...here's my plea to the new shareholders of this conference: keep it at 10 teams. Keep the round-robin, 18-game schedule in tact and let us have a pure basketball league built on a decad. It's rare, it's beautiful. The Big East powers-that-be say they wanted a new league that was basketball-oriented. Prove it by sticking with 10 teams from here on out.
marquette wrote:I couldn't be happier with Denver Lacrosse, but they have historically been conference jumpers
gmoser1210 wrote:Personally, I'd rather have it stay at 10 schools. I'd rather play Georgetown twice each year than give up a game against them to play Dayton, Richmond, or SLU.
marquette wrote:Poor writing aside, I don't think a 10 team round-robin makes the league somehow more legitimate in basketball. We do have a good lineup of schools, and we could operate as we are with some associates indefinitely. I think expanding helps us stabilize our non-revs in case some associate members decide to jump ship (I couldn't be happier with Denver Lacrosse, but they have historically been conference jumpers). It also helps us keep up, as far as NCAA bids are concerned, with the other top 5 conferences. This is going to be important in the long run if we want to maintain prestige/success.
gmoser1210 wrote:Personally, I'd rather have it stay at 10 schools. I'd rather play Georgetown twice each year than give up a game against them to play Dayton, Richmond, or SLU.
BillEsq wrote:To put it simply 10 teams gives you a round robin. with an average or 3-4 teams in the tournament with maybe 5 for an exceptional year. having only two teams going to the tourney would not be uncommon and in a disastrous year you'd be looking at what the PAC did in 09-08 and hoping that the powers that be grant you an extra team out of pity.
BillEsq wrote:I have to agree i've long wondered about where the 10 team round robin comes into play as what makes a conference a basketball conference. The Big East started at 8. The only current conferences operating at 10 are the Atlantic Sun, Big 12, Big West, and Southland, (although i think the Southland is up to 12 now). Historically 10 was a football number as it allowed one game per opponent with 2 buy games.
Even if there is some historical precedent that i am not aware of, modern sports is dominated by TV and leagues are usually set up according to TV demands, or a weekend and a weekday game. A 10 game conference makes for an odd conference schedule that leaves holes that have to be filled with RPI anchors out of the Southland Conference. The only exception to this rule is the current big 12 which we all know is a transitional number that was created by realignment and that they will be at 12 soon enough.
yorost wrote:BillEsq wrote:To put it simply 10 teams gives you a round robin. with an average or 3-4 teams in the tournament with maybe 5 for an exceptional year. having only two teams going to the tourney would not be uncommon and in a disastrous year you'd be looking at what the PAC did in 09-08 and hoping that the powers that be grant you an extra team out of pity.
That's nudging things to the pessimistic side regarding 10. More teams of similar quality is a statistical boost, not a necessary component to landing bids.
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