I use a power wheelchair and have metal rods in my spine so a 45 min drive is very strenuous on me.What is that a 45 minute drive? CT. people are spoiled.
I can confirm that Allen Field House is primarily bleacher seats, with just about enough space for half of a human butt in 2020. It shakes quite a lot, and mostly, nobody in the upper half sits down during play. Result is that it's amazingly loud and a great place to see a game.
I am a big proponent of UConn in Hartford for games. That's the essence of what the Big East is -- city basketball. That was the theory. That college hoops can be a big city sport. That is different than what other conferences like the ACC do. They take place in college towns. This is why MSG is so awesome for the Big East tournament. Big CIty basketball.
I have been to 100s of games in my career. Gampel is insane when you want the college atmosphere and students. I love the XL sold out though. Rare atmosphere.
I think we are trying to be too like the ACC when we push gampel for everything. UConn isn't an ACC school and we should stop trying to be so focused on getting a Cameron Crazie atmosphere. UConn is more like Kentucky, Indiana, Louisville. Most of our fanbase didn't go to school there. There is a place for huge event-like games, and that is XL, IMHO. Kentucky plays off-campus. I know it is close, but Rupp Arena is an awesome venue downtown Lexington. Louisville isn't playing in Freedom Hall anymore. These aren't college arenas.
I've heard it said people in the Northeast don't support their universities financially as much as other regions support theirs for a couple reasons:
-Pro sports in the region draw a lot of attention and money;
-Taxes are high and should take care of everything, so why donate to the university.
It would be interesting to see a chart of donation levels prior to Big East membership, and whether there were rises and falls in donations with the rise of the basketball and football teams, the move to the AAC and then the move back to the Big East.
What you are stating is a Connecticut/Northeast thing. It's what I have stated many times on here, CT. people are spoiled when it comes to driving. It's a product of being in the Northeast where everything is close by. In the Midwest and South driving a few hours is no big deal, in CT. some people make a half hour drive sound like a major inconvenience. People in CT. talk about Storrs being in the middle of nowhere, sure it's rural but there are levels to this. Much of the rest of the country would consider it crazy to say Storrs is in the middle of nowhere when it's surrounded by millions of people.
Don't know. New pool in the rec center?
I post the graphic about once every six months, but if you read the master plan, that's where it originated.
If you're staying at the destination for a few days or more, a six hour drive is worth it. When my wife's brother worked at the Pentagon, we thought nothing of the drive to D.C. for a 3 day weekend. and when they moved to Pittsburgh, we turn the 9 hour drive into an adventure for our kids over the Thanksgiving holiday (not this year, but still...).I agree on that point. I have family in Minneapolis who don't skip a beat when they decide to drive 6 1/2 hours to Chicago for a 3-day weekend, a friend from Detroit who drives 5 hours each way to Indianapolis in 24 hours for his daughter's swim meet, and friend who drives his family from Denver to Jackson Hole, an 8 hour drive, a few items each winter because its their favorite place to ski.
You do not understand densely populated if you honestly think that. Turns out, 1, 5, 10, 20M population density super important for a given area, access to highways key as well.nope it’s not wrong. Storrs, despite its rural surroundings, is centrally located smack dab in the most densely populated part of the country. And if you’d bother to read my argument here, it’s based on the fact that I do not believe the fan base is lazier than those fan bases, just that one particular fan
And in most cases, private Universities like Harvard, Brown, Dartmouth, Yale, etc. had a 100 or so year head-start on the public flagship universities in the Northeast, including about 50 years of football.
Duh.that’s a good point that I didn’t consider.
UConn was founded in 1881 and didnt become “UConn” till 1940ish
In comparison other big public schools like UGA, UNC and UVA were all founded in the 18th century
Just to clarify, first, UConn is not a small, urban catholic college like Providence, Seton Hall, St. John's, Xavier, etc. UConn is a State Flagship university and most of those peer schools are not in urban locations. Each has unique needs and that is why the 'old' Big East failed and likely why UConn is not the best fit for this 'new' Big East over the long-term, though it is a better short-term home than the American.
Second, yes, Kentucky and Louisville play at city-owned (though one can argue that each respective University owns its city, just look at the deal U Louisville created for itself with the Yum center the shaft that the city got in return) while Indiana has its own arena. But, its 27 miles from Babbridge Library to the XL Center while its 2.2 miles from the Young Library to Rupp Arena in Lexington (Kentucky) and 2.2 miles from Ekstrom Library to the Yum Center in Louisville. That's 'on-campus' for all intent.
As for the AD, I agree with him. There are folks in Hartford who believe one of UConn's key missiosn is to say Hartford, whether it be keeping the XL afloat or getting more folks on the street of downtown Hartford (UConn Hartford campus). That is not the University's mission and pulls focus and money away from what UConn should really be working on.
Nah - they are looking for political crap to happen at the XL as a platform for the Hartford mayor to climb political stepsThe AD made the obvious point that UConn's best interests may not be aligned with what is best for Hartford. I expect the Hartford politicians will be in an uproar by the morning.
Do you really believe what you write?Nah - they are looking for political crap to happen at the XL as a platform for the Hartford mayor to climb political steps
This board is an alternate dimension.Do you really believe what you write?
The difference is, of course, that the NCAA makes money. The XL is losing millions every year even though it is subsidized by the state directly and indirectly through the UConn leases. The CDRA isn’t good at what it does.Chief
Somebody I’d going to have to own/run the place if it continues to operate. The City of Hartford owned it for its first 20 years or so. Now CRDA. No private company want it because arenas in midsize cities are very difficult to run in the black. CRDA is kind of like the NCAA. If you didn’t have it you would need something just like it.
Yeah, maybe but that is a different argument. What do you propose to run an arena that is outdated and in need of hundreds of millions in upgrades? Not really upgrades in many cases, more replacements for equipment and components that have reached poor exceeded their useful lives and modernization to make it attractive to new/modern users. And that is publicly owned btw? Add going on a year with zero activity thus effectively zero income. It is easy to bitch about CRDA but pretty difficult to think of how to replace it.The difference is, of course, that the NCAA makes money. The XL is losing millions every year even though it is subsidized by the state directly and indirectly through the UConn leases. The CDRA isn’t good at what it does.
Yeah, maybe but that is a different argument. What do you propose to run an arena that is outdated and in need of hundreds of millions in upgrades? Not really upgrades in many cases, more replacements for equipment and components that have reached poor exceeded their useful lives and modernization to make it attractive to new/modern users. And that is publicly owned btw? Add going on a year with zero activity thus effectively zero income. It is easy to bitch about CRDA but pretty difficult to think of how to replace it.
It is kind of like the NCAA if it’s main source of income was revenues from Division 3 cross country championships rather than The D1 basketball tourney.
I agree with most of this and fundamentally it is what undergirds my dislike of the decision to rejoin the Big East. UConn might or might not be like an ACC. School, though I would argue that it is pretty Similar to NC State, Maryland ( I know they aren’t in the ACC anymore but where for many years), Pitt, Florida State. And in many ways we are closer in philosophy to UNC, Virginia and the rest. I dont know if John Silver has ever been to Storrs (joking John) but it isn’t Big City for sure. And that gets to the point. If you look for UConn’s peer institutions it is not the Big East. Those are largely urban, Catholic mid sized schools with modest graduate programs. Georgetown is 5he lone exception I think. UConn is a major flagship university which focuses on research and graduate studies. It has a medical school, a law school, several other professional graduate schools as well as significantly, major Doctoral programs. As a result the university has a significantly different worldview from the St Johns and Providences of the world.Just to clarify, first, UConn is not a small, urban catholic college like Providence, Seton Hall, St. John's, Xavier, etc. UConn is a State Flagship university and most of those peer schools are not in urban locations. Each has unique needs and that is why the 'old' Big East failed and likely why UConn is not the best fit for this 'new' Big East over the long-term, though it is a better short-term home than the American.
Second, yes, Kentucky and Louisville play at city-owned (though one can argue that each respective University owns its city, just look at the deal U Louisville created for itself with the Yum center the shaft that the city got in return) while Indiana has its own arena. But, its 27 miles from Babbridge Library to the XL Center while its 2.2 miles from the Young Library to Rupp Arena in Lexington (Kentucky) and 2.2 miles from Ekstrom Library to the Yum Center in Louisville. That's 'on-campus' for all intent.
As for the AD, I agree with him. There are folks in Hartford who believe one of UConn's key missiosn is to say Hartford, whether it be keeping the XL afloat or getting more folks on the street of downtown Hartford (UConn Hartford campus). That is not the University's mission and pulls focus and money away from what UConn should really be working on.
What do you propose to run an arena that is outdated and in need of hundreds of millions in upgrades?
I had many a good memory as a kid at Whalers games. In fact, I should go look for whalers tee right now.The Whalers leaving Harford was the beginning of the end for the Civic Center/XL Center. It was a sad and short-sited decision by people that did not understand what professional Hockey does for a city.
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Was it vsTemple on a Wednesday at 9 pm? That may be whyWhy don't they go to Gampel then? I went to a game there last year when the team was playing great and the place was half empty. So was the student section.
I like this idea. It also helps make XL games more of an “event” so to speak which UConn fans love to show out for (MSG, Fenway, Yankee Stadium,etc)I do not mind the extra drive time out to Gampel for one second. I prefer Gampel 99% of the time, but with that said, I don't hate the XL. One solution that kind of meets in the middle is to just have less games in Hartford. Play all the games during winter break at the XL Center like you already do, and maybe two conference games per year. That would be about 6-7 games in Hartford instead of the 10 or 11 like it is now.
Or versus USF on a Sunday afternoon with no FB.Was it vsTemple on a Wednesday at 9 pm? That may be why