It's really hard to believe now that back in the 1990s the SEC was as good as any conference in the country in basketball. I'm still not sure how or why it has fallen so far. I know nobody really cares about basketball, but the SEC dominates in plenty of sports no one cares about.
I agree Pat. I remember the SEC getting 6+ teams into the tournament every year. It is incredibly hard for me to understand the drop off. Is the conference bad because we don't care? Or do we not care because the conference is bad?
.wheni wasn't so obvious (UT was good, we were hyped). But when you watch SEC Bball compared to the real Bball conferences, we are getting further behind. I think it's mostly related to football in the south.
Nobody really cares? I hardly think that's the case. Maybe YOU don't care, but that's not everybody.
.wheni wasn't so obvious (UT was good, we were hyped). But when you watch SEC Bball compared to the real Bball conferences, we are getting further behind. I think it's mostly related to football in the south.
Compared to football, nobody really cares about basketball. Even in the ACC, which is one of the strongest and most historical basketball leagues in the country, TV viewership and attendance for football is over twice what it is for basketball and that's with basketball having over twice as many games as football. So the average ACC football game is seen by well over 4 times as many people as the average ACC basketball game. Same story for the Big 10, but even more slanted toward football. Nobody cares about basketball is an overstatement, but football is king everywhere. And in the SEC, basketball takes an even bigger backseat to football then the rest of the country. When you see Alabama drawing 100K+ for football and barely 10K for basketball if that, it's not that hard to see what they care about. And the story is the same at virtually every other SEC school.
Compared to football, nobody really cares about basketball. Even in the ACC, which is one of the strongest and most historical basketball leagues in the country, TV viewership and attendance for football is over twice what it is for basketball and that's with basketball having over twice as many games as football. So the average ACC football game is seen by well over 4 times as many people as the average ACC basketball game. Same story for the Big 10, but even more slanted toward football. Nobody cares about basketball is an overstatement, but football is king everywhere. And in the SEC, basketball takes an even bigger backseat to football then the rest of the country. When you see Alabama drawing 100K+ for football and barely 10K for basketball if that, it's not that hard to see what they care about. And the story is the same at virtually every other SEC school.
The more games being played and the more teams playing them hurts basketball viewership. Just last night there was atleast 10 different basketball games on tv. How bad would it hurt the viewership of the ESPN Thursday night football game if there were 10 other football games on tv that night too?
Compared to football in the SEC, no one cares about most anything.
it projects us out to 13 wins for the season right now. That's probably way optimistic but 10-11 should be doable.especially compared to Football and baseball...Tenn 4-3UPig 4-3State is 3-5Vandy 2-4Auburn 2-5Georgia 2-6We have a good chance to get 10 wins this season in spite of graduation, attrition, and injuries
It's really hard to believe now that back in the 1990s the SEC was as good as any conference in the country in basketball. I'm still not sure how or why it has fallen so far. I know nobody really cares about basketball, but the SEC dominates in plenty of sports no one cares about.
Are the side effects of your misguided perception of NBA basketball specific to the SEC?
I do think our infatuation with football, which can run year long now with 7on7 and spring stuff, is partly to blame. Our local basketball talent pool (read: likely recruits) isn't getting developed. AAU was mentioned by Blue and I partly agree. Although, I don't think that is conference specific either. It has contributed to a general decline in college basketball for years now.
I think I agree with Coach AND Blue here.
Outside of what Cal cherry picks from around the country, we definitely don't see the caliber of player in the SEC now that we used to. It's become a league of guys running and jumping and being athletic while not having a good handle on the fundamentals and common basketball sense. And let's be honest - the SEC has not been overrun with great coaches. Stansbury, Brady, Gottfried, Ellis, Kennedy, Barnes, Pelphrey, Van Breda Koff, Jirsa, Odom, Hobbs, O'Neill.....that's just off the cuff - and none of those guys are game changers. Cal gets great players to play hard because if they don't he will bench them, so he's got that going for him. Donovan has cut plenty of corners in recruiting to get talent to Florida and it paid off with the Horford/Noah/Brewer years. He's got the rolling again now and I think he might doing a better job now than he did with those championship years.
Blue, the BET is must see TV every year. Even the opening day games are usually great, and something memorable always happens there. I think is has a lot to do with MSG. Players in the northeast grow up wanting to play there so when they get their shot, they give it their all. And ESPN's production of the BET is top notch.