And almost won![]()
But that's a different argument for a different thread! 
I could have agreed with you had the ACC taken a strategic approach to realignment. They didn't. They bounced from opportunity to opportunity like a kid running the aisles of Toys R Us. Had the ACC expanded right up the Atlantic coast with Rutgers, UConn, and BC as a first move in 2003 they would have created a solid base on which to build. They would have had the population of the northeast megalopolis to challenge the SEC in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. They would have captured the strategic schools in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts to prevent the Big Ten from expanding eastward. Who knows, maybe even Penn State could have been lured away from the mid-west.
The idea that UConn was ignored because we would always be available was ludicrously short-sighted. You know who was always going to be there? Miami, that's who. Syracuse, that's who. The thing that scares me about the ACC is they lack vision, they lack leadership, and they will likely fail to be anything more than an afterthought.
)) matchups at the Garden. F Syracuse. They can continue to schedule their annual matchups with Niagara and Conisius.Is that a question? We can have the same goal regardless of whatever conference we are in. One would think reaching an attendance goal would be easier by bringing schools that have more fans and draw more interest in general.Sets a goal we can hope to match in a decade?
ND company line... hook, line, and sinker.
Whatever suits ND at the moment. "We're no longer playing Michigan because it no longer suits us."
I don't know if it matters who did and didn't have the vision, the fact is that the conference as a whole didn't have enough votes to share his vision and chose by some amount of majority rules to go in a different direction. It hurts being spurned and that's where we're at. It's why the ACC gets our venom and the B1G our affection. But, we're not stupid so we're going home with whoever we can when the lights click on at 2 am (or whatever your bar closing time is).Swofford had the vision, but, he was undermined. That is not his fault.
You might want to look up the number of games and learn why the helmet copiers (??) not only stopped playing us in the past, but also led the attempts to keep everybody in the Big Ten from playing us...
With all due respect Irish fan, I think 9 out of 10 UCONN fans are incredibly bitter with the ACC and some of its leaders/fanbases and would prefer a B1G invite over an ACC invite. We've been told all the reasons for why we've been passed over time and time and time again and all of them are changed to better fit the PR campaign on why one particular school is so much better than UCONN (or anyone else). That's not to say we wouldn't be thrilled to get out of the AAC, but watching all of these things unfold the way they have over the past few years, it's really a tough sell to get a UCONN fan to trust anything that comes out of the ACC camp. We've heard all of the reasons why UCONN and the ACC don't fit that, you know what?, we've come to believe it and, instead, prefer to align our academics and athletics with a more stable conference with members who are like us - large, public state universities with excellent academic and athletic reputations.
Like it or not, BC did have everything to do with UCONN being snubbed repeatedly. Their former AD said so. And if they didn't block us intentionally (Pitt), they certainly didn't help us out at all when the southern football schools were campaigning for Louisville Community College. "We don't want another northeast program like BC in our league, so we'll take Louisville because they've won a few games recently." Tell me, why haven't the B12 or PAC12 offered Boise State? They have the same recent wave of BCS games that Louisville has had and have carried over their success over a few decades now. The reason: academics. Granted, academics isn't the first priority in CR but it certainly shouldn't be ignored either. If the ACC is willing to lower its academic standards so low to invite a commuter school with a ridiculous acceptance rate (and embarrassingly low profile) just because "they've won a few football games in recent years", what does that signal to people outside of the conference? It reeks of desperation. I'm not saying that LCC shouldn't have gotten their ticket punched at some point, but it should have definitely come well after UCONN even if it meant that Louisville went to the B12. Athletics are cyclical, academics is long-term. And because we are talking about collegiate athletics, that should mean something. It wasn't too long ago that LCC had their own Steve Kragthorpe era similar to our Paul Pasqualoni era, complete with dwindling attendance and losing records in the Big East. And with the incredibly unreliable Bobby Petrino at the helm, a guy who could be arrested or wander off in some sort of drunken haze to chase some UK tail at any moment, their football stability is now in question. Again, desperation.
Meanwhile, while Louisville reminded everyone of the risk that comes with having them as a full member with hiring Bobby Petrino, UCONN made the hire of the offseason in Bob Diaco. I know you're familiar with him and can share the optimism that UCONN fans feel surrounding our football program. Again, sports are cyclical. Our football program seems to be entering an upswing now that we have the proper coaching staff in place to take advantage of what UCONN has to offer its student athletes. It won't be long before football is competitive again the way it was before Jeff Hathaway (good riddance!) made the mistake of the century in hiring Pasqualoni.
I understand your points about regional rivalries. Believe me, UCONN was more than delighted to be in the former Big East with our regional rivals. But those days are over and those same regional rivals who are in the ACC have done nothing but stab us in the back in an attempt to leapfrog us in the northeast pecking order. Regional rivalries can also be developed in the B1G in Penn State and Rutgers over time. And any UCONN basketball would have juice at MSG, not just UNC, ND, or the Fruit. Michigan State and UCONN sure had a lot of electricity a few weeks ago, eh?
Again, UCONN fans would just be happy to get out of the AAC. But now it appears obvious to anyone with a pair of eyes and ears and an interest in college sports that the negative perception about UCONN was/is flat-out wrong. UCONN basketball is NOT dead after the APR nonsense and Calhoun's retirement. UCONN will NOT always employ Paul Pasqualoni and be happy with 3 win seasons. UCONN fans WILL pack Madison Square Garden to give our team a tremendous home court advantage (and pay top dollar for the privilege). UCONN DOES have tremendous support in New York City.
The ACC has had ample amount of opportunity to add UCONN. And what you said earlier about sitting at 15 so a partner isn't needed to add UCONN only strengthens the point: the ACC and UCONN are not a good fit for each other. If they were, we'd be in the ACC already.
First off, you people are weird. An ND fan posts something entirely favorable to UConn and you spend two pages arguing with him about it. Lighten --- up.
That said, UConn should and will jump on the first P5 invitation that floats their way. I don't care if it's the PAC 12.
Fielding Yost lived and acted to try to have the Big Ten boycott ND.I'll leave it to you to learn some history. You have obviously completely bought in to the version being spewed from South Bend.
Regardless, Domers generally want to point to (revised) history to justify their present and future instead of just playing it out on the field.
I've always liked Tobacco Road and Virginia and know that UCONN has always had support from TR (and Virginia) at every CR meeting. If UCONN does go to the B1G and not the ACC, I would love nothing more than to partner up with any Tobacco Road school in annual basketball or football (or both) series. UNC/Duke/Virginia vs UCONN at the Garden in December before conference play begins would be fun to watch. Good tuneups for both teams after their sleepy December schedule wraps up and we're about to embark on conference play. Or agree to play our ACC vs B1G)) matchups at the Garden. F Syracuse. They can continue to schedule their annual matchups with Niagara and Conisius.
Who says UConn cannot have the ACC?
You seem to think that UConn's very late arrival to the party of D1 football did not mean major obstacles. That late starting point for the sport that drives the bus of all conference realignment means that once UConn was looking, it was in a line that had formed when it was playing 1AA football. Even Louisville was D1 back when Johnny U played for the Cards.
UConn started too late to be near the top of the list anytime before maybe 4 years ago. And the 3 ACC additions in that time all make sense, in the order they were taken, considering football as the number 1 factor. Syracuse and Pitt both have a Heisman winner and multiple Hall of Famers. Louisville has Johnny U and 2 BCS bowl wins over the past decade. UConn football moved up far too late in the game to better any of those.
I'd like to hope that UVA can keep its men's team competitive like it was this season going forward to make a matchup with UConn worth watching. We've had some teams in the recent past that wouldn't make for interesting games with UConn. Watching a UConn men's team blow out UVA wouldn't be all that fun. We almost had a UConn-UVA game at the Garden this year in the NCAA, but UVA missed a couple too many shots down the stretch against Michigan State.
The logic of this post escapes me. You start off by saying, "Who says UConn cannot have the ACC?", and then immediately proceed to give one argument for why UConn can't have the ACC? Your initial statement suggests you think that UConn could be part of the ACC, but the entire rest of your post is dedicated to rejecting that notion. Quite odd.
Didn't want to post from my phone as it capitalizes every word no matter the browser, and that sheet is annoying, but my feelings exactly. If the ACC invited us tomorrow, we'd accept yesterday. I'd love BBall games against Duke, UNC, Syracuse, Pitt and UVA. FB against Miami, Clemson, BC, FSU.First off, you people are weird. An ND fan posts something entirely favorable to UConn and you spend two pages arguing with him about it. Lighten --- up.
That said, UConn should and will jump on the first P5 invitation that floats their way. I don't care if it's the PAC 12.
Here's a tip for visiting fans...
Do not pretend that you understand the timing or the process of our transition to DIA football.
You don't and you look silly pretending that you do.
We actually had a home and home series with Virginia 15-18 years ago - they stick in my memory simply because the games were so one-sided.
Not that I expected a championship, but the two teams in our region that I really didn't want to see UConn play were St. Joe's and Virginia. I never entirely bought into Michigan State and was a little surprised that they got past UVa.
No, it is an explanation for why UConn is not now in the ACC. There are valid reasons, all football related, that UConn has not already been invited into the ACC. UConn fans need to face those reasons. Your AD certainly has too, because neither the ACC nor the BUG will make an offer, ever, if your AD remains bitter and refuses to see how UConn failed to do what it should have early enough to position itself for realignment.
My guess is that your AD has already done that.
Do you live in the real world with real people? They are quite capable of acting under the covers to ruin plans to get what they want.Of course, UConn would absolutely take an ACC offer if one came (and the Big 10 wasn't willing to counter). That doesn't mean it wouldn't make me happy beyond measure to see the Big 10 make a play thereby cutting off the ACC's northern tier (BC, Syracuse and Pitt) into isolated outposts that truly show how misguided their expansion moves have been.
As for Swofford having UConn (with the support of the league's old guard) in his vision only to be over-ruled by power plays from a few schools, if true that just confirms that the league's realignment "strategy" has been driven by politics and short-term considerations (i.e. panic and desperation) rather than a real plan.
Ummm..they are in a P5 and we are not;In what way is Rutgers football now better than UConn football?
Are you certain you are not a WVU fan?Warde Manuel has gone back and created an artificial football history for UConn in the 50s, 60s and 70s? I'll bet we have a few fake Heisman winners mixed in their too. The old timers remember when they built the first ever dome over Memorial Stadium and expanded capacity to 60,000. Those were the days.
You keep saying that UConn's lack of history is the problem that UConn must address (How precisely does one address a lack of history short of waiting another 30 years?) but that is apparently no longer the case because we are now apparently perfect for the ACC. Was it the history making wins in the last three games of the 2013 season that changed things?
Lastly, I loved learning about the wrongs Michigan did to ND in the early to mid 20th century.....and I thought BC really knew how to hold a grudge for a long time. They are amateurs compared to ND.