GumbyDamnit! wrote:Agreed X. We all need each other. Just saying that the C7 are offering the others a better situation because of a deal that they have struck on their own. Now I don't think it'll happen but what if XU and Butler decline and/or UCONN, Cinn, temple and Memphis see the writing on the wall and beg to be included and agree to ridiculous exit fees? The others are stuck in an inferior league with a terrible tv contract. No one wants that. I don't think a short term unequal arrangement is going to turn them away so quickly. That would be a bad business decision.
xman wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:Agreed X. We all need each other. Just saying that the C7 are offering the others a better situation because of a deal that they have struck on their own. Now I don't think it'll happen but what if XU and Butler decline and/or UCONN, Cinn, temple and Memphis see the writing on the wall and beg to be included and agree to ridiculous exit fees? The others are stuck in an inferior league with a terrible tv contract. No one wants that. I don't think a short term unequal arrangement is going to turn them away so quickly. That would be a bad business decision.
To your point, I could argue that Xavier and Butler have done well for themselves in basketball despite a crappy conference TV deal. The desire to join the new league is to be with peer institutions first and foremost which might elevate the exposure of the University as a whole.
GumbyDamnit! wrote: A short term unequal payout by no means equates to 1st and 2nd class citizenry in this conference.
ChiFlyer wrote:To play devils advocate, should the prospective schools go to a league where they will be struggling to finish .500 in conference play or stay in a smaller pond and compete for auto bids year in and year out?
ChiFlyer wrote:The C7 are united and driving the situation. They are the main reason the big money is being offered. XU & Butler should not accept lesser money than the C7 and at 9 teams you have a legitimate conference. These two schools bring as much to the table as any of the C7 tables and are true equals. Now where I think it gets interesting is the additional 1-3 schools that you add. They all have warts. (For the people putting Creighton above SLU and UD for their on court performance have not looked at the last decade. Creighton has not won many NCAA games.) Gonzaga and VCU have great programs. But Gonzaga is thousands of miles away in a non market. VCU is a big state school. Creighton, SLU, and UD have very similar strengths and weaknesses. Good fan bases, solid programs that lack recent NCAA success, and the money to compete in the new league. Creighton is probably the best of these three, but its close when you look at the numbers objectively. I think the C7 is in a position to twist the screw on all the available schools after XU & Butler. And I don't think any of the schools would or should say no. What if UD said, we want in the league and give us a million a year for ten years. We have plenty of money and missing out on 3 million a year won't kill us. We are still getting double what we get now. Anyone of these schools could do this, but will they? If any school says no, there are plenty of other schools that will say yes. There are a bunch of schools that would not be perfect fits, but would be adequate. Duquense, George Mason, Saint Mary's, (UCONN, Cincy, Memphis, Temple if they would dump football or go to the MAC maybe.), St Joes, etc.....
Outside of XU & Butler, the league doesn't need any of these schools and they will take what is offered. It will get interesting in 5 -10 years if Providense, SH, and DePaul (Saint John's to a lesser degree, MSG and NYC are really important.) still suck and are getting more money than the programs that joined and got less money. I'm excited to see what happens. I hope UD gets in, but if they don't they will be fine. They have the infrastructure to be good and the A-10 will still be a multi bid league and would probably add some CAA schools. If SLU doesn't get in they can go to the MVC and will be fine. If Creighton doesn't get in, they are still in the multi bid MVC. With the CAA schools and other solid, but lesser programs, the A-10 and the MVC will be able to offset the losses and still be solid. Instead of being the 5th - 10th best conference in a given year they will be the 7th -12th best conference.
To play devils advocate, should the prospective schools go to a league where they will be struggling to finish .500 in conference play or stay in a smaller pond and compete for auto bids year in and year out?
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Edrick let's say you built a prestigious law firm and decided to split off with 6 other partners and decided to engage other talent to join. And then you told that talent that they would be making 4-5x what they were currently making and they would be moving from the 12 floor middle office to the 20th floor corner office. Would that be a fair offer? From what I can see the C7 is doing all of the heavy lifting right now. In this scenario there may be some partners that are past their prime (Depaul, Prov, etc) and new associates who are primed to be Rainmakers (Butler, XU) but why should they be invited in at the same equity position? Now it should absolutely be graduated over a set period of time. In the long run it'll cause problems. Maybe unequal for the first 3-4 years then slowly leveled out. But for you to think at 1). This is a bad deal for a Creighton or a Dayton or SLU you are crazy. 2). That this is something new (see WVU joining Big 12 as an unequal member) and 3). That the negotiating is over for all parties. Before you freak out and stomp off wait and see what happens. This is a big boy conversation with hundreds of millions of dollars at stake, and hopefully all parties are bringing very competent negotiators with the business acumen to make the proper valuations of this particulars of this deal. No one's walking away from any table.
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