marquette, #2 at the time, who turned it down because we were forced to ply out in the West bracket. Al said 'f*** that' and took his team to the NIT where we won it. That 1971 rule came for that reason. At a certain point, we just have to stop caring about college basketball history because it was so confusing and because it did not become the not the national attraction it is now until the 50s and 70s. So I agree with you there. I don't think any one should be going through NIT appearances in the 30s and 40s to prove a point. You've had plenty of time since to do something.
aughnanure wrote:Bostonspider wrote:Oh, I am not doubting the Bluejays have a stronger basketball resume right now, though I would not discount a colleged owned 10,000 seat arena compared to a rented 18,000 seat civic arena. I just think that SLU is a "basketball school" as well. I think the hiring of Majerus, coupled with the building of Chaifetz, put them on that level.
So SLU's arena situation is better than every C7 school too? SLU is trying to become a basketball school after not prioritizing it for decades. I think they should be absolutely added, but they have to put more time in to be declared a "basketball school" in my opinion.
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