I don't entirely disagree with you Carl, but we, collectively, want to feel like we are moving forward as a program. We all root for UConn but it doesn't exist in a vaccum- who you play is a big part of the fun. And between this conference crap, and our on-field product lately, there's a lot of fun that's missing. I'll still go, I'll still cheer, I'll enjoy the wins... But it's a step backwards. Our measuring sticks are getting smaller, not bigger. And it pisses me off that there's nothing we can do to change it.
I agree. UConn v. Michigan and Rentschler Field is a lot different than UConn v. Buffalo. I haven't compared anywhere what our future conference schedules are like compared to our past.
But we are not taking steps backwards, (don't get me started on the W/L record for the past 2 seasons) - but in other respects, there is nothing going backwards. Our university is growing, and the athletic department is growing, and the football program is growing, and set to make more money than we ever have, we don't have a low ceiling on growth at all.
For some reason, everybody here, well the majority, seem to assume that our future conference schedules will make for worse games than our past. Why? That's not necessarily the case. We played WVU what 7 times? 8? ever? we played Syracuse and PItt how many times? (We'll miss them for one reason and one reason only - we won a lot against them) We never got to play Miami, or VTech as conference members. We got BC once. Part of the intial allure of UConn football, was the Big EAst lineup that existed in 2000, 2001. That time is long gone, and we've got a solid 25,000 people that have invested in UConn football for a decade now. Those weekend days of tailgating at the stadium aren't just going to be given up.
It's up to the program to continue to grow, and we do that by winning game, scheduling everybody and anybody, and winning. Which leads me to the other problem we face thinking about future schedules. Aside from Michigan next year, and Tennessee in what 2015? There's nothing on the schedule to look forward to right now, which was a product of our former leadership at the university as well. THat just magnifies the changes in scheduling we're seeing right now.
In the 8 years I've been in the Big East, our slate of conference opponents has changed already - three times, and will change for the fourth time in year 9, and for the fifth time in year 11. Do the math - in 11 years of one single conference play - we will have had our conference lineup changed on average every other year.
What's good for UConn, is that this is happening now, and not in 2003. In 2002, there was no UConn football fan base to speak of. There is interest now in UConn football that can sustain us through this mess of conference shifting for the next 2-3 years, without a doubt, as new opponents work their way through Rentschler, and hopefully go home losers.
The best thing we can do is recruit like hell, and start winning more games than we lose. That's what we can control, and we've got the toys with Shenkman, and Burton work with, and what should have Pasqualoni working harder than he's ever worked in his life at recruiting.