You'll need to claim a ticket to get in to Gampel for the welcome back celebration today. Here's the linkI want to be at gampel when the team arrives…is that going to be possible ? I would imagine it’s going to be packed…
I think I said that I was doing this based on current conferences. Maryland won while it was in the ACC, and both LV's and one of ours were in the American.Just one small tweak:
AAC - 1. 2014. I get it, I think of us as in the BE then also still…
Didn't the AAC have one in 2014?So much conference realignment during the last 25 years that wins by a conference are different than wins by teams now in a conference, but look at how different the last 24 basketball championships are different than football based on current conferences only:
ACC: 9
Big East: 7
SEC: 3
Big XII: 3
Big Ten: 2
Pac Ten: 0
Everyone else: 0
So the Power 2 in football, in hoops, even giving them credit for UCLA/USC/Oklahoma/UT, have won 5 of the last 24 championships. Proving that, to date, massive gobs of money generated by football is being used primarily for football, and is not buying a dominance in hoops. Will that change? If I knew that for sure I’d buy a supercomputer and move to Vegas instead of posting while I ingest morning caffeine on my way to work for a living.
Didn't the AAC have one in 2014?
Is this UConn fans celebrating a National Championship at Gampel, or Pitt fans celebrating a 5-point January win over Wake Forest?
Didn't the AAC have one in 2014?
When we won in 2014 we in the AAC, not the Big east, therefore the chart should reflect the win by that conference.UConn is not in the AAC.
When we won in 2014 we in the AAC, not the Big east, therefore the chart should reflect the win by that conference.
Interesting post. I am sure money used in football is primarily used for football, but I would assume some of that money would be used to increase spending in basketball, too. But yeah, I think they are increasing their spending in hoops (more for football for sure), but it certainly isn't buying dominance in hoops. Whether it's building a sports team, college or pros, or building a business, having more money definitely helps, but there has to be an intelligent plan to go along with it. Simply throwing more money without that intelligent plan is exercising the law of diminishing returns. There are too many examples of sports teams that heavily spend on players without thought of how their skills complement each other, without good game planning, or good player development and because of that their seasons amount to nothing.So much conference realignment during the last 25 years that wins by a conference are different than wins by teams now in a conference, but look at how different the last 24 basketball championships are different than football based on current conferences only:
ACC: 9
Big East: 7
SEC: 3
Big XII: 3
Big Ten: 2
Pac Ten: 0
Everyone else: 0
So the Power 2 in football, in hoops, even giving them credit for UCLA/USC/Oklahoma/UT, have won 5 of the last 24 championships. Proving that, to date, massive gobs of money generated by football is being used primarily for football, and is not buying a dominance in hoops. Will that change? If I knew that for sure I’d buy a supercomputer and move to Vegas instead of posting while I ingest morning caffeine on my way to work for a living.
Need a ? At the end of sentence 2. ;^)Good God people. Can you please read what I write before telling me I'm wrong.
That's what I said after the Providence game. That crowd was fantastic.Bring back $2 beer night for all games at Gampel.
Can you provide a little summary of this? Does this help players actual get NIL money or support volunteering activities for student athletes to benefit charities? I'm looking to directly benefit the athletes financially and the best way to do that.I'll be starting an NIL fundraiser later today for Bleeding Blue for Good.
Let's do our best to take care of our players.
Reading comprehension just isn't a thing for some people.Good God people. Can you please read what I write before telling me I'm wrong.
When the inevitable happens, it won't be the league; it will be the coaching.How fast can Aresco and the AAC turn really good basketball programs like Florida Atlantic, North Texas and UAB into CBI bubble teams?