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Don't you know UConn is the king of the universe, nothing happened without us. They stopped playing basketball when we weren't good.
That's my boy
Don't you know UConn is the king of the universe, nothing happened without us. They stopped playing basketball when we weren't good.
Massimino did a wonderful job at Nova, but when he left, the last guy that took them anywhere for a while was Lappas in 95.
While Uconn was in the BE, they never stood in our way. They didn't flourish until we were in the AAC. The won in 16 and 18. I give them credit, love there coach and program.
My whole point was that Uconn's success helped every other team. Uconn was the crown jewel of the BE, but we didn't fit in with the remaining schools, so they booted uconn out.
It's quite possible, that if Uconn remained in the BE, Uconn might have been a road bliock to two national titles, so Nova, who knows what uconn back in the BE means, should also be thankful uconn wasn't around to stop their teams
You keep dying on the "BE teams didn't flourish til UConn left" hill and that's a really bad take. Even passionate UConn fans are aware other BE teams had significant national success before Calhoun. Oddly enough, UConn not being successful in the BE actually led UConn to make a coaching change.
Do you not know anything about the 1980's?
That was when the BE started on national TV and flourished. There was G'towns three Final Fours in four years. Hoya Paranoia?
There was the 3 BE teams in the same FF.
There was 'Nova winning a national championship.
All that happened before UConn even won the NIT.
The BE didn't need UConn to flourish for the conference to flourish.
Now, did UConn have a longer and stronger string of success than any other BE program? Absolutely.
Did UConn carry the BE banner when several other marquee program floundered? Absolutely.
Does UConn have the chance to reclaim that status? Absolutely.
Massimino did a wonderful job at Nova, but when he left, the last guy that took them anywhere for a while was Lappas in 95.
Nova was never top dog in the conference year to year until lately after all these schools left. UConn was that .
He just became eligible. There aren't many coaches who have one national championship that aren't in the Hall of Fame.jay wright put in the work and will probably be a HOF coach
jay wright put in the work and will probably be a HOF coach
He will definitely get in the HOF. Jay Wright is a really good coach and seems like a genuinely nice guy. He should get a lot of respect from UConn fans as he was probably one of UConn's biggest supporters to rejoining the Big East of the coaches currently in the conference. I do not "boo" Jay Wright when I go to UConn-Villanova games. Sometimes there's certain players/coaches from rival teams that just do things the right way, and It makes it really hard to dislike them. Jay Wright is one of those guys.jay wright put in the work and will probably be a HOF coach
UConn definitely did not “make” the Big East. It’s the other way around. The Big East made UConn.
Before Calhoun UConn was in a lower tier of the conference. Georgetown, St Johns, Nova and Cuse were top tier.
“A winning record” the first 4 years of the Big East is fine, but UConn wasn’t the top tier of the conference until JC. His 3 championships are a bit higher profile than UConn’s 1983 winning record.You're going to explain this to UConn fans? Really?
Why not go back and look at the record to see where UConn was in the first 4 years of the BE? They had a winning record until 1983.
Is it that hard?
Yes, for another 4 years they sank to the bottom before Calhoun arrived in 1987.
But go back and look at the actual record, they had as many good years as bad years, and one could easily argue that the 1979 class of Corny Thompson, Mike McKay, and Chuck Aleksinas was better than any class UConn had until 2002.
UConn definitely did not “make” the Big East. It’s the other way around. The Big East made UConn.
Before Calhoun UConn was in a lower tier of the conference. Georgetown, St Johns, Nova and Cuse were top tier.
Calhoun was able to exploit the conference membership in building his program. For 15+ years Calhoun had the most successful program in the conference.
All of this conference history is desirable. Georgetown and Patrick gaining national attention. Nova winning it with 3 Big East teams in the final four. Prov, Seton Hall, and Cuse final fours. The Calhoun championships. Nova dominating the last 5 years. Now having UConn back.
UConn has a great History, and now has a good new coach and is back in conference. You rejoin as a respected member, but you have something to prove. Most don’t expect UConn to finish in the Top 3 this year. You’ll have to earn back bragging rights.
The Big East helped make UConn. Maybe the Big East can help revive UConn.
“A winning record” the first 4 years of the Big East is fine, but UConn wasn’t the top tier of the conference until JC. His 3 championships are a bit higher profile than UConn’s 1983 winning record.
I did not say UConn sucked. I did not say UConn was the bottom of the barrel. I do disagree that UConn made the Big East. It’s the other way around. The Big East was the platform on which JC built his program. In the early years of the Big East Georgetown, St Johns, Nova, and Cuse were the top tier. UConn got there, but not until about 10 years into the conference history.They did just fine when they entered the BE for first few years, didn't have a losing record. They weren't bottom of the barrel, as you put it. They fell into a trough the next few years prior to Calhoun.
Correct, 8th member a year later. The original 4 were Prov, St Johns, Georgetown, and Cuse. They invited the others to form the conference. Nova sat on the fence for a year.OK, I have a great deal of respect for Villanova. I played against them at Penn. They have been a tremendously valuable addition (I stress "addition") to the Big East. But before anyone goes nuts over their Big East pedigree, remember...………………………...they were NOT one of the seven original members.
and now UConn wants to be like Nova of the 10's.
Wiki:... In the early years of the Big East Georgetown, St Johns, Nova, and Cuse were the top tier. UConn got there, but not until about 10 years into the conference history.
look it up!
The original SEVEN were BC, UConn, Georgetown, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John 's, Syracuse. BC, Seton Hall and UConn would battle it out in the early years to avoid finishing last. After Villanova and Pitt joined, UConn would struggle (the Perno "we just couldn't stick the J" years) to avoid the dreaded 8 vs 9 game to qualify for the Big East Tourney quarterfinals.Correct, 8th member a year later. The original 4 were Prov, St Johns, Georgetown, and Cuse. They invited the others to form the conference. Nova sat on the fence for a year.
The original SEVEN were BC, UConn, Georgetown, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John 's, Syracuse. BC, Seton Hall and UConn would battle it out in the early years to avoid finishing last. After Villanova and Pitt joined, UConn would struggle (the Perno "we just couldn't stick the J" years) to avoid the dreaded 8 vs 9 game to qualify for the Big East Tourney quarterfinals.