whiteandblue77 wrote:Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:hortle wrote:
From what I read, it seems the only reason some of them are against it is because they are worried about being excluded from the future non-NCAA governing body that the P5 schools form. No one on their board has brought it up but I just can't see a governing body like that existing without the membership of the 3rd best basketball conference in the country.
Big-revenue football is driving that bus, with college basketball appearing in its rear-view mirror.
Not sure what your point is.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2015 Rank Program • Value ($ in millions)
1. Ohio State • 946.61
2. Texas • 885.05
3. Michigan • 811.30
4. Notre Dame • 723.59
5. Alabama • 694.87
6. Oklahoma • 674.34
7. Florida • 670.86
8. Georgia • 636.44
9. LSU • 612.30
10. Penn State • 481.39
Bill Marsh wrote:Hall2012 wrote:To me, it's pretty simple. If they genuinely want to join the Big East, they're welcome to. As annoying as their fans are, UConn is a major hoops brand and a traditional Big East brand that would add financial value to the league. That's really all they add though. It's not like we'd be adding a national championship contender. At this point, they're likely a middle 3rd team that could maybe sqeak into the NCAAs but more likely end up in the NIT. Could they build their program back to where it was in the Big East? Maybe, but they don't have Calhoun anymore either.
They didn't have Calhoun in 2014 either. They're bringing in a top ten recruiting class this year. They have a coach who won a NC just 3 years ago. How does their program need rebuilding?
This kind of comment reminds me of fans who were trashing Villanova just a few years ago. In the words of Mark Twain, "Reports of my demise have been greatly exaggerated." You're dismissing the program that has probably had the most high level success of any program in the country in recent years. Middle of the BIg East? Borderline NCAA tournament team? Seriously?
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
If you do much reading about college sports, you will know that the presidents, athletic directors and football coaches of the P5-conference schools have a real 'us and them' view of the college sports landscape. If the P5-conference schools form a future non-NCAA governing body, it will include only P5-conference schools, and will it be driven by the big football-centric schools who stand to gain the most by the formation of a non-NCAA governing body.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Major Leagues: Big Ten, Big 12, ACC, Pac 12, and Southeastern
AAA: Big East
AA: Atlantic 10, American Athletic Conference, Colonial, and Mid American
A: The other 22 conferences.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Each year in March, the P5 Conference Cartel will hold their annual college basketball tournament – at the same time as the rival NCAA Tournament. The money for the TV rights to the P5 Conference Cartel Tournament will be astronomical.
The NCAA Tournament will likely have to be reduced to 32 teams, and the TV rights money for it will plummet. The Big East should dominate the NCAA Tournament for years to come, but the tournament’s stature will decline significantly. The NIT and other post-season basketball tournaments will disappear completely after the Top 97 teams in college basketball play elsewhere in March.
The P5 Conference Cartel schools will use all means available to benefit themselves, such as increasing their FCOA payments to student-athletes, increasing football scholarships to 90, and increasing men’s basketball scholarships to 15 – just to take another 130 very good basketball players away from NCAA basketball teams. The P5 Conference Cartel schools will drop the requirement for basketball players transferring in from NCAA schools to sit out a season before playing, and after each season, the P5 Conference Cartel basketball coaches will 'release' their worse players and unashamedly recruit star players from NCAA teams for the next season – effectively turning the NCAA schools into their minor leagues.
The administrators of the NCAA and its non-P5 member schools are already aware of the potential existential threats described above. It is in their interests to ensure that this nightmare scenario does not turn into reality. That will mean a lot of unpalatable choices for them in the years to come.
whiteandblue77 wrote:
Nobody would watch the football-school basketball tournament.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:whiteandblue77 wrote:
Nobody would watch the football-school basketball tournament.
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Bill Marsh wrote:NJRedman wrote:Pride always comes before the fall. These fans (the young ones) think they have always been on top and thats just the way it's going to be. They have no idea that they didn't even make the NCAA's as a member of the Big East until 1990. They are a johnny come lately and they are about to be left behind on the ash heap of sports history like USF (San Fran), Houston and CUNY.
I'm confused by your comment.
1. You knock UConn for not making the NCAA's as a member of the Big East until 1990. Why is that significant? Wouldn't Seton Hall fit a similar description? Should we not take them seriously? How about Butler? Or Xavier? Duke didn't win a NC before 1991 and they won them all under the same coach. Hmm.
2. You call UConn a Johnny come lately, but then trash the pedigree of schools like USF, Houston, and CCNY who do have pedigrees before 1990. Which is it? Recent success or success from long ago? And CCNY is just a crazy comparison since they never accomplished anything of significance other than 1950, and their program was killed by the betting scandals along with most of NYC basketball. In contrast, UConn in 1990 went to the first of 10 Elite 8's, 5 Final Fours, and 4 NC's over a quarter century. Houston isn't much better. Although they have 5 Final Fours to their credit, they never won a NC and never reached even the Elite 8 in any season other than those 5. USF is a better comparison, but their ruin came from boosters paying players and the president suspending the program after the practice had become BOTH chronic and resistant to intervention. There is no sign of any of that happening at UConn.
3. You predict that their program is about to be left on the ash heap of sports history. Why? Is there any sign that the program is in decline? They're bringing in a top ten recruiting class this year. That sure doesn't sound like a program in decline. Bad facilities or academics? Nope. Their coach is considered to be one of the hottest young coaches in the business. If he resigned tomorrow, both college and NBA programs would be lining up for his services. What other programs have you targeted for the ash heap of sports history? Florida? Michigan State? Both have also had big runs in the same quarter century during which UConn has excelled. Does an old pedigree assure future success? Is Indiana returning to championship form any time soon? UCLA?
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