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Posts posted by Seadragon76
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4 hours ago, jlog3000 said:
@Seadragon76 That would be a cool realignment on paper. Now I'm curious on how the scheduling format would be during the regular season to assure at least each team face each other in a rotational but well-balanced basis.
If I was one of the top heads of the newly-reorganized league, it would be 16 games:
* have 10 games within division foes (home and away);
* and the other 6 games against 2 teams from other 3 divisions each, with each pair of teams rotate for a home and road standpoint during a 6-year span:
i.e.: Arizona:
Years 1 & 2: Duke City & Frisco; Dakota & Fishers; Albany & Columbus
Years 3 & 4: Nashville & New Orleans; Green Bay & Iowa; Georgia & Jacksonville
Years 5 & 6: San Antonio & Tulsa; Quad City & Sioux Falls; Massachusetts & Orlando
The non-divisonal pairings for the rotational ones would be complex, even from a hypothetical standpoint. But it's the closest I could pull off. Thoughts?
Last season was 15 games and this season is 16 games.
That would work... if you took out inter-conference play. My pitch would be for a 18 game schedule that works like this:
-10 Divisional Games (5 Home, 5 Away)
-6 Games against the other division in your conference (3 Home, 3 Away)
-2 Games against teams from the other conference based on position (1 Home, 1 Away)
As an example of this, let's use Arizona.
Home: Bay Area, Northern Arizona, San Diego, Tucson, Vegas, Duke City, Frisco, Nashville, Dakota
Away: Bay Area, Northern Arizona, San Diego, Tuscon, Vegas, New Orleans, San Antonio, Tulsa, Albany
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The the reborn Arena League is falling apart, it might be time for the IFL to be the new standard bearer for Indoor Football.
To accomplish this, they add five of the current teams from the Arena Football League to join the incoming franchises in Columbus, Dakota and Fishers. These teams would be Albany, Georgia, Nashville, New Orleans and Orlando
Realignment would be like this...
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
-Albany
-Columbus
-Georgia
-Jacksonville
-Massachusetts
-Orlando
Central Division
-Dakota
-Fishers
-Green Bay
-Iowa
-Quad City
-Sioux Falls
Western Conference
Southwest Division
-Duke City
-Frisco
-Nashville
-New Orleans
-San Antonio
-Tulsa
Pacific Division
-Arizona
-Bay Area
-Northern Arizona
-San Diego
-Tucson
-Vegas
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6 hours ago, stumpygremlin said:
I personally like the new logo they have. It's different.
I asked on Twitter what spurred the nickname change and someone was nice enough to mention that the school is looking to expand their reach globally and the current nickname (Crusaders) doesn't sit well with certain areas of the world.
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48 minutes ago, LMU said:
Well, then... stuff like that tells you what kind a roaring dumpster fire this league is destined to be.
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2 hours ago, Burmy said:
What's more, with Duquesne as an associate football member and Robert Morris rejoining as one next season, Lakers football has three guaranteed in-state conference rivals.
As you mentioned, it helps Chicago State out at least a bit, not the least because the Cougars have been seriously considering adding football themselves (given CSU's financial woes, I think it's one of the most ludicrous ideas I've ever heard, but they're counting on it being a windfall as the only D1 football team in the Chi).
Both Duquense and Robert Morris are in Pittsburgh, which is a short trip from Erie. That will come into play in 2025 as the conference schedule is already set and I don't know if they can change things with Mercyhurst jumping in.
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1 hour ago, Burmy said:
Mercyhurst University (Erie, Pennsylvania) is the newest D2 school to move up to D1...the Lakers are joining the NEC.
As destiny would have it, the Lakers already have a logo page on the mothership (because they were already playing D1 hockey in the AHA), though it is outdated.
The move helps in a couple of ways.
First off, it helps Chicago State out. They don't feel so isolated as the westernmost school in the NEC (weird, I know). It also helps St. Francis out by being not so isolated as well.
Secondly, football gets an easier transition - a school gets 63 scholarships at the FCS level. That's an additional 27 scholarships the school has to pay for, which might not be feasible for them. By joining the NEC, the numbers are easier to swallow here - schools in the NEC only give out 45 scholarships. This means Mercyhurst only has to add 9 more scholarships to be at compliance.
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So, with the A's moving to Sacramento for two years... what does that do to the River Cats?
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16 minutes ago, TrueYankee26 said:
Yeah... poor Rockies. 13 runs given up in 1 inning on Opening Day. Jeez
Angels and Rockies are in for a llllooooonnnnnggggg season.
Make that 14 runs... something tells me that Arizona might have some pent-up anger from losing the World Series last year. Thankfully, there is no better patsy to beat up on then the Rockies.
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23 minutes ago, walkerws said:
Depending on travel costs, this makes sense. Easier to rent three buses than to fly somewhere.
It does. A good majority of the road trips they took in the WAC were all westward bound.
By joining the Southland, there's no more trips that go west. The farthest east they'll have to go to is New Orleans. The farthest north they'll have to go to is Commerce.
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On the NAIA front...
The Gulf Coast Athletic Conference is changing their name to the HBCU Athletic Conference - Here's the story.
It makes perfect sense to me since all the conference members are HBCU's. This also includes the incoming members of Stillman, Voorhees and Wilberforce.
School wise, Union College in Kentucky is changing their name to Union Commonwealth University - Here's the story for this one
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22 hours ago, Germanshepherd said:
Add Quinnipiac to that list
In fact, here's the list of teams that would have gotten an automatic bid to the NIT this season had the NCAA not changed the rules...
-South Florida (American)
-Eastern Kentucky (ASUN)
-Richmond (Atlantic 10)
-Eastern Washington (Big Sky)
-High Point (Big South)
-UC Irvine (Big West)
-Sam Houston State (Conference USA)
-Princeton (Ivy League)
-Quinnipiac (MAAC)
-Norfolk State (MEAC)
-Toledo (Mid-American)
-Indiana State (Missouri Valley)
-Central Connecticut State (Northeast)
-Little Rock (Ohio Valley)
-Appalachian State (Sun Belt)
Nearly half the field could have been automatic bids this season... and there's the chance for more teams to enter this list by the time of the Selection Show on Sunday.
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11 hours ago, McCall said:
That would be the lowest rated tournament ever. You have only 5 or 6 "power conference" teams, a few mid-majors and the rest smaller conference schools. You automatically lose more than half your viewership just by cutting the number from 68. Then taking out all but 6 bigger conference schools. CBS couldn't get out of this deal fast enough.
That's why I said it was a crazy thought experiment.
If they wanted 64 teams, then go with the approach that the NAIA does: The regular season champion gets an automatic bid and the tournament champion gets an automatic bid. If the regular season champion and tournament champion are the same team, then the regular season runner up gets the second bid.
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Crazy thought experiment time...
In my perfect world, the NCAA Tournament would only have 32 teams in it, and all would be conference champions.
In this example, this is how the tournament would work:
South Region
(8) Norfolk State (MEAC) vs. (1) Houston (Big XII)
(5) High Point (Big South) vs. (4) Grand Canyon (WAC)
(6) Oakland (Horizon League) vs. (3) Samford (Southern)
(7) Eastern Kentucky (ASUN) vs. (2) Richmond (Atlantic 10)
East Region
(8) Merrimack (NEC) vs. (1) Purdue (Big Ten)
(5) College of Charleston (CAA) vs. (4) Vermont (America East)
(6) Quinnipiac (MAAC) vs. (3) Princeton (Ivy League)
(7) Morehead State (Ohio Valley) vs. (2) Connecticut (Big East)
North Region
(8) Colgate (Patriot League) vs. (1) Tennessee (SEC)
(5) Sam Houston State (Conference USA) vs. (4) St. Mary's (WCC)
(6) Toledo (Mid-American) vs. (3) Indiana State (Missouri Valley)
(7) McNeese State (Southland) vs. (2) North Carolina (ACC)
West Region
(8) Grambling (SWAC) vs. (1) Utah State (Mountain West)
(5) Appalachian State (Sun Belt) vs. (4) UC Irvine (Big West)
(6) Eastern Washington (Big Sky) vs. (3) South Florida (American)
(7) South Dakota State (Summit) vs. (2) Arizona (Pac-12)
TV wise, the four network system will still be in use. Now, each network gets their own region - meaning that they get seven games over a weekend to broadcast. CBS and TBS still has rotating Final Four duties.
The NIT is also 32 teams, but it is only open to schools in Top 16 in terms of conference RPI. For this season, the following conferences are allowed to send two teams to the NIT:
Big XII, SEC, Big Ten, Mountain West, ACC, Big East, Pac-12, Atlantic 10, Missouri Valley, American, Ivy League, Southern, West Coast, WAC, America East and Big West.
The remaining 16 conferences are then allowed to send teams to the CBI and CIT, with the second placed teams going to the CBI and third placed teams going to the CIT.
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I didn't think it was possible for an actual team to score 200+ points in a basketball game.
Granted, it's the All-Star Game and defense is literally taboo, but come on. Try a little bit here.
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Bears. The houndstooth stripe is a great touch and a great nod to Paul 'Bear' Bryant.
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Silverbacks is my vote.
Love the tie in with the Columbus Zoo.
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I'm going with Sting, only because the team would have the perfect mascot...
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Snowbirds. It's such an original idea and concept.
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Salt Lake City has my vote... the crypto beast theme has me intrigued.
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1 hour ago, 4_tattoos said:
Here's PVF's schedule. So far they have broadcast for every game up to early March either being carried by Bally or Stadium. I'm trying to figure out what role CBS has in the broadcast equation.
CBS isn't jumping in until mid-April at best. They're only getting 10 games and championship weekend while Bally Live and Stadium is probably covering the rest.
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Not a bad move for San Jose State, but man it's going to be weird to see Niumatalolo run a team that doesn't have the triple option.
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Just now, DG_ThenNowForever said:
Tough way to go out for Cowboys fans. They were good enough all season long and then....this.
The Cowboys and January - name me a combination that's better known for choking then this.
The Pointless Realignment Outpost
in Sports In General
Posted
It's an example idea. Another route would be rotating opponents each season so that each team can play everyone else at least once in a six year span OR a pairing rotation that switches after two years.
So, in the case of Arizona...
Year/Pairing 1 - Albany and Dakota
Year/Pairing 2 - Columbus and Fishers
Year/Pairing 3 - Georgia and Green Bay
Year/Pairing 4 - Jacksonville and Iowa
Year/Pairing 5 - Massachusetts and Quad City
Year/Pairing 6 - Orlando and Sioux Falls