The Gampel-XL Center, Storrs-Hartford play-all-the-games on campus debate is completely overblown.
Being Connecticut's pro teams is an undeniable pillar of the success the basketball program has been able to build and sustain. Calhoun mentioned it often, Geno knows it. Hurley rarely starts or ends a conversation without mentioning how important this college basketball-crazy state is to him choosing to come here and what this program will be again under him.
There are countless examples in this thread, among our fan base and with key corporate sponsors of situations who go to Hartford regularly but could not make the same commitment to season tickets in Storrs. If you live in Fairfield County or really anywhere from New Haven south, you know, the fan base that allows us to turn the Garden into our home court every time we play there, a trip to Hartford is something you're willing to make a few times a year maybe. The drive to Storrs? Not so much. If you work anything that resembles a 9-5 in the greater Hartford area, XL Center season tickets are a realistic option. By the time you get home from work, drive up to Storrs, park, figure out food and get to the game and then return home and have to get up to go to work again the next morning, Gampel seasons are not.
There are also many season ticket holders in both facilities who would not be able to commit the time or money to 20 games in one venue, especially with the number of early-season no-name opponent games in a college basketball schedule, but have a very good solution by being able to either or it with Gampel/XL.
Corporate sponsors buying up key ticket blocks and putting money in the program are much more likely to do so when you can tell your employees and clients, "let's grab a bite and head down the street to watch UConn play tonight" than when it means "Hey, meet us in F Lot and we'll walk up to Gampel and grab a hot dog." This is college basketball, played on weeknights in January; not college football on fall Saturday afternoons. Distance from population base matters, a lot, and having something that is part college basketball mania and part professional sports experience is an incredible advantage for the program. If you want to know what it's like playing all of your games in a 10,000-seat arena out of practical driving distance for a large portion of your fan base, let me tell you about our mid-major neighbors to the north.
These are facts. These are undeniable decisions that our athletic office is very well aware of and why Hartford is such a crucial part of UConn's ceiling as a basketball power. If your personal situation differs from that, it does not make it any less true.
As an alum who attended games at Gampel and in Hartford for four years as a student, there is no doubt which is a better experience for students. It's on-campus games, and it's not even close. But hopping in a car the other way 7-8 times a year was not the end of the world. Maybe my UConn friends and I prioritized college hoops over studies a little more than most, but big game days in either spot were basically just spent counting down until time to go to the game in either spot and having a bar or two to pregame at never hurt.
And the discussion of our home-court advantage being so much greater at Gampel is simply not true. Some of the biggest wins in program history have come in Hartford and some of the worst losses have come in front of an on-campus crowd in Storrs. Unless you are comparing a November game against Maine or some mid-major in Hartford to a Big East matchup with Nova or another top-25 team at Gampel, the environment at both stadiums is awesome because of this simple truth: We're loud as hell and we have great fans everywhere we go. We tear the roof of Gampel. We tear the roof off the Civy. We tear the roof off of MSG. Hell, we tore the roof of The Rent when we were doing things on the football field.
There's a solution that solves for this — and it’s already in place. Split the game up. Play them in two venues. Give the students an unbelievable on-campus experience in a sold-out Gampel. Own the entire state when we pack every bar downtown and then beat the hell out of someone in Hartford while our boozed-up fans are screaming U-C-O-N-N at the top of their lungs.
And now that we're back in the Big East, one big issue that divided this even further the past few years is gone: The game inventory in both locations is so much better again. It's not non-conference game, Memphis and a pile of crap in one location and Cincy, SMU and a bunch of garbage in another location. It's big game after big game, everywhere. In 2021-22, we're all going to open up any split of tickets and it's going to be like Christmas Day with Nova, G-Town, Marquette, Seton Hall, Xavier and Co. coming to whichever venue you prefer.