Cdizzle wrote:The Valley is more interested in schools with large endowments that they promise they'll eventually do something with. Actions are severely overrated.
Actions do matter when a school is located that far west.
Cdizzle wrote:The Valley is more interested in schools with large endowments that they promise they'll eventually do something with. Actions are severely overrated.
Pinkie wrote:FYI - UN-Omaha playing for NCAA bid from Summit league tonight. I'm not suggesting they are ready for the Valley but their commitment in just the second year of D1 hoops already surpasses several Valley schools. Brand new 8000 seat arena and an expanding campus with facilities being built everywhere.
Drakey wrote:From a success standpoint WSU is better off in the Valley than they would be anywhere else. If it is about money, they could probably get more moving on, but I'm not sure they would be as successful. I guess it depends what they are playing for.
LanceShock wrote:Drakey wrote:From a success standpoint WSU is better off in the Valley than they would be anywhere else. If it is about money, they could probably get more moving on, but I'm not sure they would be as successful. I guess it depends what they are playing for.
How do you define success? If it is regular season conference titles, then you are correct that WSU would probably be more successful in the Valley. If you measure success by the NCAA tournament, I think the last two years have shown that the Valley is dead weight working against you there. Last year's team won the Valley by four games and barely squeaked into the tournament (FVV's injury did contribute to that-imagine last year's team with a healthy FVV and Shamet). Even if Illinois State gets into the NCAA this year, they are going through a very long week this week not knowing if they are going to get to go to the NCAA or not, even though they went 17-1 in the Valley and co-regular season champions.
The last couple of years have shown that for a Valley team there is an extremely small margin of error in the nonconference part of the season.
But the scheduling mandates were allowed to go away. In 2007, nine of the 10 Valley teams played schedules ranked in the top 100, and the 10th team's schedule ranked 112. By last year, only two MVC teams played top-100 schedules, and three teams' slates ranked 226 or worse. Poor scheduling ultimately results in mediocrity.
GrandpaBear wrote:The quote below sort of sums it all up right? Why don't we reinstitute the scheduling mandate?But the scheduling mandates were allowed to go away. In 2007, nine of the 10 Valley teams played schedules ranked in the top 100, and the 10th team's schedule ranked 112. By last year, only two MVC teams played top-100 schedules, and three teams' slates ranked 226 or worse. Poor scheduling ultimately results in mediocrity.
RoyalShock wrote:I suspect one of the factors (but probably not the only one) was because once MVC teams became competitive against those schedules it became more difficult to renew those contracts or get games against equivalent competition.
Once we stopped giving top teams the results they were after, they stopped wanting to play. But after the past several years, that shouldn't be the case anymore. The MVC is roughly back to where it was 15 years ago.
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