Ivy League Media Day Recap and Response

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MEDIA DAY PRESEASON POLL:

  1. Yale
  2. Harvard
  3. Princeton
  4. Penn
  5. Brown
  6. Dartmouth
  7. Cornell
  8. Columbia

 

COMMENTS FROM DAVID:

-It’s never easy to forecast how a season is going to go.  That’s why so many preseason predictions, even the ones that come from experts, end up being flat-out wrong.  It’s also the reason that we don’t really make predictions anymore, but rather just try and offer a few notes on each team.  With that being said, doing that for a conference where none of the teams played a season ago won’t be easy.

-Yale is the preseason favorite and they appear to have a strong perimeter led by SR G Azar Swain.  They have been the class of the league in recent years and appear to be close to the top again.

-I was really excited about Harvard’s team last year, and was kind of disappointed when the Ivy opted not to play.  A lot of guys that would have been on the team last year graduated and moved on and it’s kind of hard to know what to make of them.  They’ve got a lot of new players so I guess we will see once the season starts.

– Princeton returns a lot of players who were in contributing roles two seasons ago, and that experience should help them out this year.

-Penn has what appears to be a strong backcourt and could have a decent frontcourt as well with some players being back from injury.

-Tamenang Choh is back for Brown and that should give them some experience this year.  It’s hard to say how much help he is going to get.

-Brendan Barry transferred from Dartmouth to Temple last year…and has now transferred back.  He should be able to give them a boost as well but they may still be in for a long season.

-Neither Cornell or Columbia had good years the last time we had an Ivy League season, and chances are this year will be a struggle for them as well.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews ASU SR SF Kimani Lawrence

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We are keeping our fingers crossed in the hope that we can return to a “normal” version of college basketball this fall: fans in the stands, announcers without masks, etc. Nobody knows exactly what is going to happen but we will try to restore some order with season previews featuring the best players/coaches in the country. We continue our coverage with ASU SR SF Kimani Lawrence. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Kimani about being a veteran leader and his expectations for this season.

You were born/raised in Rhode Island: what made you choose ASU? I wanted to go to a school that needed me and at the time Coach Bobby Hurley did not have all of his guys here yet. I felt it would be the best place for me to get onto the court right away.

What makes Hurley such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him so far? He has taught me the importance of competing regardless of the game situation. He is really good at connecting with his players, especially since he was a big-time college player himself, so we have a lot of respect for him.

In December of 2018 you scored 7 PTS in a 4-PT win over an undefeated Kansas team: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? It is definitely 1 of my favorite ASU moments: it is up there.

1 of your biggest heroes is Kobe Bryant: what was your reaction when you learned that he died last year? It was really sad, especially with his daughter Gianna and several other people also dying in the helicopter crash.

Last February you had 21 PTS/20 REB in an 8-PT win over Washington: where does that rank among the best all-around games of your career? That was definitely my best game as a Sun Devil.

Your FG%/FT% both went way up from 2020 to 2021: how were you able to improve so much in just 1 year? Just simplifying the game, moving more without the ball, and being more aggressive. It helped my confidence and took my game to another level.

After 3 straight 20-win seasons you went 11-14 last year: what will it take to turn things around this season? 1 of our biggest problems last season was not being on the court enough with each other due to COVID/injuries. The big thing this year is to just learn each other’s game and create a bond off the court so that we can gel on the court.

There are 10 newcomers on the roster this year: how much pressure is there on you to be a veteran leader? Coach Hurley trusted me to help get the new players to buy in. Being a veteran I know what is expected of the players. The newcomers are all high-character guys who want to win so there was not much pressure once I got to know them: there is a mutual level of respect and we all get along.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against San Diego State/Baylor/Creighton and either VCU or Syracuse: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? There is not 1 specific game that stands out, but the Battle 4 Atlantis in the Bahamas is a big-time opportunity to show that we can compete with Baylor and other high-level teams.

What are your goals for this season, and what are your expectations for this season? My biggest goal is just winning, since that will help us all get to where we want to be individually. This is my last year: next year I hope to play professionally and winning this year will give me the best opportunity to do so. If you look at a championship team like Villanova from a few years ago you can see how many of their players went pro.

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Happy Anniversary!: HoopsHD interviews Hall of Famer George Gervin

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Ask a non-basketball fan about “The Iceman” and they might respond that it was a terrible sci-fi film from the 1980s about a prehistoric man who gets resuscitated. Ask a basketball fan and they will tell you that the real Iceman was George Gervin, who earlier this month was named 1 of the 75 greatest players in NBA history. His sensational scoring ability revealed itself during his sophomore year at Eastern Michigan when he scored 29.5 PPG in 1972. After joining the San Antonio Spurs he won the 1978 scoring title by scoring 63 points in the final game of the regular season (including a then-NBA record 33 points in the 2nd quarter) while sitting out the entire 4th quarter. He won 3 more scoring titles during a 4-year span from 1979-1982, finishing his career with the most scoring titles of any guard in NBA history prior to some guy named Michael Jordan. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with George about his famous “finger roll” and being a great scorer. Today marks the 25th anniversary of George being named 1 of the 50 greatest players in NBA history on October 29, 1996, so we take this time to celebrate his legacy.

As a kid you played basketball at a cousin’s house with a young neighbor named Ralph Simpson (who later was your teammate on the West squad in the 1975 ABA All-Star Game): who was the better player growing up, and what was it like to finally become his teammate a couple of decades later? Ralph was the better player back then: we all admired him when we were growing up. He does not get enough credit for his game in college. We played a lot during the summer and I am truly a fan.

Virginia Squires scout Johnny Kerr allegedly saw you score 52 PTS for the Pontiac Chaparrals in the Eastern Basketball Association and then signed you to a contract for $40,000/year, but another rumor is that you made 22-25 3-PT shots at a tryout for Virginia and they immediately signed you without ever having seen you play an actual game: which is the real story? Johnny saw me playing for a semi-pro team and I scored about 38 PPG: he happened to be at a game where I scored 52 and they flew me in for a tryout. I made a ton of threes and they signed me on the spot.

In the winter of 1974 Virginia owner Earl Foreman sold you to San Antonio and then changed his mind, followed by Spurs owner Angelo Drossos filing a lawsuit and a judge granting a permanent injunction allowing you to play for Spurs: what was it like to watch your career being decided in a court of law? You never want to end up in the court system. It was tough for me to go through that as a 20-year old but it showed me how the basketball business worked.

Your trademark move was the finger roll, which you could do from as far away as the FT line: how did you 1st develop the move, and what made it so effective? Wilt Chamberlain/Dr. J/Connie Hawkins each had their own version of the move: I studied how they did it and then created my own type to make it famous.

In Game 7 of the 1976 ABA Semifinals you scored a game-high 31 PTS in a 7-PT loss to eventual champion New York: how difficult was it for you to switch from forward to guard after teammate James Silas got hurt? It was pretty easy for me because I was only 185 pounds at the time: it helped change my entire career when I became a 2-guard. I fought it at 1st but it became real easy for me.

Take me through the final day of the 1978 NBA season:
You needed to score 59 PTS to edge out David Thompson for the scoring title after Thompson had scored 73 PTS only hours earlier: did you think you still had a chance to overtake him? I did not really think about it at the time but Coach Doug Moe found out and told me what I had to do.

You started off your own game at New Orleans by missing 6 six straight shots/calling timeout/asking your teammates to give up the chase, but they ignored your request and you ended up scoring a career-high 63 PTS in only 33 minutes while sitting out the entire 4th quarter in a loss to win the scoring title: how on earth did you score a then-NBA-record 33 PTS in the 2nd quarter, and what did it mean to you to win the scoring title? It was my 1st scoring title: the beauty of having a good relationship with my team is that they set picks for me and gave me the ball. They kept edging me on and I ended up with 53 PTS in the 1st half. I technically scored 59…but made sure to score a few more in case they miscalculated!

You led the NBA in scoring each year from 1978-1980 (including a high of 33.1 PPG in 1980) and again in 1982, and your career 25.1 PPG remains #10 all-time: what is your secret for being a great scorer? I was fundamentally sound and knew how to score. I could drive to the basket or shoot off the dribble and I made a lot of in-between shots so scoring was easy for me: it all came from preparation.

Take me through the 1979 playoffs:
You had 33 PTS/12 REB and made 2 FT with 11 seconds left to clinch a 3-PT win over Philly in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals: how big a deal was it to finally win a 7-game playoff series victory after the Spurs had lost each of their 9 previous 7-game series? Philly had Dr. J. at the time and I had a lot of respect for him so it was a big win for our franchise.

You scored 42 PTS in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals but Bob Dandridge made a 16-footer over 3 defenders with 8 seconds left in a 2-PT win by Washington to win the series after coming back from 3-1 deficit: did you agree with Coach Doug Moe that the refs were to blame after calling 7 fouls against your team in the final 4 minutes? We could have become the 1st ABA franchise to get to the NBA Finals. I do not blame the refs…but the lights went out in the building for 12 minutes which totally ruined our momentum, and once they came back on the Bullets got their own momentum.

In the 1984 NBA All-Star game you scored 13 PTS in a 9-PT OT loss: how on earth did your West team lose despite fielding a Hall of Fame starting lineup of you/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar/Magic Johnson/Alex English/Adrian Dantley? I still do not believe that we lost while having such an amazing team: I guess you have to give the East a lot of credit. I thought we had that 1 in the bag but it just goes to show that anything can happen in the All-Star Game.

In 1996 you were inducted into the Hall of Fame and named 1 of the NBA’s 50 Greatest of all-time: where do these honors rank among the highlights of your career? I want to be remembered as 1 of the greats who had a tremendous impact on the game of basketball. I loved the game and played it the way that it was supposed to be played.

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Horizon League Media Day Recap and Response

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HORIZON LEAGUE MEDIA DAY PRESEASON POLL:

  1. Cleveland State
  2. Wright State
  3. Northern Kentucky
  4. Milwaukee
  5. Detroit Mercy
  6. Oakland
  7. Youngstown State
  8. UIC
  9. PFW
  10. Robert Morris
  11. Green Bay
  12. IUPUI

 

MEDIA DAY ALL CONFERENCE 1ST TEAM:

-Torrey Patton – Cleveland State
-Antoine Davis – Detroit Mercy (Preseason Player of the Year)
-Patrick Baldwin Jr. – Milwaukee
-Jalen Moore – Oakland
-Grant Basile – Wright State

MEDIA DAY ALL  CONFERENCE 2ND TEAM:

-DeAndre Gholston – Milwaukee
-Trevon Faulkner – Northern Kentucky
-Marques Warrick – Northern Kentucky
-Jarred Godfrey – PFW
-Tanner Holden – Wright State

 

COMMENTS FROM DAVID:

-I’ll start with this.  The conference has opted for a full double round robin despite having 12 teams: that’s 22 league games!  That limits the number of OOC opportunities and I’m not sure how good that is for the teams at the top of the league.

-Cleveland State was last year’s first place team and conference tournament winner.  All five starters are back, so they are clearly the frontrunners this year.  The question is are they good enough to play their way inside the bubble?  Dennis Gates has done a fantastic job as coach, the team has balanced scoring and a lot of threats, and has the depth they need to really make some noise this year.

-Wright State is another team to keep an eye on.  Four starters are back from a team that tied for first last year, and Coach Scott Nagy once again appears to have a team that can contend for the top of the league and play their way into a position to where they can make a postseason tournament such as the CIT if they come up short of the auto-bid.  They have good outside shooting, balanced scoring, and a lot of weapons all around.

-Northern Kentucky has been a force in the league since the time they joined it, and they have the makings of another good team this year.  Four returning starters give them some pretty good experience, and considering how well they played down the stretch a year ago they should be one of the horses in the race for the top of the league.

-Milwaukee signed Patrick Baldwin Jr., who was one of the top recruits in the nation.  That’s why they are being voted as high as 4th after a season where they posted a losing conference record and didn’t have many other pieces coming back.  That’s a lot of weight to put on the shoulders of a true freshman, but he certainly has given this program a big jolt of energy.  Coach Pat Baldwin Sr. did a fantastic job of recruiting his son!!

-Detroit Mercy had a very respectable season last year where they finished 4th in the league.  While they lost some key players, Antoine Davis is back, who is perhaps the best player in the entire conference.  I don’t know how much he’ll have in the way of help, but it goes without saying that this team will be relying heavily on him.

-Oakland finished in the middle of the pack a year ago, has three starters back from that team, and given the way things are looking I expect them to kind of finish in the middle of the league again this year.  They do have a fantastic player in PG Jalen Moore.  He’ll need some help if they want to finish far up the standings, though.

-Youngstown State has posted back to back winning seasons for the first time in…well…I don’t know exactly how long, but it is not something they do very often!  The bad news is they lost some key players.  The good news is they’ve added some transfers that should be able to help them out.  I don’t know why, but the Penguins are a team that we always seem to have a soft spot for and hopefully they can continue to grow their program.

-UIC returns three starters and looks to have added some key transfers.  I’m not ready to pick them at the top of the league but they do have reason to be optimistic.

-PFW has four starters back, but seeing as how they only won 8 games a year ago and finished at the bottom of the league, it’s hard to say just how improved they are going to be.

-Robert Morris had some pretty good years in the NEC, but last year was not one of them, and it’s not looking all that promising for this season either.  They have added some transfers to try and get some help right away, but after winning just four games a year ago it’s hard to project them to finish that high from the bottom.

-Green Bay and IUPUI could also be in for long seasons.

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West Coast Conference Media Day Recap and Response

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WEST COAST MEDIA DAY PRESEASON POLL:

  1. Gonzaga
  2. BYU
  3. Saint Mary’s
  4. LMU
  5. San Francisco
  6. Santa Clara
  7. Pepperdine
  8. Pacific
  9. San Diego
  10. Portland

 

WEST COAST MEDIA DAY PRESEASON ALL CONFERENCE TEAM:

-Alex Barcello – SR,G -BYU
-Jamaree Bouyea – SR,G – San Francisco
-Logan Johnson – SR, G – Saint Mary’s
-Caleb Lohner – SO, F – BYU
-Andrew Nembhard – SR, G – Gonzaga
-Eli Scott – SR, G/F – LMU
-Khalil Shabazz – SR, G – San Francisco
-Drew Timme – JR, F – Gonzaga
-Josip Vrankic – SR, F – Santa Clara
-Jalen Williams – JR, G – Santa Clara

 

COMMENTS FROM DAVID:

-Gonzaga has had five straight 30+ win seasons.  I’m not sure if that has ever been done before in the history of college basketball.  To be fair, the UCLA teams in the 1960s/1970s played fewer games and most likely would have done it, but that is a hell of a run.  They’ve also been the national runner-up twice during that run.  So, the fact that they are beginning this season ranked #1 shouldn’t be a surprise.  They could hold on to that ranking for quite a while.  They are once again a solid Final Four/national title contender.  They did lose some key players but appeared to have just reloaded on talent.  It is very likely that they will once again just run away from the rest of the conference.

-BYU will be moving on to the Big 12 after this season.  As for this season, they are coming off an NCAA Tournament appearance from a year ago and despite losing three starters I like their chances to get back there this year.  Two of their top three scorers are back and they appear to have some guys who are ready to step in to bigger roles.

-We are used to seeing Saint Mary’s near the top of the standings and inside the NCAA Tournament bubble, but they had a bit of a down year last year and are looking to bounce back.  All five starters are back so the experience should help them out.  They also have some key players back that they lost to injury last season so expect to see quite a bit of improvement out of the Gaels.

-After four straight 20+ win seasons, San Francisco took a step back last season winning just 11 games overall and finishing just 4-9 in WCC play.  They do have some experience back but they’ll need to show substantial improvement if they want to get back in the top half of the standings and contend for a postseason bid.  Now having said that, it wouldn’t shock me at all if they were able to make huge improvements.  Truth be told I’m a little surprised that they’re not getting more preseason love.  They appear to have a very strong backcourt and a good enough frontcourt to where they can make quite a bit of noise this year.

-LMU is another team with all five starters back.  They had a nice season last year where they finished third and were looking pretty good at the end of the season.  This is a program that appears to be heading in the right direction and could take another big step forward this year.

-I seem to pick Santa Clara as a dark horse every year, and while I think they do have potential they haven’t ever come through the way that I thought they would.  They have three double-digit scoring starters back and some key transfers, as well as some guys who can step into bigger roles.  They have all the ingredients of being a dark horse again this year!!  I guess I haven’t learned my lesson because I’m going to once again pick them as a dark horse.

-Pepperdine was a very respectable 7-6 in the league last year and with three starters back they shouldn’t be completely dismissed or overlooked.  They also add some key transfers which should help them out.

-Pacific is coming off a 9-9 season, but they did win three of their last four heading into the conference tournament and with three starters back they may be able to continue that momentum into this season.  They have a fairly solid backcourt and will look to get some help from some transfer players.

-Portland and San Diego are bringing up the rear.  Portland didn’t win a single game last year and with all five starters gone get the chance to kind of reboot.  San Diego returns three starters from a team that won just two conference games a year ago, one of which was against…Portland.

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Puppet Ramblings: A Statement Regarding Next Month’s NCAA Special Convention

If the Power Five creates their own division within the NCAA, or leaves the NCAA entirely, I seriously doubt I’ll even care about college basketball anymore.

That’s not a threat.  I wish it were, but the reality is I’m not in a position of any real power or influence, so I couldn’t make it a threat even if I wanted to.  It’s just a statement as to what my feelings are.  I just won’t care anymore.  I probably won’t watch it nearly as often, and I probably won’t be interested in doing all that much with Hoops HD anymore.  I suspect that I am far from the only person that feels this way.  I believe that millions of other people (maybe even tens of millions) feel the same way.  But, I don’t know that for a fact.  I only know how I feel about it, and that’s pretty much how I feel.

To bring you up to speed, the NCAA released a statement today, which was really just bunch of words that said nothing more than that they had met and they had a plan.  Geez, THAT’S GREAT!!!  (CLICK HERE TO READ THE STATEMENT).  What we know at this point is that a new “Transformation Committee” has been created, and that there is a Special Convention next month, and that the topic at hand is possibly creating a new division within the NCAA.  That’s really all we know.  What we don’t know for certain, but that may be of high concern, is that the changes being discussed will consist of the Power Five/Autonomy Five (ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac 12) becoming their own division, and threatening to leave the NCAA altogether if that doesn’t happen.

We’ve heard these rumblings for close to 30 years now, and perhaps even longer than that.  We’ve heard them for so long that it has become very easy to ignore them.  It’s a fire alarm in a college dorm.  It always goes off, but the building is never on fire, so you just start ignoring it.  I don’t think we should ignore it this time.  The building may actually be on fire.  The moans and groans from the P5 as to how unhappy they are with the NCAA seem to have grown in both size and sound.  It’s now louder, and bigger, and coming from more people.  In some cases, I can kind of understand the gripes.  They don’t feel that some of the NCAA rules, and policies, and governance that has been put in place for low performing Under the Radar schools is in the best interests of the P5 schools and they don’t want to be bound by it.  But my response to that is that they already have a great deal of autonomy, so I don’t quite understand why they would need to form their own division to get the governance that they want.

Another, perhaps bigger, issue is the revenue sharing.  They feel they should get more of it.  Okay, I can understand that.  That’s only natural.  But, my response to this is that they already get more of it.  A LOT more of it!!  So one of the questions I have for them is how much more they think they can actually get by creating their own division and/or leaving the NCAA altogether??  And…from where would more money come from??

Do they think it will come from TV??  Every conference has its own independent media deal.  The Big Ten, Pac 12, ACC, and SEC even have their own networks.  Their membership with the NCAA does not require them to share any of that.  So, how would leaving the NCAA result in them getting any more money from TV??

Do they think it will come from football??  The College Football Playoff (CFP) does share revenue with all ten conferences (meaning both the P5 and the G5), but the lions share of it goes to the P5, and the access to the playoff itself is so slanted toward the P5 that it practically an exclusively a P5 event.  It TECHNICALLY isn’t, but it PRACTICALLY is.  No non-P5 team has ever been selected for the CFP, and while Cincinnati may be selected this year, they will also become a P5 program next year.  The NCAA has no control at all over the CFP.  It is not an NCAA Championship Event.  No NCAA trophy is awarded.  There is no required shared revenue throughout the NCAA membership.  So with that in mind, when it comes to FBS football, the P5 has practically pretty much already left the NCAA.  They have their own championship that is pretty much exclusively for their own teams and while not all the revenue goes to them, it might as well because the share that the G5 gets is so much less.

And now for the big question…Do they think it will come from having their own basketball tournament??  If that’s what they think, then I STRONGLY believe they are wrong!  It is my understanding that the current NCAA Tournament basically generates $1.1 billion a year in revenue just from the TV deal with CBS/Turner.  And yes, unlike football, that revenue is shared throughout the entire NCAA D1 membership, and it also goes to fund other championships for other sports throughout all three NCAA divisions.  If the P5 is looking at that and thinking “Why do we have to share that $1.1 billion with the rest of the NCAA??  Why can’t we keep that all for ourselves??” then I think they are hugely underestimating the appeal that the non-p5 teams have on the NCAA Tournament.  People like to watch the good teams from the Under the Radar conferences play against the P5 caliber teams in the early rounds.  They’d much rather watch Abilene Christian, or North Texas, or New Mexico State, or Loyola Chicago, or any number of good Under the Radar teams play against good P5 teams than watch bad P5 teams with .300 records play against good P5 teams.  We get games like that all season long, and they are objectively not compelling to watch.

If the P5 formed their own division and staged their own tournament with just the 69 teams that are members of those conferences, I’m not saying there wouldn’t be any interest in it at all.  But,I do not think there’d be an annual $1.1 billion dollars worth of interest in it.  Not even close.  And that tournament would not feel at all like what the NCAA Tournament currently feels like to the fans.  Not even close.  And, yeah while there may be way less money than the over a billion it makes now, I get that they’d only be splitting it 69 ways instead of 358 ways, but here’s the thing…not all 358 schools get the same amount under the current structure.  It’s the total number of games that the members of a conference play that determines the payouts.  If your conference has a lot of teams qualify and wins a lot of games, then they’ll get higher dollar amount.  So, in a typical year, the P5 schools get a larger share of the money than most other conferences.  How much more can they really make by just having their own tournament??  I’d venture to say that it wouldn’t be a substantial amount.  It may even come out to less.  But…okay, let’s just say for the sake of argument that they can make a little bit more per school by going it on their own.  I am not conceding that point, but am merely supposing it.  My question is would it really be worth it??  Because, you know what would NOT increase??  The brightness of the spotlight that would be on the event.  I think it would be significantly dimmer, ESPECIALLY for the 48ish games that make up the first couple of rounds of their tournament.   When it comes to branding, and marketing, and all of those so-called “intangibles” that the NCAA Tournament can provide for an institution, is making a little more money worth performing on a smaller stage??  My feelings are that it is definitely not.

So my final thought is this….

We’ve all heard this statement many times.  “There’s nothing like March Madness!  There’s nothing like the NCAA Tournament!”  And you know what…there really isn’t!  But let’s look at one of the major things that makes it unlike anything else.  It really is tangible to just about everyone!!  The NFL Playoffs are great, but not  everyone lives in an NFL city, and many of those people who don’t probably don’t care about the playoffs nearly as much.  Same with the NBA.  Same with the MLB.  When it comes to the FBS College Football Playoff and Bowl Games, I would argue that those actually aren’t that great at all.  Anyone who is not a member of a select group of conferences is practically shut out no matter how good they are.  But the NCAA Basketball Tournament??  that IS great!!  It truly is a great event!!  You don’t need to live in a pro sports town.  You don’t need to have some sort of exclusive tie-in to a particular conference or group of conferences the way you do with college football.  Teams have to be good to make it to the NCAA Tournament, but all 358 D1 schools have a path to it.  If you live in a small town and went to a Southland school, or an OVC school, or an MVC school, you can still be a part of it.  Your school has a path to it.  That’s why it’s great.  That’s what will be ruined if the P5 opts for their own division.  And…if that happens…you know what you’ll never hear anyone say anymore??  “There is nothing like March Madness!!”  You know WHY you won’t hear that anymore??  Because it will no longer be true.

So even if they do think they can make more money (which, again, may not even be the case) the question has to be at what cost??  Getting back to those “intangibles” that I mentioned previously, they’d probably be trading in some really good ones for some really bad ones.  Would it be worth it??  Bad intangibles can sometimes end up being bad for the finances.

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