Originally posted by TheAsianSensation
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TAS-I think LaSalle and St. Joseph's would both be in that above league. Even though Duquesne offers the Pitt market, I do think the two Philly's are a package.
Houston, DePaul's attendance has only really stunk the past few years. That is for a variety of reasons, their non-con has been less than stellar and as the team has been bad, interest dwindled. However, in the first few years of Big East play, they were easily getting 18-20K+ for their home dates against the likes of Syracuse, UConn, G'town, 'Nova etc. So it's a not a completely lost cause, and offers much greater potential than a Bradley.
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Originally posted by thefish7 View PostYou had me right up until here. I agree that Pittsburgh is greater than Peoria, but I don't think Duquesne is more attractive than Bradley by any measure-- basketball or money. That's fairly akin to saying Detroit Mercy is more attractive because it's in Detroit. Heck by that logic Detroit is probably more attractive than Duquesne because Detroit (despite all its problems) is probably > Pittsburgh.
LaSalle a package deal with St Joe's? I'll take squirrel's word for it, although I'm skeptical.
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It'd be interesting, for the sake of these arguments, to know something about revenue of the programs in question-- tickets, TV, advertising. I think Bradley would end up quite a bit higher in the list than we tend to give it credit for. I'm not foolish enough to compare Bradley to DePaul-- DePaul is in a MUCH larger market and actually has fan interest, but location is not the only thing and that's the problem with a school like Duquesne which is near zero interest.
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The one thing we have to think about is will the BCS have BB only conf. as the BE is now or will they get really picky and go to 4-6 conf makeup of 12-16 teams that then will play their own tournaments and develop their own tv pkgs as individual conf and/or as a BCS tv rights for cable or possibly both.
I really think as this aligns out these schools will seperate from the NCAA completely and have all of their own tournaments. Then the rest of schools will be governed by the NCAA and we will have a major crack down on what these schools can and can't do. Only time will tell but this is how it is shaping up.
One other thing if these schools break off from the NCAA will the benefits change for the student athlete? Just something to ponder.
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TAS seems to think there will be room.
I am firmly in the camp of "No."
A couple reasons for my view:
1) This is about closing the door. The end game here is consolidation of power. At present, it looks like there will be more than 64 teams, but football will still be a requirement.
2) Short-term, in order to salvage itself, the NCAA will do everything it can to prevent a split by the BCS members, which may mean they have to rule that you must play BCS/FBS level football in order to play basketball at that level. I've been saying this for 3 years and I am even stronger in this belief than ever before. The one caveat I always add is that there *MAY* be a window that states "Your league or a certain % of your league must play football at the FBS level" to play at that level for hoops which means that the window remains open for schools like DePaul and Marquette, but Valley schools would all have to commit to making the jump in order to remain relevant.
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Originally posted by squirrelgotdead View PostThis is about closing the door. The end game here is consolidation of power. At present, it looks like there will be more than 64 teams, but football will still be a requirement.
And Bradley's hope would be to somehow find a place in there.
And you're also assuming the NCAA is competent enoughto make a power play to attempt to keep everyone in their organization.
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Duquesne's increased fan interest resulted in an average attendance of just over 3000 fans/game, squirrel. I just don't buy it. Not saying we have a place at the table, because I'm not sure we do, but as far as basketball programs as a package go, I think we're probably top 75 or a little better.
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Originally posted by thefish7 View PostDuquesne's increased fan interest resulted in an average attendance of just over 3000 fans/game, squirrel. I just don't buy it. Not saying we have a place at the table, because I'm not sure we do, but as far as basketball programs as a package go, I think we're probably top 75 or a little better.
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Originally posted by TheAsianSensation View PostI do disagree with this on one front: The current Big East members that don't play FBS football (Marq, DePaul, G'town, et al) will be allowed to join the 64 football members in the liftoff. There is far too much value in some of those schools.
And Bradley's hope would be to somehow find a place in there.
And you're also assuming the NCAA is competent enoughto make a power play to attempt to keep everyone in their organization.
In other words, the NCAA immediately recognizes the threat of losing it's biggest members. Therefore, out of desperation, it alienates 2/3rds of its money-making entities at the DI level by appeasing the BCS types.
And again, there will be a caveat that will likely say "Your league or x% of your league's membership must play football at the FBS level" whereby those schools and others who are in position to make a move (such as UMass and Richmond) could make the jump.
Well, after a few years, they are faced with the same problem of more schools making the jump to FBS simply for DI basketball, and the BCS still leave.
So it's not competence, but rather a knee-jerk reaction that only prolongs the inevitable, and in the meantime reaps internal havoc among its membership.
Also, I think the NCAA still only has an interim President who has stated he was going to leave the membership decisions to his full-time successor. So I have to wonder if there will be an emergency NCAA meeting at some point this summer.
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Originally posted by TheAsianSensation View PostI'll change my mind and say Bradley > Duquesne. I can be swayed. Bradley would still then be #16 in a 16-team conference, which isn't exactly a vote of confidence here.
I think the thing is about Bradley, we probably don't make much with our Comcast broadcasts, but I bet viewership isn't bad. We're probably about a 350,000 person TV market (more if you include BloNo, but I don't think BU can lay claim to that market hehe) and Bradley would consistently own that market (particularly if playing on Nat TV against good opponents) and deliver strong viewership for each game. My professional trade is that of a buyer and my suppliers like to have a mix of big time cyclical customers (high peak, high margin customers who suffer from a lot of demand variability) and good consistent customers (lower margin but lower demand variability to ensure good baseline business all the time). That's how I view Bradley as a revenue stream, maybe a little unspectactular and without a chance of gaining that much significant viewership or attendance (though I think we could match Creighton with sustained success in a major league so ~14K-15K in time) but you know we're going to deliver a nice solid amount of revenue at all times.
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I think one thing a little lost in this is the non revenue sports.
If you start putting all these basketball only conferences all over the place with teams from Nebraska to NC to Mass the travel costs in non revenue sports will be difficult to accept.
It has to be a huge issue right now at at place like SLU, there isnt to much direct TV revenue to suppliment costs in the A-10. And if you start moving schools around and expand conferences who is going to pay for the softball teams of the worlds to travel everywhere.
Even more if the BCS's splitter off in basketball and that NCAA tourney money/CBS/ESPN money evaporates.
This is going to be a mess for the Bradleys of the world.
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Originally posted by squirrelgotdead View PostI don't know if I would call it competence, but rather faith in that the NCAA always gets it wrong.
In other words, the NCAA immediately recognizes the threat of losing it's biggest members. Therefore, out of desperation, it alienates 2/3rds of its money-making entities at the DI level by appeasing the BCS types.
And again, there will be a caveat that will likely say "Your league or x% of your league's membership must play football at the FBS level" whereby those schools and others who are in position to make a move (such as UMass and Richmond) could make the jump.
Well, after a few years, they are faced with the same problem of more schools making the jump to FBS simply for DI basketball, and the BCS still leave.
So it's not competence, but rather a knee-jerk reaction that only prolongs the inevitable, and in the meantime reaps internal havoc among its membership.
Also, I think the NCAA still only has an interim President who has stated he was going to leave the membership decisions to his full-time successor. So I have to wonder if there will be an emergency NCAA meeting at some point this summer.
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