MUBoxer wrote:Haha are you striker then? And nope no 180 turn around in my book that I reserve for those with Crean alters in their apartment.
Bill Marsh wrote:marquette wrote:I guess I misspoke. It is only 2 championships instead of 3, but according to their wikipedia page it was pre-tournament Helms Championships in 1924 and 1929.
Actually North Carolina was the Helms Foundation title holder in 1924 and Montana State in 1929, but Butler won the AAU championship in 1924 and were awarded the McDevitt trophy in 1929 by Veteran Athletes of Philadelphia, recognizing Butler as national title holders that year. Obviously Butler challenges the Helms Foundation picks in both of those seasons
Bill Marsh wrote:TheHall wrote:
I agree winning helps but it seems to me that putting players in the league outweighs even winning in cbb today. Just look at the BE's current flagship program Gtown. JT3 has had too many spectacular flameouts to count since that Final4 run but Gtown has become a NBA launching pad so he & the program are rightly revered. Same thing (minus the 1st round flameouts) for marquette recently under Buzz. He's won a decent amount but he's made marquette a beast on the recruiting trail with his NBA talent development success. Example:
http://painttouches.com/2013/09/02/why-trent-lockett-is-nba-bound/
When a program starts having success putting players in the league it most times gives a boost to recruiting, which is the lifeblood of all programs. I actually think winning is more important for mid majors & below (your Florida Gulf Coast example or Loyola Marymount back in the day), but I think Harkless going in the lottery was more significant for the perception of SJU's program than winning a few more games that season.
Also, If the players wind up doing well in the league or over-performing like Jimmy Butler or Roy Hibbert it's a double bonus. But even if the school has a history of putting busts in the league there's still a measurable boost to the program's perception...Syracuse/Duke.
I think Fuquan Edwin will have a helluva senior year (1st Team All-BE) and will get a shot at making the league next year, which would definitely help the Hall's perception going forward.
I think you're really onto something here. Getting players who become big stars in the NBA is a huge boost for a program.
Georgetown is a classic case. Despite their dominance in the mid '80's, ultimately they won only a single championship. Hardly something that establishes them as a legendary program. But they produced a string of big men - Ewing, Mourning, and Mutombo - and followed them with Allen Iverson, one of the most exciting "little men" the game has ever seen. Those four alone kept Georgetown in a position of prominence until JT III could revive the program more recently. Of course the aura of "Hoya Paranoia" that surrounded the program and the way that Thompson revolutionized the game with his approach to defense didn't hurt either.
Bill Marsh wrote:
Great coaches can also help to sell programs because they make for great TV. Al McGuire was certainly that kind of coach at Marquette. Gerry Tarkanian created a prominence for UNLV that went beyond anything they accomplished on the court. Coaches can be stars too and the original Big East had a group of coaches who were also interesting personalities, which certainly helped the league's TV appeal and star power.
Bulldog_Muskie wrote:I guess you and I have different definitions of national power, because to me you just described a team with at best a regional following as of late. For all the success they may have had, (outside of the title, plenty of teams of similar records) a majority of people right now would not include them in the conversation. Based on history is that fair? Maybe, maybe not. But a team that hasn't made it past the sweet sixteen since 1996 isn't exactly going to be at the forefront of the public consciousnesses.
Also don't confuse the above with me saying that butler is a national power (far from it) but in terms of recent performance I'd say they are at least on equal footing with Arkansas in terms of national recognition at present.
Friarfan2 wrote:To say brand recognition is not important is ridiculous. The reason we just got half a billion dollars from fox is because of brand recognition.
Look, if providence, DePaul and seton hall are the top teams in the league in a couple of years, and nova, Georgetown and Marquette are missing the dance, the perception will be that the big east was a step down, it hurt the power programs and diluted the talent available, and it hurt the major brands of the conference. The perception will be that providence, seton hall and DePaul are only winning because the big east took a step back and hurt the schools that used to compete on a higher level.
Fair or not, brand recognition is important. The four biggest brands are nova, Georgetown, Marquette and St. John's.
Look at the acc. Most of that conference sucked for a decade. But unc and duke are huge brands, they performed well, the conference got respect. Maybe not from all hard core hoops fans who,would see the rest of the conference sucked, but for the public at large they got the respect.
We have four major brands I this conference. They are the teams that need to perform for the national perception to stay solid. Villanova and georgetown are by far the two largest brands, they are the two teams that I would say would benefit the conference the most if they succeeded.
Friarfan2 wrote:To say brand recognition is not important is ridiculous. The reason we just got half a billion dollars from fox is because of brand recognition.
Look, if providence, DePaul and seton hall are the top teams in the league in a couple of years, and nova, Georgetown and Marquette are missing the dance, the perception will be that the big east was a step down, it hurt the power programs and diluted the talent available, and it hurt the major brands of the conference. The perception will be that providence, seton hall and DePaul are only winning because the big east took a step back and hurt the schools that used to compete on a higher level....
Friarfan2 wrote:The hall,
If seton hall, providence and DePaul are winning multiple national championships, like uconn did, then sure, it will be fine.
But we haven't had one of our teams win it all in 28 yrs. If it turns out that providence,creighton, DePaul and shu are making the tournament, sometimes making the second weekend, not really threatening the final four, while the more marquee brands are sitting at home, that would be much worse than if the marquee brands were making the dance, sometimes making the second weekend. If you have Georgetown, nova and Marquette still making the second weekend, they keep the perception of strength. The other schools are not perceived that way, and it will be a hit to the conference.
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