MUScoop
MUScoop => Hangin' at the Al => Topic started by: muwarrior69 on October 24, 2014, 10:47:02 AM
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http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/11750375/big-east-conference-basketball-crossroads-entering-second-season
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I won't really argue, but it has that ESPN coat of oil all over it.
edited. OK. I read it more carefully. It is a POS.
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Ummmmm, it's a little early in the game to be at the crossroads. Of course, ESPN would love nothing more.
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Someone beat the Big East to Wikipedia to set the narrative. In Wikipedia, there are articles "about the former league that played from 1979-2013", for "its successor football-playing league, see American Athletic Conference", and for "the current league of the same name". The article about the "current league of the same name" shows all schools joining in 2013 or later.
Technically, I guess that the "Catholic Seven" formally left and formed a new league. But I doubt that this is what they had in mind when they negotiated for the Big East name. I would guess that this interpretation getting out there is a result of the "new" Big East getting a slow start with its web presence.
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I think Marquette is responsible for some heavy lifting as well given our string of success over the last decade and beyond. I think way too much emphasis is placed on the "old guard."
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I expected this to be a Myron Medcalf article talking about how much he knows about the Big East because he lived in Milwaukee.
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I think Marquette is responsible for some heavy lifting as well given our string of success over the last decade and beyond. I think way too much emphasis is placed on the "old guard."
Agreed the four best shots at keeping this conference relevant are MU GU VU and XU. By far the most successful, consistent, top teams in recent years.
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It's interesting that the article excludes Marquette from the "programs that straddle both the past and present Big East" while at the same time mentioning Louisville has a program relied on "to carry the league's banner." Didn't Marquette and Louisville both join in 2005?
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What another bad article put out by ESPN. ?-(
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It's interesting that the article excludes Marquette from the "programs that straddle both the past and present Big East" while at the same time mentioning Louisville has a program relied on "to carry the league's banner." Didn't Marquette and Louisville both join in 2005?
In all fairness we've been good but they've been great.
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Agreed the four best shots at keeping this conference relevant are MU GU VU and XU. By far the most successful, consistent, top teams in recent years.
Agreed but I think the real key is for one of the sleeping giants to wake up. SJU, Seton Hall, or Depaul are former greats in huge basketball markets. One of them taking off would be the greatest thing that could happen to the BEast. Ideally, it would be St. John's.
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Meh .. I doubt ESPN still has their panties in a bunch after losing the 5th best conference in the country.
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Agreed but I think the real key is for one of the sleeping giants to wake up. SJU, Seton Hall, or Depaul are former greats in huge basketball markets. One of them taking off would be the greatest thing that could happen to the BEast. Ideally, it would be St. John's.
Or Brad Stevens going back to Butler. But you're right, 4 teams can't carry the conference. It seems like Providence could get comfortable being the 5th best team and then as you pointed out St. Johns needs to get their act together.
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This article is much ado about nothing. We will see what happens over the next few years: which teams get hot, which recruit well, which get into the tourney and do well. The nucleus is there for a great basketball conference.
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Someone beat the Big East to Wikipedia to set the narrative. In Wikipedia, there are articles "about the former league that played from 1979-2013", for "its successor football-playing league, see American Athletic Conference", and for "the current league of the same name". The article about the "current league of the same name" shows all schools joining in 2013 or later.
Technically, I guess that the "Catholic Seven" formally left and formed a new league. But I doubt that this is what they had in mind when they negotiated for the Big East name. I would guess that this interpretation getting out there is a result of the "new" Big East getting a slow start with its web presence.
That is technially correct. Legally speaking, the AAC is the actually successor to the Big East. They sold us the name. 99.9% of the population does not know the difference or care, but we are technically a new conference.
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Someone beat the Big East to Wikipedia to set the narrative. In Wikipedia, there are articles "about the former league that played from 1979-2013", for "its successor football-playing league, see American Athletic Conference", and for "the current league of the same name". The article about the "current league of the same name" shows all schools joining in 2013 or later.
That is actually what occurred.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
That article is 100% fair.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
That article is 100% fair.
Yep. Performance will be the ultimate test. Need to win NC games, get tourney bids and wins. Hopefully, th good recruiting for the 2014 and 2015 classes will help getting there.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
I don't find the article particularly heinous, but ESPN has an agenda in everything it does. I think a lot of fanbases go too far with it or overhype it but ESPN has a slant to everything it does.
It is not a media organization, it is an entertainment organization. They own the SEC network and have a vested interest in it's success.....plug in the hype machine. ESPN is a competitor to the Big Ten Network, hence a bias against the Big Ten. Same goes with the Big East. Etc. The revenue dollars color the coverage.
They are financially invested in hyping some things and down playing others. I don't think it's huge by any stretch of the imagine but to dismiss it as not a thing is disingenuous.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
That article is 100% fair.
Calling anything "at the crossroads" after a single year is not "100% fair".
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Calling anything "at the crossroads" after a single year is not "100% fair".
Whatever. It's a word. I don't think it is a terribly inaccurate one either. ::)
That being said, there really is no evidence to suggest it was used in a negative way on purpose.
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Well, if Bert didn't crap the bed last year the conference would have had a higher profile. Same for G'town. Neither one did. Articles are there to get people to talk, the Big Ten has been crapped on for football the last decade plus. Don't lose sleep over this article, play better and it takes care of itself.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
That article is 100% fair.
but there was no point in what Dana was saying. Yes, the sky is blue. I thought Val did a great job in her speech. Her job is different in what Mike had to deal with.
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I was under the impression that many of you were "boycotting" espn. It's interesting that so many of their articles are linked here while almost none from foxsports are linked. Strange.
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It only takes one person to post it. I do like CBSSportline.
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but there was no point in what Dana was saying. Yes, the sky is blue. I thought Val did a great job in her speech. Her job is different in what Mike had to deal with.
OK...so you simply want sunshine blown up your ass.
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I was under the impression that many of you were "boycotting" espn. It's interesting that so many of their articles are linked here while almost none from foxsports are linked. Strange.
Nah, peeps just boycotting Thursday night football....ESPN is still in the target acquired mode.
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OK...so you simply want sunshine blown up your ass.
That'd be the Worst sunburn ever
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Meet me at the crossroads.
(http://stream1.gifsoup.com/webroot/animatedgifs/109047_o.gif)
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The article is typical ESPN in that it paints the Big East as "at a crossroads" in an attempt to build up its beloved ACC without offering any alternative solution to what the C7 schools could have done differently. Obviously the college sports landscape is light years different than it was back in 1979. And the day the Big East got into the football business was the day Dave Gavitt's "vision" started to slowly die. The conference will continue to improve and find its way, it just takes a bit of time.
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People are boycotting Thurs night football? This is a thing?
Weird.
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At least the Big East was on the front page.
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At least the Big East was on the front page.
"The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about."
---Oscar Wilde
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That is technially correct. Legally speaking, the AAC is the actually successor to the Big East. They sold us the name. 99.9% of the population does not know the difference or care, but we are technically a new conference.
That is actually what occurred.
Do either of you guys -or anyone else for that matter- know whether either The (new) Big East or the American Athletic is keeping the records for the (old) Big East? In other words, did Villanova just win its first conference regular season championship?
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Big East keeps the historical records. The American is starting fresh.
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If anything, I would consider the AAC at a crossroads.
They have 5 teams in football that have 3 or fewer wins, 3 of which have 1 or fewer wins (SMU still has zero). They are 3-17 against P5 teams this season, in addition to having an 8-26 record against other conferences. They have 7 schools that average below 30,000 people at home games. including 4 schools that average under 60% capacity.
In basketball, they had 5 schools in 2013-14 that had a 140 RPI or lower (Houston-143, Temple-179, Rutgers-196, UCF-215, and USF-227). This year, by replacing Louisville (19) and Rutgers with ECU and Tulane, they will now be adding the 219th and 223rd ranked teams in RPI last year. They really lucked out by piggy-backing the success of UCONN's championship season.
The AAC used the exact same colors, imagery and former schools of Conference USA, doing absolutely nothing to displace public opinion that the AAC is not a power conference, and nothing more than just a best-of-the rest conference. The league has a mixture of Southern, Midwestern and Northeastern schools that are public and private, with some focusing on basketball and others football. The AAC, not the Big East, is in much more trouble long term IMHO.
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Lists Providence and Seton Hall as heavy lifters. Fails to mention Marquettes Ncaa tournament runs since 2010.
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Lists Providence and Seton Hall as heavy lifters. Fails to mention Marquettes Ncaa tournament runs since 2010.
Apparently the first 26 years matter but not the last nine, so what we do doesn't matter since nobody associates us with the Big East. All eyes are on Seton Hall to champion the conference. ::)
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If anything, I would consider the AAC at a crossroads.
They have 5 teams in football that have 3 or fewer wins, 3 of which have 1 or fewer wins (SMU still has zero). They are 3-17 against P5 teams this season, in addition to having an 8-26 record against other conferences. They have 7 schools that average below 30,000 people at home games. including 4 schools that average under 60% capacity.
In basketball, they had 5 schools in 2013-14 that had a 140 RPI or lower (Houston-143, Temple-179, Rutgers-196, UCF-215, and USF-227). This year, by replacing Louisville (19) and Rutgers with ECU and Tulane, they will now be adding the 219th and 223rd ranked teams in RPI last year. They really lucked out by piggy-backing the success of UCONN's championship season.
The AAC used the exact same colors, imagery and former schools of Conference USA, doing absolutely nothing to displace public opinion that the AAC is not a power conference, and nothing more than just a best-of-the rest conference. The league has a mixture of Southern, Midwestern and Northeastern schools that are public and private, with some focusing on basketball and others football. The AAC, not the Big East, is in much more trouble long term IMHO.
+1
The AAC is gonna be the east coast WCC. A crappy conference with three really strong programs at the top
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+1
The AAC is gonna be the east coast WCC. A crappy conference with three really strong programs at the top
But those three programs are much better than Gonzaga. And the quality of a conference, fairly or unfairly, is judged in part by the quality at the top.
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God am I tired of the "blame ESPN" approach to everything. You see it with PSU fans and Sandusky...you see it with FSU fans and Winston...and here.
That article is 100% fair.
Not questioning the fairness of the article as much as ESPN seems to attack and question non-ESPN entities more than their own. Rather, they say more positive things about their own than others.
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Not questioning the fairness of the article as much as ESPN seems to attack and question non-ESPN entities more than their own. Rather, they say more positive things about their own than others.
Is this post sarcasm? I hope it is...but I'm not really sure it is.
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I don't find the article particularly heinous, but ESPN has an agenda in everything it does. I think a lot of fanbases go too far with it or overhype it but ESPN has a slant to everything it does.
It is not a media organization, it is an entertainment organization. They own the SEC network and have a vested interest in it's success.....plug in the hype machine. ESPN is a competitor to the Big Ten Network, hence a bias against the Big Ten. Same goes with the Big East. Etc. The revenue dollars color the coverage.
They are financially invested in hyping some things and down playing others. I don't think it's huge by any stretch of the imagine but to dismiss it as not a thing is disingenuous.
+1
I think some of the "Blame ESPN" on here is a little overdone, and sometimes people seem to seek it out. But to discard that they have a slant to suit their interests is a bit naive and it can be noticed in pieces they write.
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I don't find the article particularly heinous, but ESPN has an agenda in everything it does. I think a lot of fanbases go too far with it or overhype it but ESPN has a slant to everything it does.
It is not a media organization, it is an entertainment organization. They own the SEC network and have a vested interest in it's success.....plug in the hype machine. ESPN is a competitor to the Big Ten Network, hence a bias against the Big Ten. Same goes with the Big East. Etc. The revenue dollars color the coverage.
They are financially invested in hyping some things and down playing others. I don't think it's huge by any stretch of the imagine but to dismiss it as not a thing is disingenuous.
It has a news division and an entertainment division. I have many friends that work in the business\entertainment division and they don't talk to the news \ editorial side. Church and state. If you read all the negative articles on Goodell and the NFL during the Ray Rice stuff, that would come out pretty clearly. The business guys were wincing every time the editorial side did a piece. Let's just say I find it a lot less agenda driven than say the agenda driven stuff around policies, etc...see Sheryl Attkisson's book release over the weekend as an example.
It's college basketball season, the Big East wasn't particularly good last year and articles get written about things like this. No one at ESPN business side is ordering hit pieces on the Big East or the Big Ten, etc. The Big Ten gets skewered because it isn't very good, they're just reporting the reality of it. Last year, the Big East wasn't very good, quite frankly.
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+1
I think some of the "Blame ESPN" on here is a little overdone, and sometimes people seem to seek it out. But to discard that they have a slant to suit their interests is a bit naive and it can be noticed in pieces they write.
I don't see it.....every fan base rips ESPN, do they have a slant against every single conference, league, team?
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Keep in mind that the article was written by Dana O'Neil, who, if I remember correctly, graduated from Villanova (and also covered them as a local beat reporter for some Philly newspaper).
I read the article and it didn't come off as super anti BE or anything. However, I didn't like that she basically claimed that MU and DePaul were never essential BE programs, but Louisville was. I get that Louisville did more in the BE than we did, but still, I read it as her trying to have it both ways--the BE has been fully dismantled, in part by the addition of new programs (e.g., Butler, MU, Depaul, etc), and in part by the loss of key programs (eg, Syracuse, UCONN, and Louisville, etc). Which is it? Were the CUSA expats key programs that helped the BE brand, or were they new programs that really did nothing to add to the BE brand. But I think this quasi-cherry picking is just her trying to fit the narrative of her story qua author not qua ESPN employee. Furthermore, keep in mind that I call this cherry-picking because I am an MU fan.
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I don't think people, in general, are blaming ESPN for anything. They're criticizing clearly slanted writing. Specifically regarding this article, O'Neil may have previously covered Nova but she writes like she hasn't seen a thing from the BE since then or, at least, since the league grew almost 10 years ago. I don't know if she was covering Nova then, but she definitely writes in this article as if she was not and hasn't paid any attention since then, either.
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I hardly would call this "clearly slanted writing." By and large I think people are over-sensitive when things have a negative tone, and blame the source and some sort of perceived bias.
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Not questioning the fairness of the article as much as ESPN seems to attack and question non-ESPN entities more than their own. Rather, they say more positive things about their own than others.
I just a commercial that advertised motor oil. The company said it was superior to "other brands." So shameful.
Remember the PC vs Apple commercials? The fat, nerd in a suit said he was good at spreadsheets. The cool hipster that represented Apple said he liked photos, videos and super cool things. I thought to myield, can't we all get along? Why does there have to be competition?
I walked to a nearby Italian restaurant tonight and asked the owner what his thoughts were on the new Italian restaurant that opened two blocks away. He said, "I love everything about it. The menu, the service, and the atmosphere are wonderful. In fact, if you can't find me here at my restaurant, I'm probably down the street at my competitors place eating dinner with my family."
::)
I thought I would add to the stupidity of this thread.
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Suggesting a league is "at a crossroads" after one year is stupid.
Suggesting that stupid word choice is a result of some ESPN conspiracy is equally stupid.
It's a stupid story, something ESPN produces regularly almost by its very nature. Nothing more.
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Big East keeps the historical records. The American is starting fresh.
That's where the American Athletic being the continuation of the (old) big East and the (new) Big East being the brand new conference becomes confusing, even if it is accurate.