Crazy new conference map... | Syracusefan.com

Crazy new conference map...

cto

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The college basketball landscape as of yesterday, as per "Field of 68 Daily."

Name_graphics__1_.png

1. You’ll stare at this map for a while​

The Power 6 became the Power 5 yesterday. Such is life without the Pac-12.​
(Well, almost. SMU officially joined the ACC yesterday, but the other Pac-12 schools don’t switch until Aug. 2. But when conferences are sending out welcome notices, it’s safe to say the schools are in.)
College sports still has (some) of its regional and local rivalries, but now that the Big Ten and ACC are bi-coastal conferences, it’s helpful to have a map for a visual representation of how everything looks for the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East and SEC now.​
image.png
The ACC counties are wild. It’s not just the Northern California section, but also spots in North Texas in addition to the existing pockets around Notre Dame, Louisville, and the rest scattered along the Eastern seaboard. No wonder it covers the largest population base.​
The SEC has the smallest population footprint, but the most counties. That expansion into Texas and Oklahoma was larger than the geographic footprint.​
The Big 12’s four new schools basically means adding 2½ states. Lotta counties, though.​
The Big Ten looks like one of the railroad sections in Ticket to Ride that got cut off by rude players. Maybe there’s a small section in Montana and Nevada that can have so it can stretch from coast to coach in one random line?​
Can’t wait to see this map when the Big East adds Gonzaga one day.​
 
This is so stupid. It's got the Big East with NY counties from the Albany area all the way down to Westchester. Nobody gives a squat about the Big East there. Connecticut for sure and the NYC area (St. John's) are Big East but anywhere else is preposterous. So what, those areas might closer to Connecticut but as far as influence I don't buy it.
 
This is so stupid. It's got the Big East with NY counties from the Albany area all the way down to Westchester. Nobody gives a squat about the Big East there. Connecticut for sure and the NYC area (St. John's) are Big East but anywhere else is preposterous. So what, those areas might closer to Connecticut but as far as influence I don't buy it.
At least one person there cares about the Big East...Rick Pitino lives in Westchester.

And Seton Hall get some attention in NYC media.
 
The college basketball landscape as of yesterday, as per "Field of 68 Daily."

Name_graphics__1_.png

1. You’ll stare at this map for a while​

The Power 6 became the Power 5 yesterday. Such is life without the Pac-12.​
(Well, almost. SMU officially joined the ACC yesterday, but the other Pac-12 schools don’t switch until Aug. 2. But when conferences are sending out welcome notices, it’s safe to say the schools are in.)
College sports still has (some) of its regional and local rivalries, but now that the Big Ten and ACC are bi-coastal conferences, it’s helpful to have a map for a visual representation of how everything looks for the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East and SEC now.​
image.png
The ACC counties are wild. It’s not just the Northern California section, but also spots in North Texas in addition to the existing pockets around Notre Dame, Louisville, and the rest scattered along the Eastern seaboard. No wonder it covers the largest population base.​
The SEC has the smallest population footprint, but the most counties. That expansion into Texas and Oklahoma was larger than the geographic footprint.​
The Big 12’s four new schools basically means adding 2½ states. Lotta counties, though.​
The Big Ten looks like one of the railroad sections in Ticket to Ride that got cut off by rude players. Maybe there’s a small section in Montana and Nevada that can have so it can stretch from coast to coach in one random line?​
Can’t wait to see this map when the Big East adds Gonzaga one day.​
Having the highest population near their schools should matter more to the ACC than it has.

Moving into Texas and California seems like it should greatly increase the national appeal, and thus the dollars that can be made for television rights.
 
This is so stupid. It's got the Big East with NY counties from the Albany area all the way down to Westchester. Nobody gives a squat about the Big East there. Connecticut for sure and the NYC area (St. John's) are Big East but anywhere else is preposterous. So what, those areas might closer to Connecticut but as far as influence I don't buy it.
A large part of the Hudson Valley gets NYC media (radio, tv, newspapers) which give a lot of attention to SJU, Seton Hall and UConn. Seton Hall games are actually carried on WCBS radio.
 
This is so stupid. It's got the Big East with NY counties from the Albany area all the way down to Westchester. Nobody gives a squat about the Big East there. Connecticut for sure and the NYC area (St. John's) are Big East but anywhere else is preposterous. So what, those areas might closer to Connecticut but as far as influence I don't buy it.

The map is simply who's closer, not who's got the biggest fan base in each county.
 
As long as it’s all serving the core academic mission I’m ok with it.
Can’t spell “student athletes” without “NIL”.

In other news, is every game now going to be blacked out? Montana is prime ACC territory amiright?
 
A large part of the Hudson Valley gets NYC media (radio, tv, newspapers) which give a lot of attention to SJU, Seton Hall and UConn. Seton Hall games are actually carried on WCBS radio.
… radio? Like the thing new cars don’t/won’t have?

Heck I don’t know if I have a radio in my house.
 
Interesting that the ACC has the largest population base, it should mean something positive regarding media interest and viewership.
Agree. Timing is everything though Big Ten got to not only break up other conferences and break into other media companies but they did it at the (only) perfect time.

I don't think the ACC is any worse than the Big 12 though. Maybe it is in hoops this would be a good time for Syracuse to pull their own weight and act like a historic program vs dragging the conference down how long again since we played a conference game ranked?
 
… radio? Like the thing new cars don’t/won’t have?

Heck I don’t know if I have a radio in my house.
If they stop putting radios in cars, I will never get a new car. I cannot exist without the radio in my car
 
If they stop putting radios in cars, I will never get a new car. I cannot exist without the radio in my car
You'll just have to stream the station you like through your cars computer :)
 
If they stop putting radios in cars, I will never get a new car. I cannot exist without the radio in my car
As a young man I drove from Albany to Tucson (woman) in my VW camper van. 20 minutes after leaving Albany my radio broke and I drove in silence the rest of the way.
 
You'll just have to stream the station you like through your cars computer :)
Imagine my surprise when purchasing my most recent new car that a very large collection of CDs became useless.
 
A large part of the Hudson Valley gets NYC media (radio, tv, newspapers) which give a lot of attention to SJU, Seton Hall and UConn. Seton Hall games are actually carried on WCBS radio.
CTO, I know you grew up in Westchester, but the Hudson Valley doesn't really care about the Big East or any college basketball. Its Knicks, Knicks, Knicks (and I'm a Nets fans) I drive to work on 287 every day and I see more Cuse stickers than any other college and not naby of them. Maybe a few ND and Huskies on CT plates and a few Rutgers if the car has Jersey plates.
There are some fair weather UConn fans (attracted by their success) and a few old timers may mention SJU, but no one cares about Seton Hall at all. Also WCBS carries Rutgers basketball games not Seton Hall - I know because I change the channel.
 

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