This ^^We really need to stop looking at any trend analysis prior to NIL & Portal maturity. I don't get why anyone completely ignores this referring to times prior to. The sport has changed more in the last 3 years than it did in the prior 25.
This ^^We really need to stop looking at any trend analysis prior to NIL & Portal maturity. I don't get why anyone completely ignores this referring to times prior to. The sport has changed more in the last 3 years than it did in the prior 25.
Georgetown is a very unique situation. It is a small, private university with an alumni base that for the most part was not local prior to attending and doesn't remain local after graduation.Please stop with Georgetown. Georgetown averages less than 6,000 for home attendance. Just because Georgetown was a national powerhouse 40 years ago means nothing today. Creighton and Marquette have a much better chance to succeed since they actually have fans that care about the program.
St John’s getting an Elite 8 run! ROLF😂Not only that but St. John's is talented. If they put it together and get a #6 seed, an Elite 8 run with the right matchups is very realistic.
Great analysis. What’s more, they don’t really care. Georgetown’s administration is far more concerned with keeping Nobel prize winners and potential Supreme Court nominees and international affairs advisors happy than they are with keeping their basketball coach happy. It has been so long since they were a relevant program that alumni under 50 don’t care either.Georgetown is a very unique situation. It is a small, private university with an alumni base that for the most part was not local prior to attending and doesn't remain local after graduation.
Their city (DC) largely is people from different parts of the country (politicians and their staffs) who often aren't residents for extended periods.
Their ability to draw came from being a fad, a cool, unapologetic, anti-establishment program in the 1980's. The only way they can draw crowds that would fill an NBA arena (where they would prefer to play all home games) would be by being very successful and having an image that's few could replicate. Being successful but boring might not be enough. Being unsuccessful and inept is a recipe for failure.
Sure - but finding great coaches this day and age isn't that easy. Marquette has a name, but I wouldn't call it destination.Institutions matter. I'm not worried about Marquette's down year. The administration is all-in for men's basketball, there's a history of success, the athletic department resources are there, the fan base is stout, and NIL should be okay.
Shaka will adapt or MU will find another coach. They may not be Final Four or Elite 8 quality, but they should be tournament worthy 7 out of 10 years.
We really need to stop looking at any trend analysis prior to NIL & Portal maturity. I don't get why anyone completely ignores this referring to times prior to. The sport has changed more in the last 3 years than it did in the prior 25.
They have a composite 5 star, top 20 recruit lined up for next year and had a first round draft pick this past season, talent isn’t an issue. This isn’t a historical analysis, they literally have a path to succeed right now.Please stop with Georgetown. Georgetown averages less than 6,000 for home attendance. Just because Georgetown was a national powerhouse 40 years ago means nothing today. Creighton and Marquette have a much better chance to succeed since they actually have fans that care about the program.
There isn’t any other data or “trends” to look at. According to you NIL settled last season. What tournament “trends” do you have?We really need to stop looking at any trend analysis prior to NIL & Portal maturity. I don't get why anyone completely ignores this referring to times prior to. The sport has changed more in the last 3 years than it did in the prior 25.
Here is what I think - the most recent and very extreme chalk tourney of last season will be more the trend than prior years. I think in most years we are going to see an elite 8 made up primarily of seeds 1-3.There isn’t any other data or “trends” to look at. According to you NIL settled last season. What tournament “trends” do you have?
So because it happened last year it’s going to happen every year going forward. That seems like sound logic. Because that’s exactly how sports works.Here is what I think - the most recent and very extreme chalk tourney of last season will be more the trend than prior years. I think in most years we are going to see an elite 8 made up primary of seeds 1-3.
I just answered above. How is it any different than MLB where franchises with most $ and clout get the best players and win?So because it happened last year it’s going to happen every year going forward. That seems like sound logic. Because that’s exactly how sports works.
🤦♂️🤦♂️
Okay so this is all just what you “think”. So can you stop appealing to trends and data? Because there are none for the NCAA tournament that yet support what you think will happen.Here is what I think - the most recent and very extreme chalk tourney of last season will be more the trend than prior years. I think in most years we are going to see an elite 8 made up primarily of seeds 1-3.
Top teams will talent load and create super teams that separate using the current system.
They will on average be:
Duke
UNC
Ville
UConn
Purdue
Michigan
MSU
Kansas
Arizona
Houston
Florida
Arkansas
Kentucky
UCLA
Indiana
Gonzaga
These teams will front load.
I'm saying old trends/data don't matter, at all. I didn't say there was a lot of trend beyond the most recent season to indicate it's going to happen again. Macro economics would suggest it will lean much harder in that direction - while it won't be that chalk, I'm expecting it to be pretty chalky year over year with much fewer cinderella mid majors. Last year was a REALLY extreme chalk tournament. Those things don't happen without cause.Okay so this is all just what you “think”. So can you stop appealing to trends and data? Because there are none for the NCAA tournament that yet support what you think will happen.
Ok you’re right. So let’s just skip the regular season and the 68 team bracket and go straight to the Sweet 16 with all the blue bloods.I just answered above. How is it any different than MLB where franchises with most $ and clout get the best players and win?
There is a consolidation of top talent happening across programs that invest in hoops. There is def more possibilities given 5 man game and some other outliers, but it’s very easy to identify players these days with analytics.
Yup…,so that’s how it will be EVERY YEAR from now on.I'm saying old trends/data don't matter, at all. I didn't say there was a lot of trend beyond the most recent season to indicate it's going to happen again. Macro economics would suggest it will lean much harder in that direction - while it won't be that chalk, I'm expecting it to be pretty chalky year over year with much fewer cinderella mid majors. Last year was a REALLY extreme chalk tournament. Those things don't happen without cause.
You had ONE cinderella MM and an Elite 8 made up of 4 one's and 3 two's.
This year I'd be really suprised if the Elite 8 is not made up of the top 14-15 KP teams. There is a severe drop off.
Here is what I think - the most recent and very extreme chalk tourney of last season will be more the trend than prior years. I think in most years we are going to see an elite 8 made up primarily of seeds 1-3.
Top teams will talent load and create super teams that separate using the current system.
They will on average be:
Duke
UNC
Ville
UConn
Purdue
Michigan
MSU
Kansas
Arizona
Houston
Florida
Arkansas
Kentucky
UCLA
Indiana
Gonzaga
These teams will front load.
Yeah I laughed at that, the MLB has had 9 winners in the last 12 years, and another 7 that lost in the World Series. Not exactly a lack of parityOk you’re right. So let’s just skip the regular season and the 68 team bracket and go straight to the Sweet 16 with all the blue bloods.
Besides you, I don’t think that would make anyone happy.
And Dodgers and Yankees in the World Series every year. Just like this year….,oh, wait
Stupid factsYeah I laughed at that, the MLB has had 9 winners in the last 12 years, and another 7 that lost in the World Series. Not exactly a lack of parity
How many small market teams are winning the WS these days? Let's see what happens. The sport, like football, is consolidating talent at the top. It's looking more and more professional in nature.Yeah I laughed at that, the MLB has had 9 winners in the last 12 years, and another 7 that lost in the World Series. Not exactly a lack of parity
How many small market teams are winning the WS these days? Let's see what happens. The sport, like football, is consolidating talent at the top. It's looking more and more professional in nature.
I thought when you said compete you meant only the new super conference setup. I’d agree with you there. In fact I’d say that it may be less that that. I get what you’re saying.You keep trying to have it both ways in this argument.
On one hand, you argue that basketball power is being consolidated to a handful of schools, but when I pointed out that football power is being consolidated to 5-10 programs, you claimed that every P4 had a shot to compete. Huh?
Football is a sport that has historically been dominated by a small number of programs, even before House, It has always been a very expensive sport to run because of the large number of players and coaches, and the fact that in some parts of the country it is much more popular than basketball, so big programs will pay big money to compete in it. With House, the gap is insane, within the P4. When schools like Alabama, Texas and Ohio State are unloading massive dollars into their programs directly and through NIL, how are schools like Mississippi State and Minnesota supposed to compete? The answer is, they aren’t.
College basketball has always been more fragmented because it doesn’t take as many players to win, among other reasons such as skill is more important than pure physical superiority in basketball so talent evaluation is more difficult among the sub superstar players. Also, basketball has historically been more popular in urban areas. Is it really financially worth it for rural state schools in less economically advantaged states to compete when their own fan bases don’t care and their are more claims on their spending because of House? Can a city school in a place like New York City or even Omaha extend its fan and booster base beyond its alumni? It sure appears so, but we will find out.
One development that is unarguable is that many of the P4 programs appear to be willing to settle for less in both basketball and football, in some cases a lot less.
Yet your argument seems to be that Big East bad, literally everyone else good. None of the big trends seem to matter, just conference affiliation.
Doubt it - football will be bigger than ever simply consolidated into areas/cultures that it thrives in, while the rest of the country watches.I give college sports less than a 50% chance to survive as a major sport/entertainment choice 10 years from now, for the reasons discussed in this thread.
My advice is to enjoy the present and not worry too much about the future.