How is Army considered in a bigger metro area than Rutgers?
Long Island? 50 miles is rather arbitrary. Make it 120, or under a 2 hour drive, and things would change.
ND yes. Nobody without ties to NY is rooting randomly for OSU or PSU. Rutgers is truly a regional tri-state. In fairness, Army meets this criteria too.The NYC area is watching Penn State, Michigan, Ohio State, and Notre Dame. It’s not an RU market unless we’re 9-0.
My guess is more of the five boroughs resides within a 50 mile radius of West Point than New Brunswick.How is Army considered in a bigger metro area than Rutgers?
6-3 and a bowl win and RU the sleeping Giant starts waking-up NY/NJ.The NYC area is watching Penn State, Michigan, Ohio State, and Notre Dame. It’s not an RU market unless we’re 9-0.
I don't think it had anything to do with fans. It's about the population within a specific footprint, which is crazy considering Army is further from NYC than Rutgers.It's not really at all applicable. Teams like Ohio State and Alabama dominate their entire states. OSU is hardly playing for just the Columbus metro area. Similarly, Rutgers can't lay claim to Long Island, Westchester or NYC. Rutgers market is New Jersey. Army is national, not regional. New York probably has the same rate of Army fans as Kansas or Maine.
But that's pointless and Army is a perfect example. What does it matter that the USMA is close to the largest population cluster in the US? Their fans are sprinkled across the map. And if you went by radius Rutgers' area would include parts of Pennsylvania, which is in no way relevant. There are 3 RU fans west of the Delaware and they post on this board.I don't think it had anything to do with fans. It's about the population within a specific footprint, which is crazy considering Army is further from NYC than Rutgers.
I don't think it had anything to do with fans. It's about the population within a specific footprint, which is crazy considering Army is further from NYC than Rutgers.
West Point, NY to the Bronx: 37 miles in a straight line. The driving distance is 50 miles.Not from Manhattan. Staten Island maybe.
The post never addresses fans. It's all centered around the population of said metro area. Direct quote from Twitter:But that's pointless and Army is a perfect example. What does it matter that the USMA is close to the largest population cluster in the US? Their fans are sprinkled across the map. And if you went by radius Rutgers' area would include parts of Pennsylvania, which is in no way relevant. There are 3 RU fans west of the Delaware and they post on this board.
Why guess? A simple look at a map shows NB is closer to most of NYC than WP is. NB and WP are equidistant to about a mile or so north of the GWB/95 as it crosses the southern Bronx, meaning WP is only closer to the Bronx, with NB being closer to every other borough (and ~11 miles closer to the center of Central Park, which is the heart of Manhattan/NYC).My guess is more of the five boroughs resides within a 50 mile radius of West Point than New Brunswick.
Because it's stupidly done. Georgia no doubt only includes a radius around Athens. Raise your hand if you think the entire stare of Georgia isn't Bulldogs territory.Am I missing something or are there no SEC teams on that list? Probably a good comment on the worth of that demo. Also, if considering B1G expansion from the PAC12, that list might be informative.
West Point, NY to the Bronx: 37 miles in a straight line distance. The driving distance is 50 miles.My guess is more of the five boroughs resides within a 50 mile radius of West Point than New Brunswick.
Not according to the TV ratings. Temple vs. Notre Dame is by far the most viewed regular season game in Philadelphia history (and there were three Primetime Penn State vs. Notre Dame games on since 1986). So the X factor was Temple not ND or PSU. Also note below that the Temple-ND game of 2015 clobbered the Penn State vs. Ohio State game just a year prior in the same Philadelphia market.Hey, if we are really being honest Philly is Penn State territory, Temple is not even a close second.![]()