Fordham basketball is more relevant in NYC than Notre Dame.With St Johns now demoted to permanent mid-major status, ND becomes the default Catholic school for support in NYC college basketball.
Fordham basketball is more relevant in NYC than Notre Dame.
B1G didn't do their research. They thought Rutgers was NYC's team.
Amazing how institutions of higher learning can make such uninformed decisions. Just like ACC thought BC and SU brought the Boston and NYC markets.
Nobody can dominate the NYC TV market in college football without us. ND football is required to even get close.
Nobody can dominate the NYC TV market in college basketball without Syracuse, UConn, and us. With St Johns now demoted to permanent mid-major status, ND becomes the default Catholic school for support in NYC college basketball.
uconNYC said:Amazing how institutions of higher learning can make such uninformed decisions. Just like ACC thought BC and SU brought the Boston and NYC markets.
Do you really think calling Michigan "Meatchicken" resonates over here?Your last sentence sums the issue. The BUG is the only conference that expands with weak athletics departments because they are in large tv markets, which means the BTN gets crammed onto local cable for the highest rates.
The BUG is quite happy with winning few national titles as long as it is rich and Meatchicken and Blohio State run the football part of the conference as they wish.
Realistically, there is a chance that the ACC makes up ground on the B1G if the B1G fails to make improvement in on-field performance a priority in such a way that it eschews lip service in favor of results. I don't get your Maine to Miami conclusion, however. I don't see the ACC's advantage in D.C., Phila., and NYC, the three biggest components of the northeast. NYC will likely be a stalemate with UConn and Cuse vs. Rutgers. Without a clearly dominant presence there, college sports presence will continue to languish. Philly becomes even more B1G owned as they are surrounded by Rutgers, Maryland, and Penn State. And Maryland will get the lions share of D.C. The ACC will be seriously constrained by the SEC in the south and the B1G in to north.Unfortunately, UConn will probably end up in the ACC. It will take too long for UConn to get AAU membership to gain a B1G invite, and an ACC invite would be the more likely scenario, as a long run in the AAC will be very detrimental to UConn's future as has been discussed in this blog forever. However, let's cheer up UConn fans. Realistically, if you look at P5 conference rankings in the next few years, I think the ACC will be ahead of the B1G overall in athletics. Academics matter not. The B1G will probably drop lower once they realize that the addition of RU will not bolster their presence in the Northeast, whereas the ACC probably noticed how the addition of UConn will control Maine to Miami, including NYC and Boston(which BC has failed to deliver) for them. I suspect the B1G will be too slow to act and lose out, as the first of the P5's who comes calling will probably get the date to the prom.
Love this post, pj. I've been thinking the same thing about if either the ACC or B1G offers, the other could as well. Unfortunately, that might not be good for us. If the ACC fears losing out to the B1G should it come to that, and they worry about the northeast dynamics with UConn in the B1G, what would be their incentive to offer us, especially given ND doesn't want to be our partner. Better for the ACC to let us dissipate our value in the humdrum world of the AAC until we are less attractive to the B1G and they could pick us up for the proverbial song and help us re-build.I think the ACC situation is very similar to the B1G situation in regard to UConn. Both would have to go to 15 and likely wait 10-12 years for #16, unless there is a major shake-up. In the ACC the barrier to taking UConn is politics (south-v-north, football-v-bball, public-v-private), in the B1G it's AAU and football. Those obstacles make UConn arguably a marginal pickup for each. On the other hand, UConn must be key to the B1G's eastern strategy, and is surely a pivotal piece in conference vs conference competition for northeastern mindshare. I think if one of those conferences offers UConn, the other one will too. They have to ponder whether it makes sense to delay. I hope UConn keeps its cards close to the vest. Meanwhile, it has to work for an arrangement with the AAC in which it has major Tier 3 rights to sell, especially women's bball.
Good assessment, imo. The long view here is that the demographics are on the side of the ACC vs. the BIG, as the Big is still primarily a midwest league stuck in the Rust Belt, and the population shifts projected by demographers over the next few decades are decidely south, southwest, not out to the midwest. Additionally, the retirement of Bobby Bowden who stayed too long at the Dance with JF at FSU has given the ACC the lynchpin football program it dearly needed compared with the Big. The SEC will continue to be the de facto premier college football league in the country, but insofar as the comparison between the Big and the ACC, the best high school football is still played in the south and the southwest, and the ACC has a future edge here in my opinion, now that we begin to see the inevitable ACC Coaches retired and replaced with younger and more dynamic coaches.Realistically, there is a chance that the ACC makes up ground on the B1G if the B1G fails to make improvement in on-field performance a priority in such a way that it eschews lip service in favor of results. .
I was really speaking to the possibility of a bidding war now due to interest by both conferences now that might not be the case in the future. Not sure exactly how that bidding war might develop. Perhaps an offer to make us whole with respect to exit fees owed by departing mates, waiving entrance fees or lower shares during a probationary period.It's not like UConn is a stock that can be picked up more cheaply in the future. You can buy Uconn now for the absolute minimum value, and that purchase price will be the same in 5 years or 10 or 20. In fact, one could argue that UConn has more assets right now as we speak with top coaches, money for new facilities, engaged fans, etc., than it might have in 10 years, so if you purchase for the rock bottom price right now, you also get something with intrinsic value.
If these conferences are going to buy UConn in the future, there is absolutely no reason not to buy them soon. The longer UConn goes without a home, the more difficult it will be. The B1G needs to digest the two new adds first, so that might be the hangup there, but the ACC is different, and it should be adding UConn now, if it had any intention of ever adding them at all.
Lot of good points Yawkey and, in my opinion, a better and more productive approach to conversation than some of the baiting you've offered in other threads. As far as the demographics go, greater population growth rates in the southeast will take a long, long time (>50 years) to get the ACC's base up to that of the B1G, especially if the B1G is the big winner in the northeast. And the ACC probably doesn't have majority ownership of the five South Atlantic states (VA, NC, SC, GA, and FL) and so don't get the full benefit of population growth there.Good assessment, imo. The long view here is that the demographics are on the side of the ACC vs. the BIG, as the Big is still primarily a midwest league stuck in the Rust Belt, and the population shifts projected by demographers over the next few decades are decidely south, southwest, not out to the midwest. Additionally, the retirement of Bobby Bowden who stayed too long at the Dance with JF at FSU has given the ACC the lynchpin football program it dearly needed compared with the Big. The SEC will continue to be the de facto premier college football league in the country, but insofar as the comparison between the Big and the ACC, the best high school football is still played in the south and the southwest, and the ACC has a future edge here in my opinion, now that we begin to see the inevitable ACC Coaches retired and replaced with younger and more dynamic coaches.
Good assessment, imo. The long view here is that the demographics are on the side of the ACC vs. the BIG, as the Big is still primarily a midwest league stuck in the Rust Belt, and the population shifts projected by demographers over the next few decades are decidely south, southwest, not out to the midwest. Additionally, the retirement of Bobby Bowden who stayed too long at the Dance with JF at FSU has given the ACC the lynchpin football program it dearly needed compared with the Big. The SEC will continue to be the de facto premier college football league in the country, but insofar as the comparison between the Big and the ACC, the best high school football is still played in the south and the southwest, and the ACC has a future edge here in my opinion, now that we begin to see the inevitable ACC Coaches retired and replaced with younger and more dynamic coaches.
Lot of good points Yawkey and, in my opinion, a better and more productive approach to conversation than some of the baiting you've offered in other threads. As far as the demographics go, greater population growth rates in the southeast will take a long, long time (>50 years) to get the ACC's base up to that of the B1G, especially if the B1G is the big winner in the northeast. And the ACC probably doesn't have majority ownership of the five South Atlantic states (VA, NC, SC, GA, and FL) and so don't get the full benefit of population growth there.
We have no idea what's going to happen in the next few decades. Environmental shifts might create whole new migrations. I do know that it is not a bad idea to own real estate near the biggest bodies of fresh water on earth. Something tells me that in the future, there will be a premium on fresh water.
Or you could simply put a house down just about anywhere in Minnesota. It might be slightly warmer than the AntarcticActually you should Google Fresh Water Aquifers - there are some massive, untapped ones around the world - granted exploiting them will be tremendously difficult and costly, esp the ones along he Antarctica coast line.

Vanderbilt is in the SEC, Tenn-Vandy is an SEC conference game.The ACC also has built-in rivalry games in Clemson-SCar & Tenn-Vandy. But let's be fair, Vandy sits in an international city that loves their music and professional teams as well, they will always be little brother to the Vols. Vandy is like Pitt or Minnesota, urban campuses that integrate with a much larger population that have passions and priorities beyond college loyalty - lately Miami has encountered this reality..
Vanderbilt is in the SEC, Tenn-Vandy is an SEC conference game.
Or you could simply put a house down just about anywhere in Minnesota. It might be slightly warmer than the Antarctic![]()

They don't need to turn Rutgers into NYC's team, they only need to turn them into New Jersey's team and it will pay off.
Rutgers has more TV sets and this is what Rutgers fans will be watching,Rutgers is AAU and has more TV sets
I want to commend you on the courage you are demonstrating by insulting the Big Ten, Ohio State and Michigan on a UConn board. Sheer courage man.
You started another thread how UConn belongs in the ACC. You do realize you can help with that? Join the ACC as their 15th school in all sports. UConn will walk into the ACC as the 16th school right behind you on your red carpet.
It may very well be the case that UConn joins the ACC before the B1G and it certainly should if the ACC is the first of the two conferences to extend an invitation. However, my impression – although the ACC posters can correct me if I am wrong – is that the ACC will likely not pursue further expansion in the hopes that Notre Dame will eventually elect to join full time as the 15th school at which time a 16th school such as UConn would be added. What is the likelihood that Notre Dame will join the ACC full time? It is my impression - although the Notre Dame posters can correct me if I am wrong - that Notre Dame intends to remain independent in football for the forseeable future.