Jasper wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 9:07 am
The Jackal wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 6:02 am
HiHiYikas wrote: ↑Mon May 21, 2018 9:01 pm
FUBeAR wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 5:23 pm
I’m confused.
I thought Appy dropped Football, along with GaSou & Marsha. I know all 3 of them formerly were often mentioned in NCAA Division 1 National Championship discussions, but I just don’t hear about them anymore. Maybe they dropped to D3 or NAIA. Not sure.
Why are they being mentioned in a thread about Furman’s rivals? If they still have Teams, I would imagine their rivals are New Mexico Military Institute, Eastern Southwestern Louisiana A&M Tech, and Ohio Wesleyan...respectively. Certainly not, respectfully.
Actually all three teams are playing in D1 conferences with better overall talent than the SoCon. That's not me knocking on the Socon, it's merely an honest opinion. I have no doubt there are some FCS programs that could compete for titles in the CUSA, or even the Sun Belt, but there are less than a handful, and they don't hale from conferences headquartered in Sparkle City. Maybe you folks can fix that soon, already.
I don’t necessarily disagree that with 80+ scholarships per team the talent will probably be better than the SoCon. I do not think the talent gap is particularly wide, though.
I mean, I watched Georiga State play a mediocre FCS team last year and lose. I think GSU made a bowl game. Maybe they got monumentally better, but I would not put GSU anywhere near as talented as some of the SoCon clubs.
My question has never been about the overall talent of the league, but more about the good sense of increasing your athletic expenditures by some $7m (I think that was the reported case with Georgia Southern) without any real uptick in revenue and to play only marginally better competition. I don’t think Georgia Southern, for instance, has any more national exposure today than they did pre-2013. In fact, probably less.
I too would love to hear an answer to that question. I cannot fathom why a school would spend so much more money on its football program without getting any obvious benefit. There must be some hidden benefit because so many schools like App State and GSU have done it in recent years. I cant believe that either of those schools are happier finishing in the middle of a mediocre FBS league than they would be if getting all the pub of NDSU for instance. The sad thing is that they were NDSU before NDSU was. Appy beating Michigan is so epic a sports memory mostly BECAUSE they were an FCS school beating a titan - the old David and Goliath thang. The only reason I can come up with is that they feel they will dominate the lower FCS league and then be invited into a Power 5 conference so as to rake in the big bucks. Better chance buying a handful of lottery tickets IMO.
Personal opinion - there's a pride factor. I think that has a lot to do with it.
Some of these schools want to visualize themselves as being a peer with the larger flagship universities in their state. They aren't, but their fans want to see themselves that way. Furman does not suffer from this complex. I think a few of our former brethren saw playing smaller liberal arts colleges as "beneath" their stature of large state run institutions. Football is football, though.
From a financial standpoint, I've never understood it. I'm sure the league members get more TV revenues than they did in the in SoCon, but the travel costs have to be outrageous. My sister in law attended Texas State, and I've been to a game out there. I cannot fathom what it costs for Georgia Southern to relocate a football team to San Marcos for a conference football game.
Look at the Eagles schedule next season. They play back to back road games at Texas State and New Mexico State (who the SunBelt just kicked out). These are not money games. Two weeks later they play at UL-Monroe, which is over 700 miles away for another conference game. And that isn't just football either. That's every sport.
What's bizarre, in my view, is that when you look at the schedule it looks pretty much like an FCS schedule you might expect from the SoCon, OVC, or Southland. An ACC money game, a winnable home game against a lesser FCS program, and a bunch of former FCS teams, many of whom they were already playing while a member of the SoCon.