I would say its close from middle to the top but the bottom is absolute garbage...ECU, Tulane
UConn and Tulsa are currently worse than anyone in the BE
national champs in 2014? If you are UConn fan and you were used to the Big East and the BE tourney and playing Gtown, Cuse, Nova, St Johns and now you are playing Tulane and Tulsa it must be rough
True, but at least for us Pikiell has cast a much wider net (actually targeting a lot of New England, usually UConn ground, but more national). Also, you dont get a ton of 4 player classes.With Uconn they should improve with Hurley
Unfortunately it is a win vs loss with other area schools.
- if they get some players it can impact Rutgers, BC, Seton Hall, or St Johns negatively since the schools are competing for the same players.
- if Hurley grabs 2 NJ recruits, 1 NYC recruit, and 1 Mass recruit it can be BC, SHU, RU, and SJU all losing a kid they wanted and having to settle for plan B.
In football Rutgers did that to Cuse when Schiano got Ray Rice and the mcCourty's away from Syracuse after they fired a coach.
BE is still well ahead of AAC at this point.
Ranking the kenpom averages of each school going back to 2013-14 (Wichita St only joined BE in 2017-18, and Tulsa/Tulane/ECU only joined in 2014-15), Big East in bold (# of Top 25 finishes):
7.8 - Villanova (5)
22.5 - Wichita St (5)
26.7 - Cincinnati (3)
32.8 - Xavier (3)
41.3 - Creighton (1)
43.7 - Butler (3)
46.3 - SMU (2)
53.0 - Providence
56.5 - SHU
62.5 - Marquette
67.0 - Georgetown (1)
81.5 - Houston (2)
81.7 - UConn (1)
88.2 - Memphis
94.3 - Temple
95.5 - SJU
102.2 - Tulsa
139.3 - UCF (1)
150.2 - Depaul
231.7 - USF
234.2 - Tulane
236.3 - East Carolina
Based on this thread and others, Objectivity is not an option when it comes to the BE. Jealousy, based on the success of the NJ member, is a possibility though.Timeout......
C'mon guys be objective. Big East is allowed a down year. The B1G has had 2 down years in the past 4.
Timeout......
We all hate Villanova, I get it.
Villanova had a down year because unexpectedly their team went to the NBA.
Looking at the last 4 years the Big East is better than the B1G and any analysis vs American is laughable.
2019
1. B1G
5. BE
6. AAC
2018
2. BE
4. B1G
7. AAC
2017
3. BE
4. B1G
7. AAC
2016
3. BE
6. B1G
7. AAC
C'mon guys be objective. Big East is allowed a down year. The B1G has had 2 down years in the past 4.
Timeout......
We all hate Villanova, I get it.
Villanova had a down year because unexpectedly their team went to the NBA.
Looking at the last 4 years the Big East is better than the B1G and any analysis vs American is laughable.
2019
1. B1G
5. BE
6. AAC
2018
2. BE
4. B1G
7. AAC
2017
3. BE
4. B1G
7. AAC
2016
3. BE
6. B1G
7. AAC
C'mon guys be objective. Big East is allowed a down year. The B1G has had 2 down years in the past 4.
With Uconn they should improve with Hurley
Unfortunately it is a win vs loss with other area schools.
- if they get some players it can impact Rutgers, BC, Seton Hall, or St Johns negatively since the schools are competing for the same players.
- if Hurley grabs 2 NJ recruits, 1 NYC recruit, and 1 Mass recruit it can be BC, SHU, RU, and SJU all losing a kid they wanted and having to settle for plan B.
In football Rutgers did that to Cuse when Schiano got Ray Rice and the mcCourty's away from Syracuse after they fired a coach.
Ray Rice, yes, and also Courtney Greene....but not the McCourtys from what I remember. I think Jason was considering BC but then he and Devin signed with Rutgers together.
I would say its close from middle to the top but the bottom is absolute garbage...ECU, Tulane
UConn and Tulsa are currently worse than anyone in the BE
First time posting on your board. I’m hoping not to make any enemies.The bottom of the B1G is usually worse than the bottom of the BE, but the top of the B1G is usually better than the top of the BE. So, the B1G usually has a higher number of better teams, but also a higher number of worse teams.
Comparing the B1G and BE over the last 5 years:
Overall Kenpom averages by year:
2018-19: B1G 38.6, BE 66.3
2017-18: B1G 57.9, BE 47.5
2016-17: B1G 57.4, BE 58.0
2015-16: B1G 80.2, BE 71.1
2014-15: B1G 63.9, BE 55.0
Looking at the average for the Top 5 in each year:
2018-19: B1G 11.2, BE 46.6
2017-18: B1G 10.6, BE 18.4
2016-17: B1G 27.0, BE 23.6
2015-16: B1G 14.0, BE 22.8
2014-15: B1G 18.4, BE 19.0
Taking out the best team in each year, and looking at the next 5:
2018-19: B1G 17.6, BE 54.8
2017-18: B1G 17.4, BE 28.8
2016-17: B1G 31.2, BE 33.4
2015-16: B1G 20.6, BE 31.4
2014-15: B1G 26.8, BE 28.0
Jealousy? Success? Hey man, id sign up for 4 straight tourney appearances no doubt, but after cheating you guys peaked at 1-4 in the tourney and havent made it past the opening weekend.Based on this thread and others, Objectivity is not an option when it comes to the BE. Jealousy, based on the success of the NJ member, is a possibility though.
First time posting on your board. I’m hoping not to make any enemies.
Great analysis. I'm curious how this looks if you did it based on percentages. Obviously B1G has 14 teams compared the big east only having 10, essentially by looking at the top third of the B1G and comparing it to the top half of the big east. How would these numbers look if you did something like top third or top half of each conference.
Fair point, but when has the big east routinely had 1 team in the top 25? This year yes. Prior to that Xavier was top 10 at points in a season. Kris Dunn and PC were top 15 for a while.From a perception angle, I think the overall strength top to bottom (or top half/bottom half) is less important than the number of teams battling it out for elite status, both in the regular season and the tournament.
Look at the ACC this year - plenty of bad schools (95 ND, 100 Pitt, 113 GTech, 120 Boston College, 170 Wake Forest).... but no one really looks at that because they have 5 teams in the Top 15 (1 UVA, 4 Duke, 6 UNC, 11 VTech, 14 FSU) that all made the Sweet 16. Their average kenpom rating is 59.9 (not that far ahead of the BE's 66.3), but I don't think anyone would be drawing any sort of comparison between the strengths of those two conferences this year.
When a conference is only routinely putting one school into the Top 25, people start drawing comparisons to lower conferences with just one "name" program (like Gonzaga is in the WCC, or what Wichita St was in the MWC)
BE is still well ahead of AAC at this point.
Ranking the kenpom averages of each school going back to 2013-14 (Wichita St only joined BE in 2017-18, and Tulsa/Tulane/ECU only joined in 2014-15), Big East in bold (# of Top 25 finishes):
7.8 - Villanova (5)
22.5 - Wichita St (5)
26.7 - Cincinnati (3)
32.8 - Xavier (3)
41.3 - Creighton (1)
43.7 - Butler (3)
46.3 - SMU (2)
53.0 - Providence
56.5 - SHU
62.5 - Marquette
67.0 - Georgetown (1)
81.5 - Houston (2)
81.7 - UConn (1)
88.2 - Memphis
94.3 - Temple
95.5 - SJU
102.2 - Tulsa
139.3 - UCF (1)
150.2 - Depaul
231.7 - USF
234.2 - Tulane
236.3 - East Carolina
UConn will join Big East in due time.......and its football will either go independent or down a level......only a matter of time.
This year much better----no doubt about it.
Can UCF and Temple maintain ?
We'll see
Can Wichita and UConn recover ?
We'll see
But this year...
Why would they give up FBS football revenue to make this move?
But giving up millions per year in revenue and moving to the Big East isn't going to magically make their basketball team better.because no one at UConn cares about football but they care about hoops and they are danger of becoming irrelevant...remember Calhoun is gone, they easily could end up like St Johns did for years
Fair point, but when has the big east routinely had 1 team in the top 25? This year yes. Prior to that Xavier was top 10 at points in a season. Kris Dunn and PC were top 15 for a while.
But giving up millions per year in revenue and moving to the Big East isn't going to magically make their basketball team better.
But they're not going to cut football altogether. So if they move their other sports to the BE, their choices for football are (1) Keep football in the AAC , (2) Move football to another FBS conference, (3) Keep football in FBS as an independent, or (4) Drop to FCS football.I have to assume their football team is venting money. If they were to make an administrative decision to cut their losses in football and focus on their other sports, I'd be curious to see if they ended up with a higher or lower net.
But they're not going to cut football altogether. So if they move their other sports to the BE, their choices for football are (1) Keep football in the AAC , (2) Move football to another FBS conference, (3) Keep football in FBS as an independent, or (4) Drop to FCS football.
I don't think the AAC would allow option 1. I don't think they would find a conference for option 2, but even if they did, it would mean lower revenue with no reduction in expense. Option 3 would mean lower revenue with higher expense, since they would need to buy some of their home games. Option 4 would mean much lower revenue with a slight decrease in expense. The cost savings for FCS are lower facilities costs (which doesn't apply to UConn since they have already built FBS facilitites), and lower scholarship costs. But scholarship costs are funny money, since the tuition portion gets paid to the university. The only real costs are the cost of room/board/expenses for the additional scholarship athletes, which is a couple hundred thousand dollars at most. No one in their right minds gives up millions in revenue to save thousands in expense.