- Joined
- Oct 15, 2012
- Messages
- 4,609
- Reaction Score
- 18,571
I still don't understand why people are against/upset about this. It doesn't hurt UConn.
LOL let me enlighten you.
Wichita St has an easy pass to the NCAA tournament every year. They seem to be doing quite well with that. They seem to recruit quite well with that. Even make a final four in that dreadful conference.
Is it beyond comprehension not to give that up for a few seed lines? And that's all it would be, a few seed lines.
And all of a sudden the AAC has turned into the ACC in this case when you've done nothing but crap on this league in every other thread?
Which way does your wind blow tomorrow?
Let's put it this way: if Memphis kept Calipari, would they prefer CUSA or the AAC? If we were in our mid-2000s heydey, would you prefer the Big East, or the MVC?LOL let me enlighten you.
Wichita St has an easy pass to the NCAA tournament every year. They seem to be doing quite well with that. They seem to recruit quite well with that. Even make a final four in that dreadful conference.
Is it beyond comprehension not to give that up for a few seed lines? And that's all it would be, a few seed lines.
And all of a sudden the AAC has turned into the ACC in this case when you've done nothing but crap on this league in every other thread?
Which way does your wind blow tomorrow?
The AAC had 4 out of 10 teams who could make it last year. And SMU was in if they weren't banned, so we had 5/11 who were tournament quality. The year before 2/11, and the year before that 5/10, including the national champion. The conference isn't what we want it to be, and this year it wasn't great. But if Temple and Memphis get their act together, Houston and UCF keep their upward trend, and SMU stays strong, that's 7/11 solid to very good programs when you throw in Cincy and UConn. Hell, Tulsa made an at-large appearance. That's more difficult for WSU, but also offers the chance to have a down year and still get in the tourney.They've had a good run. Before this recent tournament run, they went 5 years without making the tournament (where they got to Sweet 16). Before that, they went 17 (!!!) years without making the tournament.
Let's break it down for you. The old conference, 1 team out of 10 made the tournament. On average, you make the tournament 10% of the time, maybe slightly more often because you have a good program, you devote slightly more funds than most towards the sports, and hopefully you can keep your coach. But guess what, you make Spartacus money in that conference, so you can't pay the coach as much as a better school in a better conference can. So you're going to lose him eventually. If he hits a down recruiting year or two, or god forbid the Celtics come calling, your coach is gone. Then you go another 10 years before you make the tournament.
Do you think it might be easier to up-conference and get to a place where 3/12 members make it, instead of 1/10?
For every Gonzaga, there is a Southern Illinois, a Davidson, a Belmont, a FGCU, or a UNCW.
Let's put it this way: if Memphis kept Calipari, would they prefer CUSA or the AAC? If we were in our mid-2000s heydey, would you prefer the Big East, or the MVC?
For Wichita State, this is a pretty easy answer. This is a team that, in a real conference (and though a down year, the AAC still qualified as one) would have gotten a 4-5 seed, and thus likely a S16 rather than R32. And, if they got there, perhaps could have broken through to the E8, given they got paired with the best 2-seed.
Dominating bad conferences alone isn't a proposition most schools want. They want to sell tickets, get higher seeds, and make deeper tournament runs. The MVC doesn't do that.
Men's basketball is what put UConn on the map and we are all concerned with the state of our program right now, one of those reasons being we are stuck in a dreadful conference and don't have enough good people to play. We add a school who has been to 6 straight tournaments including a final 4, is ranked in the top 10 heading into next season, pays their coach more than any other school in our conference and has more people come out to watch their games than anyone else in the conference and people are mad. This board defies all logic sometimes.
What makes you feel Wich st would have had a 4-5 seed when smu and cinncy had a 6 with the years they had?
If Gonzaga can get a 1-seed, an AAC team can.
First, the AAC had a down year, but in its 4 years has put in 5, 2, 4*, 2 teams in. MVC put in 1, 2, 2, 1.
In the NIT, the AAC had 1, 3, 1, 2; MVC: 0, 1, o, 1
So the difference in the leagues is obvious.
Second, you're taking my BE comparison out of context. The basic point--and why I used Memphis--is do you want to play a bunch of bad teams and compile a gaudy record, or do you want to play a bunch of good to mediocre teams (and with the AAC, some bad too, though the BE had DePaul) and have a slightly less great record, but one that might translate to better chances of success.
Further, SMU and Cincy had 4 Top 25 and 5 Top 50 wins combined. And 3 of those Top 50 wins were vs. each other. So, that's why they got 6 seeds. The AAC wasn't great, but they only had 4 sub-150 teams. That helped SMU to an RPI of 15 and Cincy to an RPI of 12. Temple, UConn, and Memphis were in down years, too, otherwise those are much better RPI boosters.
Wichita State had a great record, but was only RPI 31 because of an SOS of 138. They had 0 Top 25 wins (3 games) and only 2 Top 50 wins. Hell, they only had 6 Top 100 wins...and 23 sub-150 wins! 16 in conference. That's 7 sub-150 teams. It's a freaking disaster of a conference. By RPI this UConn team--the worst we had in 30 years--would have been the third best team. And not just by the crappy RPI, by KenPom.
So, this is a long way of saying that people who think the AAC get hosed don't look closely at their resume, and conveniently forget that a less-than-mediocre Tulsa team got in last year. If Gonzaga can get a 1-seed, an AAC team can. The conference can get a series of good seeds just like the peak CUSA did (not that this is what I wish UConn were in), but it needs a variety of good teams. If you add last years WSU in, the RPI's of all the teams rise because you're replacing a bad game with at least one good one.
For instance, I replaced one game against USF and one against ECU for Cincy (RPI 12 mind you) with two against WSU. Even though they won both the original games and I had them split with WSU, their RPI went up from 12 to 10. And there isn't a lot of room to improve.
UConn's RPI goes from 118 to 101 with replacing our ECU loss and an USF loss with two Wichita State losses.
So imagine that effect spread throughout the conference? It's how some conferences (ACC) get overrated, but a team like WSU can help a good way to at least get the AAC RPI closer to its advanced metrics (where the conference looked better).
_________________
*SMU was in if they weren't banned.
Wichita is opting for significantly more money, more exposure and a bigger profile. Right now, they almost have to run through the Missouri Valley undefeated to get a bid. They went 30-4 and ended up as a ten seed. If they lost in the first round of the MVC Tournament, they would have been 28-5 and a two seed in the NIT.
There is exactly zero downside risk for them.
It would be like UConn turning down the Big Ten because it's easier in the AAC.
Because it actually does hurt UConn. Wichita States total revenue is 26 mil, 3x less than UConn's. In other words, this is a fine addition for a men's basketball opponent. For realignment, new tv contract, and anything else that matters, this is another nail in the coffin. Time is running out. Tick tock.I still don't understand why people are against/upset about this. It doesn't hurt UConn.
Does nothing for realignment purposes that hates us, for tv purposes it's a brand I'm guessing draws decent ratings when the contract is coming up for renegotiation.Because it actually does hurt UConn. Wichita States total revenue is 26 mil, 3x less than UConn's. In other words, this is a fine addition for a men's basketball opponent. For realignment, new tv contract, and anything else that matters, this is another nail in the coffin. Time is running out. Tick tock.
Someone said it earlier. Frankenstein conference.
More mouths to feed.
We will be ODU womens hoop in a few years. A nice memory.
F this. And F Suzy
Aresco needs to focus on getting us a better tv contract. How does this help? By adding another mid-major, UConn is slowly becoming one. Pretty remarkable when you think about how strong our brand was 5 years ago.Does nothing for realignment purposes that hates us, for tv purposes it's a brand I'm guessing draws decent ratings when the contract is coming up for renegotiation.
There is no reason to HATE this. The quality basketball in our conference just went up. We already go to Oklahoma and Texas in this conference, what's wrong with Kansas?
People complain Aresco does nothing, then he does probably the best move he CAN make and people complain. This league isn't poaching from the P5.
The new Big East is not the old Big East, not even close. Killing football (which is not going to happen) and hitching our wagon to that train will surely doom us. Guess you just want to give up.Agree with this. What also defies logic is why we try to chase Football glory, I think it's time the University realized that the Football program is secondary and its time to head back to the Big East and just kill the Football program.
No. Those 2 things are not equal. First, by having them in the conference, you get them twice a year instead of once. Second, as was pointed out earlier in the thread, having them in the conference boosts the RPI of every other team in the conference - even if they lose to WSU. That also benefits UConn... because now when we play ECU/Tulsa/USF et al the RPI is much higher. So in summary, no, you're wrong, UConn would not be better suited signing a 6 year home and home.If Wichita State is such a valuable add, UConn would be better suited signing a 6 year home and home series. Not add them to the conference.
Why didn't the Big East just go after Wichita st? I guess that would have made too much sense?Creighton has worked out well for the BE, and Creighton is not nearly as good as Wichita St. has been, but the fans understand that they've brought value to the league. It's funny, over on the Big East board, they're dying to add Gonzaga, which is way worse of a fit geographically than WSU.
they can also earn tournament credits = $ for the conference once they get here.No. Those 2 things are not equal. First, by having them in the conference, you get them twice a year instead of once. Second, as was pointed out earlier in the thread, having them in the conference boosts the RPI of every other team in the conference - even if they lose to WSU. That also benefits UConn... because now when we play ECU/Tulsa/USF et al the RPI is much higher. So in summary, no, you're wrong, UConn would not be better suited signing a 6 year home and home.