Officially Official | Page 5 | The Boneyard

Officially Official

More accurately the cheating whores finally reconciling with the last standing member of the Original Big East.

Basically, we are Hodor. We allowed the rest of them to escape and got killed for it.
Cheating whores? Last standing member of the Orginal Big East?

What???
 
For the Harvard of central Connecticut? Millions. Get the over yourself.
He thinks UConn is in the same league academically with Georgetown and Villanova. Nothing wrong with UConn but John is a bit delusional.
 
I'm impressed with all the smack talking considering we've been a joke of a basketball program the last 3 years or so.
Perhaps we can hold some of our artillery for when Hurley really turns this around (which he will in short order)
 
Let’s hope our strong b-ball programs can help with our football scheduling. Great move for b-ball and I’m excited for that. Overall, I think in 20 years we might look back at this as one of the worst decisions ever made by UConn, but only time will tell if this was a good or bad move.
As opposed to what? Our mens team and football team have been a poop show the last few years with no sign of improvement until Dan Hurley got here and his success isnt guaranteed. The football program is a lost case.
 
We’re going home boys... We’re going home.
Yeah but it sure don't look as nice as the home we left years ago
Looks like only the garage is left from the mansion
 
.-.
Ed Daigneault @EdDaigneault 1 hour ago
Despite being married to a lawyer, I'm not fluent in legalese, but I think the UConn-Big East deal states the withdrawal fee is $30 million from acceptance thru year 6 ...

Ed Daigneault @EdDaigneault 1 hour ago
$15 million from year 7 thru year 9 and $10 million after the start of year 10 of membership.
Who cares?
It's only hostage money
It's the NBE!!!!!
Whoever agreed to this is insane, better basketball or not
Hopefully not a grad from UConn Business School, if so, I'm digging up all the bricks my family donated
Scary stuff
 
Not likely to be an afterthought for some time. More a not my kid is going to play which will greatly reduce the pool of players. The majority of parents who refuse to allow their own will have no problem watching someone else’s kid get his body destroyed. There will be enough desperate families who want the golden goose as well as regions of the country that consider it badge of manhood to ignore the consequences football has on the body to continue football for quite some time. It just might not be the number one sport.
My mother was way ahead of her time on this. She was born and raised in Ansonia. My godfather's son played at AHS and in college, has been a long time coach there and was, for a time, the head coach. My older sisters went to AHS. We went to nearly all the games and were big fans. In 8th grade, my father was approached by the then head coach asking if I was going to play football for him the following year. He said no because my mother refused to allow it. Why? She worked in an ER in Bridgeport and saw the injuries come in. My son was probably perfect for football as a corner or a receiver. I refused to allow him to play. We are not alone. But, yeah, down south it is going to take much longer for people to come to their senses. It won't happen in our lifetime but it will happen.
 
He thinks UConn is in the same league academically with Georgetown and Villanova. Nothing wrong with UConn but John is a bit delusional.

Behind Georgetown, sure, but not Nova really. Villanova was never any great shakes back in the day. Their rise in the USNWR rankings is fairly recent. Admissions to Nova are about similar to UConn. Factor in graduate research stuff and it’s a wash.
 
.-.
My understanding is that they originally wanted to form a league with members all on the same page, so not football playing schools.
I believe the phrase that was used was "Like Minded Schools"
 
Any chance this is being used as leverage to get an invite to a P5 conference? Likely get laughed at, but who knows?
 
Expensive leverage gambit then.

$30 million if UConn backs out or goes elsewhere for next ten years.

No...I'd say it was more giving up on the dream of a P5 invite.
 
$30M isn't stopping UConn from accepting a P5 bid. West Virginia paid $20M 6 years ago. Par for the course.

Not like a P5 bid is ever coming, but it wouldn't stop them if it did.

No...But if, like the poster wondered, "Any chance this is being used as leverage to get an invite to a P5 conference? "

My comment is still the same...expensive gambit...pay exit fees to two conferences ($40 million), buy in fee, and it is a $43 million expense...

As leverage for a P5 invite?

Hell no...tired of treading water, waiting on a boat that may never come, UConn swam back to shore.
 
No...But if, like the poster wondered, "Any chance this is being used as leverage to get an invite to a P5 conference? "

My comment is still the same...expensive gambit...pay exit fees to two conferences ($40 million), buy in fee, and it is a $43 million expense...

As leverage for a P5 invite?

Hell no...tired of treading water, waiting on a boat that may never come, UConn swam back to shore.

True enough ... the move is just improving UConn's position, it's not a precursor to a P5 move. But there is a chance that it could showcase UConn's value better than the AAC. UConn's value to a P5 conference depends on the value of its market as demonstrated by statewide and regional fan support and revenue generated from it. Having independent football that airs on a regional network (SNY) and getting significant revenue and support via cable playing regional opponents from the northeast is better for UConn than trying to compete on the field as a national team with the likes of USF/UCF/Houston/SMU. The AAC's whole strategy is designed for the benefit of aspirational football powers located in good recruiting grounds like USF/UCF. It was a misfit.
 
Last edited:
.-.
It’s
Expensive leverage gambit then.

$30 million if UConn backs out or goes elsewhere for next ten years.

No...I'd say it was more giving up on the dream of a P5 invite.
It’s 6 years and not 10 for 30 million. It drops to 15 million in years 7-10.
 
UConn won't pay any stinkin' $10M fee.
Will claim the conf is guilty of NCAA infractions and that's why cutting ties.
 
Behind Georgetown, sure, but not Nova really. Villanova was never any great shakes back in the day. Their rise in the USNWR rankings is fairly recent. Admissions to Nova are about similar to UConn. Factor in graduate research stuff and it’s a wash.
Average SAT scores:
UConn: 1250
Villanova: 1345
 
.-.

Forum statistics

Threads
168,326
Messages
4,564,180
Members
10,462
Latest member
Liam Rainst


Top Bottom