Our fanbase is full of spoiled frontrunners. Fairweather fans to the extreme. How is anyone arguing to the contrary?
But there are enough people to fill a Double A ballpark every night? It seems like the people going to that are younger and fun! The Yard Goats market and brand very well. UConn...not so much.
Lol well I think the only real counter argument is that all fanbases are like that and that this isn’t an issue unique to UConn
To this extent? It’s wholly unique.
1. Novelty factor is still high
2. The attendance numbers are more inflated than tires on a monster truck
3. For profit business that employes private sector employees
4. The facility is light years better
5. Less competition on stuff to do especially youth sports
6. Centrally located in and out
7. Nobody cares who wins so you just leave when you get bored.
8. Perceived as family friendly and more affordable
9. People like to be outside in nice weather
The Rent had a novelty period too. So did New Britain Stadium.
I only mentioned DC because I was rubbing shoulders with alumni bases from all over.
Don’t even get me started on my experiences since moving to Atlanta. Most SEC fanbases take an almost bizarre pride in not caring about basketball.
At UGA - in all seriousness - the basketball program might be lower on the totem poll than the gymnastics and baseball programs.
For football? Maybe. What’s really unique is that we’re a large flagship state school that focuses on basketball.
If you think our basketball fanbase is uniquely “bad” than, buddy, you need to get out of Tolland County more.
The basketball fanbase only exists in the first place because of miraculous postseason runs. HuskyMania and the subsequent growth of the program is tied directly to a program that competed at the most elite level of the entire sport. That is the only thing that drew people in, not history or tradition or intrinsic connection to the university.
Look at the shift in “fan” enthusiasm once the NBE move was made and you’ll understand.
1. Novelty factor is still high
2. The attendance numbers are more inflated than tires on a monster truck
3. For profit business that employes private sector employees
4. The facility is light years better
5. Less competition on stuff to do especially youth sports
6. Centrally located in and out
7. Nobody cares who wins so you just leave when you get bored.
8. Perceived as family friendly and more affordable
9. People like to be outside in nice weather
The Rent had a novelty period too. So did New Britain Stadium.
Look, of course that is true but that isn’t unique to UConn in any way. Every team with a large fanbase can tie that fanbases growth to a specific event or “miraculous post season run”
It's only holds 6,000. If Rentschler sat 10,000 at the FBS level, it'd be packed.Right but it still shows a level of fan commitment and engagement that they’re able to draw every night
The basketball fanbase only exists in the first place because of miraculous postseason runs. HuskyMania and the subsequent growth of the program is tied directly to a program that competed at the most elite level of the entire sport. That is the only thing that drew people in, not history or tradition or intrinsic connection to the university.
Look at the shift in “fan” enthusiasm once the NBE move was made and you’ll understand.
Look, of course that is true but that isn’t unique to UConn in any way. Every team with a large fanbase can tie that fanbases growth to a specific event or “miraculous post season run”
Or those teams with large fan bases had big-time athletic departments and basketball programs from the start, rather than competing against mainly America East schools for most of the 20th century.
The Tobacco Road schools were football schools until some guy decided to broadcast the 1957 national championship between UNC and WILT CHAMBERLAIN (and Kansas) on local TV in Raleigh touching off a mania for ACC basketball in the region.
How Youngish? If they are going during the week, young kids don't have school the next morning and their is no flack for leaving early. If they are driving age, they don't have to go with parents. Younger teens might be dropped off and picked up.Yup, all that is fair. But there still seems to be youngish people that go! At least according to my social media feeds...
How is what I described above and Dave Gavitt deciding to broadcast big time northeastern basketball 22 years later much different?
Or unless you are invested in the home team. When I was at school we got up for the big games, but we got up for the small games too. We went to football at Memorial with the the expectation that the team would lose. (Although to your earlier point, we did have a keg - probably were at least 3 IIRC, ours was at the 50 yard line.) We'd also go to the soccer games, but the soccer team was good and went on to win a natty while I was there.Just look at this coming season - the home games are pointless unless you are a junkie. If they win who cares, if they lose it’s a disaster.
How Youngish? If they are going during the week, young kids don't have school the next morning and their is no flack for leaving early. If they are driving age, they don't have to go with parents. Younger teens might be dropped off and picked up.
So folks with disposable income and nothing better to do for an hour or two on a Summer Afternoon/Evening.
In other words, the 9 reasons @whaler11 pointed out.

Jeff Jacobs was around back then? Wow.The Tobacco Road schools were football schools until some guy decided to broadcast the 1957 national championship between UNC and WILT CHAMBERLAIN (and Kansas) on local TV in Raleigh touching off a mania for ACC basketball in the region.
I was told they count heads in the building. Staff, security, police, EMT, players, coaches, grounds crew, vendors... everybody. Probably adds 500+/-(??) which, for the Rent is insignificant, but for the Yard Goats could be a roughly 8% bump in attendance figures.It's only holds 6,000. If Rentschler sat 10,000 at the FBS level, it'd be packed.
Re: the Yardgoats, I'd be interested in true turnstile data. Season tickets are pretty in expensive for minor league sports and it's not a huge loss to miss a weeknight game. Also, not only do they in all likelihood base attendance on tickets distributed, they inflate official attendance by a not so insignificant value. The Whale did it too. They all do it.
They walked out after Illinois scored 24 straight points. How many adults were thinking "Here we go again." ?
Look, of course that is true but that isn’t unique to UConn in any way. Every team with a large fanbase can tie that fanbases growth to a specific event or “miraculous post season run”
I'm sorry -- it's not true. We sold out the HCC for big games in the Corny Thompson era before we were competing at a national level.
A lot of it has to do to the fact that the journey is usually a lot more exciting than the destination.
The fanbase had been spoiled beyond belief and then we had our league swept from under our feet and left on an island by ourselves.
It really was just a completely perfect #2 storm of things to happen.
Then when you look into the other issues, i.e. two stadiums, alumni leaving the state, different type of student attending the school, it further stacks against our situation.
I think the Big East move will give hoops a shot in the arm. Football is forever relegated to second class, but a good 7,8 win UConn team I think could still hit 30k+ for a name brand school or a local rival.