I read this post the other day and decided not to reply. I was just relooking for news, saw this and it made ROFL. UMass as leverage is one of the most absurd comments in this whole realignment morass.
Time to put a merciful end to this thread.UMASS is an answer to a question nobody ever asked.
Instead of creating a strawman, why don't you attempt to refute the list of reasons why UMass isn't a good idea?
We have better alternatives than UMass. UCF, Navy, and ECU for starters.
It's amazing how duplicitous you are. The Big East is so good we aren't harmed by losing Pitt/Quse, but so bad we can't do any better than UMass. UConn is so valuable, Herbst herself is responsible if some schools deflect to the Big 12 (rather than Quse/Pitt who put us in this position), but UConn isn't valuable enough to get an ACC invite. And somehow Quse/Pitt were valuable enough for the ACC to add them, but not so valuable that they can't be easily replaced by Houston and UMass. LMAO.
It is about choices. ECU is the #5 team in a large poor state. UCF is the #5 team in a very large state that has several of the top programs in college football to compete with. UMass is the #1 school in a large state that has weak competition for viewers and fans.
It is about choices. ECU is the #5 team in a large poor state. UCF is the #5 team in a very large state that has several of the top programs in college football to compete with. UMass is the #1 school in a large state that has weak competition for viewers and fans.
UMASS drew 32,000 people to Gillette last year for a game against New Hampshire. If they could draw that many for New Hampshire i'm sure they could get
close to 50,000 for Big East games. I'd be willing to bet that UMASS could draw more fans to games than BC which would have to be pretty embarrassing to BC.
The question people need to ask themselves is can UMASS generate more fan support than BC if they were moved into a quality league? The answer to that question is absolutely YES, which is why UMASS as leverage might work.
How many of those 32k were New Hampshire fans (a school who I believe normally has better attendance than UMass)?UMASS drew 32,000 people to Gillette last year for a game against New Hampshire.
How many of those 32k were New Hampshire fans (a school who I believe normally has better attendance than UMass)?
There are a ton of UNH grads in the Boston ara and unlike many UMass grads, they actually prefer admitting to where they went to school and take pride in their alma mater.
I never said that it wasn't a problem with UConn (in all candor, it is far more existent outside of the Boneyard than in it).You want to talk taking pride in your Alma Mater? Look at some of the threads on this forum. Many UCONN fans aren't taking pride in their Alma Mater's football program right now. Half the posters are trashing the place.
UMASS drew 32,000 people to Gillette last year for a game against New Hampshire. If they could draw that many for New Hampshire i'm sure they could get
close to 50,000 for Big East games. I'd be willing to bet that UMASS could draw more fans to games than BC which would have to be pretty embarrassing to BC.
The question people need to ask themselves is can UMASS generate more fan support than BC if they were moved into a quality league? The answer to that question is absolutely YES, which is why UMASS as leverage might work.
I agree. A UMASS vs UCONN football game if both teams are in the Big East or some other BCS conference would easily draw 40-50k; easily. That is one reason why UMass should be considered period. It's the same reason why BC vs UCONN should continue. Simply because there will be LOCAL interest!
Unless somehow the state of Massachusetts can solve its budget problems, and miraculously they decide to stop treating UMass like a red-headed stepchild, there is no money for UMass to make a jump to Div. 1a. It's fantasy.
Are any of us going to be alive when that happens?
OK, UMass will be D-1a in two years. You're on record with this.