hoyahooligan wrote:bmorex wrote:Just a really lousy schedule if you are a Xavier student. Spring semester starts January 13.
Students miss:
12/31 vs. St John's (Christmas break)
1/4 vs. Butler (Christmas break)
1/9 vs. Marquette (Christmas break)
3/1 vs. Creighton (Christmas break)
I consider Butler to be our biggest rival so missing that one my senior year definitely hurts.
Isn't half of Xavier's student body from Ohio? Nothing stopping you from coming back to see that game. I know Georgetown has sparse crowds over winter break, but we're a lot less regional than Xavier is.
Xudash wrote:Apparently, people who attend(ed) national universities are clueless when it comes to geography, and predisposed to making arrogant statements.
Even though over 50% of Xavier's students actually come from outside Ohio, I wouldn't try to convince a student from Cleveland that, due to the fact they're "in Ohio" they have it easier than one of their friends from, say Lexington, KY when it comes to making it to the Cintas Center.
The former faces a 4+ hour trip, whereas the latter can make it to Cincinnati in roughly 90 minutes.
hoyahooligan wrote:Xudash wrote:Apparently, people who attend(ed) national universities are clueless when it comes to geography, and predisposed to making arrogant statements.
Even though over 50% of Xavier's students actually come from outside Ohio, I wouldn't try to convince a student from Cleveland that, due to the fact they're "in Ohio" they have it easier than one of their friends from, say Lexington, KY when it comes to making it to the Cintas Center.
The former faces a 4+ hour trip, whereas the latter can make it to Cincinnati in roughly 90 minutes.
The majority of Xavier students do come from Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky the areas surrounding the city of Cincinnati. There's more students who go to xavier who live within driving distance of that school than Georgetown does. Sorry if that rubs you the wrong way. If seeing a specific game is a priority for you there's no reason you cannot travel to that game if you desire to. The Marquette game is 4 days before break for example there's no reason some students couldn't come back a few days early to attend that game. Especially if you get the word out. Last year Georgetown's final game of the season was against Syracuse over spring break but the university made a push for students to come back early from spring break to attend the game. And I would totally drive 4 hours to catch my team play our biggest conference rival especially since the game is at 2pm giving plenty of time to drive back the same day if you needed to. Not saying all fans are like that, but 4 hours is still driving distance in my book.
hoyahooligan wrote:Xudash wrote:Apparently, people who attend(ed) national universities are clueless when it comes to geography, and predisposed to making arrogant statements.
Even though over 50% of Xavier's students actually come from outside Ohio, I wouldn't try to convince a student from Cleveland that, due to the fact they're "in Ohio" they have it easier than one of their friends from, say Lexington, KY when it comes to making it to the Cintas Center.
The former faces a 4+ hour trip, whereas the latter can make it to Cincinnati in roughly 90 minutes.
The majority of Xavier students do come from Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky the areas surrounding the city of Cincinnati. There's more students who go to xavier who live within driving distance of that school than Georgetown does. Sorry if that rubs you the wrong way. If seeing a specific game is a priority for you there's no reason you cannot travel to that game if you desire to. The Marquette game is 4 days before break for example there's no reason some students couldn't come back a few days early to attend that game. Especially if you get the word out. Last year Georgetown's final game of the season was against Syracuse over spring break but the university made a push for students to come back early from spring break to attend the game. And I would totally drive 4 hours to catch my team play our biggest conference rival especially since the game is at 2pm giving plenty of time to drive back the same day if you needed to. Not saying all fans are like that, but 4 hours is still driving distance in my book.
bmorex wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:Xudash wrote:Apparently, people who attend(ed) national universities are clueless when it comes to geography, and predisposed to making arrogant statements.
Even though over 50% of Xavier's students actually come from outside Ohio, I wouldn't try to convince a student from Cleveland that, due to the fact they're "in Ohio" they have it easier than one of their friends from, say Lexington, KY when it comes to making it to the Cintas Center.
The former faces a 4+ hour trip, whereas the latter can make it to Cincinnati in roughly 90 minutes.
The majority of Xavier students do come from Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky the areas surrounding the city of Cincinnati. There's more students who go to xavier who live within driving distance of that school than Georgetown does. Sorry if that rubs you the wrong way. If seeing a specific game is a priority for you there's no reason you cannot travel to that game if you desire to. The Marquette game is 4 days before break for example there's no reason some students couldn't come back a few days early to attend that game. Especially if you get the word out. Last year Georgetown's final game of the season was against Syracuse over spring break but the university made a push for students to come back early from spring break to attend the game. And I would totally drive 4 hours to catch my team play our biggest conference rival especially since the game is at 2pm giving plenty of time to drive back the same day if you needed to. Not saying all fans are like that, but 4 hours is still driving distance in my book.
Dash covered most of the points I was going to respond with, but just a few more:
1. I am planning on coming back to school early for the Marquette game. However, I live off-campus in a house. (As of now...may change if the student body pushes for it) The students that live in on-campus housing probably won't be able to move in until Jan 11/12 because that is when the residence halls open. So you are incorrect in saying "there's no reason you cannot travel to that game if you desire to." This is likely only possible for students living in a 2 hour radius of Cincinnati. Let's try and avoid making absolute statements unless you are 100% positive about them.
2. I never said that Cintas Center is dead when the students aren't there. Fact is, a good number from the area still attend. The attendance is still high. (Last year, students were on break against big games vs. VCU, Memphis, just off the top of my head.) The rest of the arena is still filled with your normal fans. My point was that the atmosphere and the loudness of the arena is usually more subdued over breaks.
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