GumbyDamnit! wrote:Hall2012 wrote:DudeAnon wrote:
No doubt UCONN has its fingerprints all over the BE. In fact, in my mind, the only schools not in the current BE that are truly missed are Syracuse and UCONN. I
I was just having a good laugh at stever taking a shot at other poster's attitudes when he has yet to post even one positive remark about this conference without some sort of catch.
Well...to say Syracuse is missed might be a little bit of a stretch lol
I miss 'Cuse. Boeheim's a little whiney bee-yatch, but there is no denying that their BB program is one of the best nationally.
Programs I don't miss: Rutgers, Pitt.
sheg wrote:Outsider looking in perspective...
This is an interesting thread and I'm surprised by the results.
I thought the Big East should have kept them all along! If you keep the Seven, plus UConn, Cincinnati, and Louisville (you could have had them for one year), and add Xavier, Butler, Creighton or whomever, you keep one hell of a basketball conference! Now, as it turns out, the BE did pretty well without them in the three years since. But that was far from certain back then.
The Big East in the ten years leading up to the split was great, with Syracuse, UConn, Louisville, Villanova, Marquette, and Georgetown all having multiple top-top rankings at times. Include Pitt if you go back a little bit. I would have been concerned that losing Pitt/Cuse/UConn/Louisville would be too much too soon. I would have sought a way to keep UConn, UC, and UofL around. Then:
- you are certain to keep the BE name, most of the money, and MSG.
- you probably keep a decent ESPN deal.
- you get UConn's 2014 championship year (and Nova and Creighton were so great that year too). Amazing they were a 7 seed
- you have just a little bit more street cred.
Sure, you'd know that Louisville (one year later), UConn and Cincinnati, would all be bolting as soon as they could get to a P5, but if they remain part all along, that's somewhat less of a concern. Only Rutgers (for one year) and USF would have been bought out. The other BE additions like Temple, UCF, ECU, Tulane, etc. were never really part of the conference. And that group would have been so desperate to keep a viable football conference that they probably would have taken UConn, Cincinnati, and again, Louisville, all football-only just to keep their heads above water.
Now, things turned out pretty good for the BE to date, so it was fortunate. But looking back to then, I would have taken a more certain route.
FenwayFriar wrote:NJRedman wrote:xusandy wrote:11 pages of comments on something that has a close to 0% chance of happening! Man, you guys have a lot of time to waste on nothing! The Big East does not have to expand, and, at least IMHO, to think an invitation might be issued to a school that's a truly lousy fit on every dimension except geography and basketball team quality is pretty silly.
So you don't think those are the two biggest qualifications? You think it's silly to give out an invitation to a school that will easily raise the value of the entire league? It's funny, the 7 schools fans who actually shared a conference with UConn don't think they are a lousy fit. It's a message board, nothing we do matters. Why the hell are you here if it's such a waste?
xusandy wrote:FenwayFriar wrote:So you don't think those are the two biggest qualifications? You think it's silly to give out an invitation to a school that will easily raise the value of the entire league? It's funny, the 7 schools fans who actually shared a conference with UConn don't think they are a lousy fit. It's a message board, nothing we do matters. Why the hell are you here if it's such a waste?
NO, actually I don't think those are the two biggest qualifications, except perhaps to BE basketball fans who care about little else. I think "institutional fit" is the biggest qualification by far, and UConn simply does not make the grade. Except for nostalgia, there is just no reason to include a public institution at which football drives the sports bus. Well, your point that UConn's addition would "easily raise the value of the entire league" is true, but only in a very narrow way (the total $$ paid to the league for the right to carry basketball games would be larger if UConn were part of the package), but there are at least 30 other schools for whom that applies as well -- and almost none of them would "fit" the current BE either. UConn may be available ("desperate" might be a better word if Cincy and Houston join the B12), but that doesn't make them fit. Wanting to keep a bunch of good rivalries going is understandable, but that doesn't make UConn fit either.
hoyahooligan wrote:xusandy wrote:FenwayFriar wrote:So you don't think those are the two biggest qualifications? You think it's silly to give out an invitation to a school that will easily raise the value of the entire league? It's funny, the 7 schools fans who actually shared a conference with UConn don't think they are a lousy fit. It's a message board, nothing we do matters. Why the hell are you here if it's such a waste?
NO, actually I don't think those are the two biggest qualifications, except perhaps to BE basketball fans who care about little else. I think "institutional fit" is the biggest qualification by far, and UConn simply does not make the grade. Except for nostalgia, there is just no reason to include a public institution at which football drives the sports bus. Well, your point that UConn's addition would "easily raise the value of the entire league" is true, but only in a very narrow way (the total $$ paid to the league for the right to carry basketball games would be larger if UConn were part of the package), but there are at least 30 other schools for whom that applies as well -- and almost none of them would "fit" the current BE either. UConn may be available ("desperate" might be a better word if Cincy and Houston join the B12), but that doesn't make them fit. Wanting to keep a bunch of good rivalries going is understandable, but that doesn't make UConn fit either.
If they oukd've added Aeizona, why not Gonzaga?
I'm with Friar. The whole institutional fit thing is marketing. We only trump up our similar institutions and institutional fit as a good marketing scheme. I don't think any of the presidents or athletic directors care about it. If at the time of the split Kansas, Indiana, and Arizona wanted to join the 7 schools that broke off we absolutely would've added them and not butler xavier and creighton (don't get me wrong, the additions have been great). What the schools care about is having a good basketball league and making money. We'll do whatever to achieve those two things. The institutional fit thing doesn't matter. Neither does the public institutions being subject to the freedom of information act (There's no info that we'd be trying to hide that isn't available through other means as it is adding a public institution wouldn't change anything.
xusandy wrote:FenwayFriar wrote:NJRedman wrote:
So you don't think those are the two biggest qualifications? You think it's silly to give out an invitation to a school that will easily raise the value of the entire league? It's funny, the 7 schools fans who actually shared a conference with UConn don't think they are a lousy fit. It's a message board, nothing we do matters. Why the hell are you here if it's such a waste?
NO, actually I don't think those are the two biggest qualifications, except perhaps to BE basketball fans who care about little else. I think "institutional fit" is the biggest qualification by far, and UConn simply does not make the grade. Except for nostalgia, there is just no reason to include a public institution at which football drives the sports bus. Well, your point that UConn's addition would "easily raise the value of the entire league" is true, but only in a very narrow way (the total $$ paid to the league for the right to carry basketball games would be larger if UConn were part of the package), but there are at least 30 other schools for whom that applies as well -- and almost none of them would "fit" the current BE either. UConn may be available ("desperate" might be a better word if Cincy and Houston join the B12), but that doesn't make them fit. Wanting to keep a bunch of good rivalries going is understandable, but that doesn't make UConn fit either.
NJRedman wrote:UConn is the best fit for us short of UNC, Duke or UK coming on board. They are a blue blood in the sport. Institutional fit means nothing when push comes to shove. When the money is on the table no one cares about institutional fit. In fact before we invited the three new teams we asked UConn and Cincy to stick with us. If that happened you guys are still in the A-10. What does that tell you about how the presidents think? Money is the first, second and third criteria when bringing in new members.
whiteandblue77 wrote:NJRedman wrote:UConn is the best fit for us short of UNC, Duke or UK coming on board. They are a blue blood in the sport. Institutional fit means nothing when push comes to shove. When the money is on the table no one cares about institutional fit. In fact before we invited the three new teams we asked UConn and Cincy to stick with us. If that happened you guys are still in the A-10. What does that tell you about how the presidents think? Money is the first, second and third criteria when bringing in new members.
That's the whole point, THEY DON'T WANT TO BE in the Big East, so we don't want them. Period. Wanting UCONN makes us look like stalker girl, not the National Champs that we are.
Return to Big East basketball message board
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 4 guests