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Hawk,
Let's not overstate the academics of the old Big East. I mean St Johns, Seton Hall? when the league was founded BC was essentially a mid-level school that attracted a student body that was mostly Catholic and largely from the New England region even more concentrated in Boston area. UCONN was a solid mid-level public university, Villanova was BC for the middle Atlantic, and Providence, Setron hall and St Johns were commuter schools for their local ares mostly. Only Georgetwon and to a degree Syracuse had anything like National reputations. That a number of the schools made major efforts to improve their academic standing (BC, Connecticut, Villanova) or benefitted indirectly from the efforts of others (PC became the alternative for better Catholic students when BC and non-big East member Holy Cross expanded their recruiting nationally for example) is an interesting sidelight, but St Johns remains largely a commuter school and Seton Hall accepts students who couldn't get into most of the better Big East schools if they donated a building. The Big East was founded as a basketball league among a group of northeastern schools that played pretty good basketball, in response to changes in the way teams were selected for the NCAA tournement. Nothing more. Academics had nothing to do with it. As for Louisville and Cincinatti, both have major law schools, well regarded medical schools, graduate programs that are highly respected, Cincy has a very well repected school of Fine Arts and is considered a Research 1 university by the Carnegie Foundation. Only Georgetown among the Catholic schools can touch Cincicnatti's overall academic status. Louisville probably isn't as good, but it is still a major public uniersity with a breadth that Seton Hall doesn't come close to meeting.
Let's not overstate the academics of the old Big East. I mean St Johns, Seton Hall? when the league was founded BC was essentially a mid-level school that attracted a student body that was mostly Catholic and largely from the New England region even more concentrated in Boston area. UCONN was a solid mid-level public university, Villanova was BC for the middle Atlantic, and Providence, Setron hall and St Johns were commuter schools for their local ares mostly. Only Georgetwon and to a degree Syracuse had anything like National reputations. That a number of the schools made major efforts to improve their academic standing (BC, Connecticut, Villanova) or benefitted indirectly from the efforts of others (PC became the alternative for better Catholic students when BC and non-big East member Holy Cross expanded their recruiting nationally for example) is an interesting sidelight, but St Johns remains largely a commuter school and Seton Hall accepts students who couldn't get into most of the better Big East schools if they donated a building. The Big East was founded as a basketball league among a group of northeastern schools that played pretty good basketball, in response to changes in the way teams were selected for the NCAA tournement. Nothing more. Academics had nothing to do with it. As for Louisville and Cincinatti, both have major law schools, well regarded medical schools, graduate programs that are highly respected, Cincy has a very well repected school of Fine Arts and is considered a Research 1 university by the Carnegie Foundation. Only Georgetown among the Catholic schools can touch Cincicnatti's overall academic status. Louisville probably isn't as good, but it is still a major public uniersity with a breadth that Seton Hall doesn't come close to meeting.