Re: SIU AD - WSU Too Big For Their Britches
Posted: October 24th, 2016, 3:43 pm
Cdizzle wrote:UEACES80 wrote:Mike wrote:Loyola took CU's place in the MVC.
No MVC team could match WSU's post season success (Sweet 16 in 2006 and Final 4 in 2013) during the last 17 years of CU's membership (1996-97 through 2012-13) when MVC membership was the same. SIU did have two Sweet 16 appearances during that time frame.
No MVC team came close to CU's overall conference success during that same 17 year period (WSU figures in parenthesis for comparison):
Regular Season MVC Win Percentage .673 (.546)
Regular Season Championships 4 (2)
MVC Tournament Championships 8 (0)
NCAA Tournament Appearances 9 (3)
20-win seasons 14 (7)
10-win MVC conference seasons 17 (9)
Good stuff Mike - rare to see WSU fans scramble.
Let me know when I need to start "scrambling."
If you feel that some 'gotcha' has been made about WSU being too big for the league, consider that in order to make that point, one is now celebrating the exploits of a team no longer in the conference (proving that no one left is a challenger)*, while ignoring the very fact that said team, even with their inferior national accomplishments and reputation, was STILL TOO BIG FOR THE VALLEY, as evidenced by the fact that they have literally already moved on to greener pastures.
I was unaware that human brain density could be so high.
And yes, for the umpteenth time, we are aware that Evansville is the greatest team to ever be in the Valley because they beat the exact same WSU team that went on the the Final Four...twice!
*Note to my reasonable, non-Simmons loving Valley fans that this is not my line of thinking. There are still challengers. But this is the thought process one must have to make the above comparison to Creighton as a 'gotcha'.
Wait, Evansville beat a team that went to the F4 twice in the same season? Surely they parlayed that into making the tournament. Or a conference title. No? Oh. Did Baker play in either of those games? No? Oh.
WSU wasnt looking for a new league 4 or 5 years ago. They are looking at options NOW. 2000 is a long time ago, especially in the world of realignment.