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Trade our whole history. Of course not. Would I trade this one season. Yeah, probably.
If we went 17-14 and were labeled as the team that got in when we shouldn’t have this place would have burned to the groundTrade our whole history. Of course not. Would I trade this one season. Yeah, probably.
As far as trajectory of the program, you have to look big picture. The random nature of the NCAA Tournament can make or break your season, and a lot of times that is not fair. I think a lot of it has to do with expectations. You take our 2005-2006 season where we lost to George Mason in the Elite 8, compare that to our 2002 team that also lost in the Elite 8, but to the 1 seed Maryland, and 100% of UConn fans will say 2001-2002 was a better season.
The reason we are all sour right now is becaus le we lost in the first round…again, to a lower seeded team. Upsets in the tournament are going to happen, It’s a guarantee. Some of the best coaches to ever walk the sidelines have been upset in the NCAA Tournament. With that said, you have to choose our situation over Michigan.
I would like to be in the Big Ten.
They absolutely have been a better program than us the last 5 years and are still alive for a national title this year and are in the Big Ten.
You’re lying to yourself if you wouldn’t rather be in their shoes right now.
Rutgers improved going to the B10 and has been better than they've ever been in the BE.We’d get killed in the Big Ten. Anyone who leaves the Big East dies.
Big deal. This place is crazy on any L. Right now we'd be psyched if our team was still playingIf we went 17-14 and were labeled as the team that got in when we shouldn’t have this place would have burned to the ground
Pitt, Syracuse, BC, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, Miami, Louisville…odds aren’t in our favor.Rutgers improved going to the B10 and has been better than they've ever been in the BE.
I agree if we are only talking about basketball, which is my major concern by a long shot. But I have come to realize—too late, unfortunately, like our own AD—that football drives the bus for Div. 1 sports and that the long term health of our basketball program and our university is better served by being in a P5 conference.I would like to be in the Big Ten for football reasons, and maybe a few other sports as well. But if we're just talking about men's basketball, absolutely not. From the perspective of mens basketball only, we are in the right place for travel, rivalries and recruiting.
Pitt, Syracuse, BC, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, Miami, Louisville…odds aren’t in our favor.
The Big East isn't a mid major. It is a power conference in basketball. Marquette went 19-12 this year and was CLEANLY in the field. If they had gone 17-14, they probably would have been in the First Four due to their scheduling.The Power Conference schools will always have an advantage over mid majors. 17-14 in the Big 10 is very different from being 17-14 in the Big East. Big Ten Conference games were battles for the upper 2/3 of the conference. Big East had three contenders and the rest had flaws. Even Rutgers would have beaten UConn this year. It would be much better to be in the Big Ten in the long run, no doubt. I don't care for Michigan only because their AD failed UConn.
I'll always support Big East teams. Their success leads to monetary and reputational benefits for everyone in the conference, including UConn. Go PC, go Nova!Ok with me if Michigan wins this year... prefer them over most of the teams left besides St. Peter's and maybe Purdue. Don't want to see PC or Nova win that's for sure.
AJ Price - San DiegoWhich is another part of the Calhoun legacy that is just remarkable. In his 20 plus year run from the Dream Season on, only once did we lose in the first weekend to a clearly inferior team. And that was when our point guard blew out his knee in the game and it took too long for our players to recover emotionally. Normal ranked teams, and normal prominent programs, are used to losing 5-12 or 4-13 games every so often.
I'm not saying that to make excuses for our play Thursday night in the first half, which was not acceptable, or for our inability to make enough good and smart plays in the second half. But normal coaches, not named Jim Calhoun, have to be viewed in terms of reality. The reality is that we had a good year. You can absolutely question whether Hurley could have tweaked a little more out of this team, but the reality is that he brought a team with obvious and visible limitations into the Tourney as the 17th best team in the country. A team that was limited in terms of present quality depth, outside shooting and other than RJ the ability to keep making smart decisions at the end of close games.
We had a good season that was at the top level of expectations. We sucked in one game in the tourney. Those are almost separate things. Everyone is free to value one more than the other, but no one should be not paying attention to both of them.
I was unaware. You are correct. From what I found out, the Big East is actually the second strongest of the basketball power conferences, with the Big Ten ranked first.The Big East isn't a mid major. It is a power conference in basketball. Marquette went 19-12 this year and was CLEANLY in the field. If they had gone 17-14, they probably would have been in the First Four due to their scheduling.
Probably closer to fourth but yes it is a major league.I was unaware. You are correct. From what I found out, the Big East is actually the second strongest of the basketball power conferences, with the Big Ten ranked first.
The Power Conference schools will always have an advantage over mid majors. 17-14 in the Big 10 is very different from being 17-14 in the Big East. Big Ten Conference games were battles for the upper 2/3 of the conference. Big East had three contenders and the rest had flaws. Even Rutgers would have beaten UConn this year. It would be much better to be in the Big Ten in the long run, no doubt. I don't care for Michigan only because their AD failed UConn.
Guess Saragin doesn’t look at tournament performance. The bad ACC has 3 of 4 in the Sweet 16 while the might NOOB has 2 of 6. Oh well. Of course he is the guy who declared Duke the national champion in 1999. After they lost to UConn! But statistically they were better.Probably closer to fourth but yes it is a major league.
Sagarin has them:
1. Big 12
2. B1G
3. SEC
4. Big East
5. Pac-12
6. ACC
That's the point. The tournament isn't the best way of determining the champion or the best league. It only determines who gets hot at the right time.Guess Saragin doesn’t look at tournament performance. The bad ACC has 3 of 4 in the Sweet 16 while the might NOOB has 2 of 6. Oh well. Of course he is the guy who declared Duke the national champion in 1999. After they lost to UConn! But statistically they were better.
LOL. And the Super Bowl isn’t the best way of determining the Champion, either. AFC is much tougher so the winner is more worn down. And the US Open isn’t the best way to determine the Champion either. Andy North can get hot while a great player hits it into the toolie boonies. We should do it by computer. I can just see the ratings now. Millions of viewers watching some guy punch in SOS data, and then two statistics PhDs arguing about components of the Golden Mean calculation and whether Recent results should be weighed more than overall.That's the point. The tournament isn't the best way of determining the champion or the best league. It only determines who gets hot at the right time.
It isn't. See the 18-1 Patriots. They were a better team than the Giants that year but they lost. The only true way to determine who the best team is is a double round robin (home/away) format. That way everyone has the same SOS and the same opponents. Over the course of the season, the best team would have the most wins. That is not practical in college basketball because that would require all 358 teams have a 714-game season.LOL. And the Super Bowl isn’t the best way of determining the Champion, either. AFC is much tougher so the winner is more worn down. And the US Open isn’t the best way to determine the Champion either. Andy North can get hot while a great player hits it into the toolie boonies. We should do it by computer. I can just see the ratings now. Millions of viewers watching some guy punch in SOS data, and then two statistics PhDs arguing about components of the Golden Mean calculation and whether Recent results should be weighed more than overall.
Actually it kinda does identify the best team. Since 2000, only 6 champs have not been a 1 seed. And if we posit that seeding is generally correct and 1 seeds are more or less the best teams in their years, that is pretty much what would be expected. There have also been 2 2-seeds, 3 3-seeds and a 7-seed. UConn in 2014 being the biggest Outlier. But it is the only one over a 3 seed to win a title since Villanova in 1985. And I would argue that that team was under seeded because nobody really had a handle on how good or bad the AAC was.
So you might say calling a whole season a failure after a tournament loss is a bit extreme right?That's the point. The tournament isn't the best way of determining the champion or the best league. It only determines who gets hot at the right time.
YesI know it's a different conference and all but they are the perfect counterpoint to these recent threads.
1. A very lackluster regular season. A regular season we would all be very disappointed in.
2. A Coach whose actions were more egregious than Hurley's ejection and comments.
3. But 2 tourney wins.
Do the tourney wins wipe everything clean? Is this what we want?