billyjack wrote:- Big East schools have always drawn fans from beyond their alumni base. The schools' hoops teams belong to all the fans in each of our metro areas.
Gopher+RamFan wrote:Jet915 wrote:Pretty lame article IMO. First, the Big East ratings this year are better than last year. Second, he compares Big East ratings to basketball ratings on the big ESPN channel. You compare anything on Fox Sports 1 to main ESPN and you are gonna lose big time. Right now, FS1 is comparable and better than ESPNU/NBC Sports Network/CBS Sports Network.
Lastly, Big East games have regularly received better ratings than Pac-12 games. Is anyone saying there is a Pac-12 problem? For example, the games from January 19-25 were as follows:
7 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: Georgetown at Marquette Sat 2:34PM- 5:09PM 155 0.1 233
8 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: Creighton at Butler Wed 9:14PM-11:31PM 137 0.1 173
9 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: DePaul at Xavier Sat 12:00PM- 2:08PM 128 0.1 161
10 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: Villanova at Georgetown Mon 9:00PM-11:26PM 146 0.1 154
12 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: Creighton at Villanova Sun 7:00PM- 9:00PM 120 0.1 130
15 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: Marquette at St. John’s Wed 7:00PM- 9:14PM 134 0.1 107
16 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: PAC 12: Washington at Colorado Thu 9:30PM-11:29PM 119 0.1 94
24 COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BIG EAST: DePaul at Seton Hall Thu 7:00PM- 9:27PM 147 0.1 82
Valid points, but your comparing some BE games to the 11th placed PAC12 team against the 9th placed team. Neither of those are big hoops programs. My brother is a CU grad, still follows their horrendous football team, but won't watch much of their bball.
Another poster mentioned losing "brands" like ND, Louisville and Syracuse. Those brand teams are also public institutions (at least SU and Louisville) and churning out alumni at a great rate than private institutions. My VCU fandom aside, does anyone else think that is a factor (even if it's a small one?). When a public school is graduating 7-9k a year, it may make a difference.
Of course I think the private schools have a higher alumni donor rate, as well as post-grad median earnings.
HoosierPal wrote:In Indiana, the IU territory (viewers) stretches from Evansville to Ft. Wayne to the Calumet Region. (Carve out Lafayette.) The Butler territory is primarily Indianapolis.
Gopher+RamFan wrote:Valid points, but your comparing some BE games to the 11th placed PAC12 team against the 9th placed team. Neither of those are big hoops programs. My brother is a CU grad, still follows their horrendous football team, but won't watch much of their bball.
Another poster mentioned losing "brands" like ND, Louisville and Syracuse. Those brand teams are also public institutions (at least SU and Louisville) and churning out alumni at a great rate than private institutions. My VCU fandom aside, does anyone else think that is a factor (even if it's a small one?). When a public school is graduating 7-9k a year, it may make a difference.
Of course I think the private schools have a higher alumni donor rate, as well as post-grad median earnings.
marquette wrote:Gopher+RamFan wrote:Valid points, but your comparing some BE games to the 11th placed PAC12 team against the 9th placed team. Neither of those are big hoops programs. My brother is a CU grad, still follows their horrendous football team, but won't watch much of their bball.
Another poster mentioned losing "brands" like ND, Louisville and Syracuse. Those brand teams are also public institutions (at least SU and Louisville) and churning out alumni at a great rate than private institutions. My VCU fandom aside, does anyone else think that is a factor (even if it's a small one?). When a public school is graduating 7-9k a year, it may make a difference.
Of course I think the private schools have a higher alumni donor rate, as well as post-grad median earnings.
Syracuse and Notre Dame are not public schools. Syracuse and Notre Dame have lower enrollments than DePaul and St. John's. Louisville is also smaller than DePaul and only 1k larger than St. John's. Notre Dame is smaller than Marquette. Size may be a factor, but it isn't the only one.
butlerguy03 wrote:HoosierPal wrote:In Indiana, the IU territory (viewers) stretches from Evansville to Ft. Wayne to the Calumet Region. (Carve out Lafayette.) The Butler territory is primarily Indianapolis.
Not even that. A pocket on the north side of Indianapolis. You can barely find Butler gear to buy outside of campus. Even sports stores like Dick's only has one or two t-shirts.
It's been said that Butler basketball has more pull outside the state than inside Indiana. I believe that is true.
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