billyjack wrote:The only time anyone fights on this board is when friarfan2 is involved... I don't even know what his argument is... that GU, Villanova and St John's are the top teams historically... but he wants to leave out Marquette for some reason...?
Bill Marsh wrote:Does anyone have any idea why posters are arguing over "brand recognition"?
Bill Marsh wrote:Just as an aside that doesn't really matter . . .
There is no comparison between St. John's and DePaul historically. St. John's has been the far better program. Historically, you can't just look at NCAA finishes because there was a time when the NIT was just as important and then a time when it was still important although not as important. St. John's won 4 NIT's between 1943-65 while DePaul won one.
Another piece of historical trivia is that the Helms foundation named mythical national champions for a long time. They are generally used for the era before tournament play and polls. St. John's was named national champion by the Helms Foundation for 1913.
Again, none of this really matters, but with St. John's we're talking about a program whose success at the highest levels goes back a century with just the past decade being down as a program. The St. John's program has won about 300 more games in its history than DePaul, which is another way of demonstrating the relative success of the two programs over their histories.
marquette wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Does anyone have any idea why posters are arguing over "brand recognition"?
You know, I keep asking myself this same question (yes I know I'm part of the problem). Fact of the matter is winning creates brand recognition, failing to perform hurts it. I live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin but just yesterday I saw a kid wearing a Florida Gulf Coast University shirt. You could not find a place more different from Fort Meyers than Milwaukee. I know this kid isn't a student there as the semester started this week most places and last week some places. My point is that it doesn't matter who wins, as long as several of our teas perform well in the non-conference and the NCAA.
Another piece of historical trivia is that the Helms foundation named mythical national champions for a long time. They are generally used for the era before tournament play and polls. St. John's was named national champion by the Helms Foundation for 1913.
marquette wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Does anyone have any idea why posters are arguing over "brand recognition"?
You know, I keep asking myself this same question (yes I know I'm part of the problem). Fact of the matter is winning creates brand recognition, failing to perform hurts it. I live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin but just yesterday I saw a kid wearing a Florida Gulf Coast University shirt. You could not find a place more different from Fort Meyers than Milwaukee. I know this kid isn't a student there as the semester started this week most places and last week some places. My point is that it doesn't matter who wins, as long as several of our teas perform well in the non-conference and the NCAA.Bill Marsh wrote:Just as an aside that doesn't really matter . . .
There is no comparison between St. John's and DePaul historically. St. John's has been the far better program. Historically, you can't just look at NCAA finishes because there was a time when the NIT was just as important and then a time when it was still important although not as important. St. John's won 4 NIT's between 1943-65 while DePaul won one.
Another piece of historical trivia is that the Helms foundation named mythical national champions for a long time. They are generally used for the era before tournament play and polls. St. John's was named national champion by the Helms Foundation for 1913.
Again, none of this really matters, but with St. John's we're talking about a program whose success at the highest levels goes back a century with just the past decade being down as a program. The St. John's program has won about 300 more games in its history than DePaul, which is another way of demonstrating the relative success of the two programs over their histories.
Fair points, and I agree that DePaul is not the equal of St. John's. Just pointing out some interesting similarities between our two largest market teams. If we count Helms championships then Butler all of a sudden enters the equation. With 2 recent national runner-ups and 3 Helms titles Butler is pretty much the historical class of the league.
@Boxer
No, I don't have a Tom Crean altar anywhere in my apartment, so I must not be Chicos. I'm the annoying poster who's always trying to make FS1 seem like a juggernaut based on the niche fanbases of the UFC and NASCAR (what can I say, I see the world through blue and gold colored glasses). Please don't have too much of a 180 in your opinion of me.
marquette wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Does anyone have any idea why posters are arguing over "brand recognition"?
You know, I keep asking myself this same question (yes I know I'm part of the problem). Fact of the matter is winning creates brand recognition, failing to perform hurts it. I live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin but just yesterday I saw a kid wearing a Florida Gulf Coast University shirt. You could not find a place more different from Fort Meyers than Milwaukee. I know this kid isn't a student there as the semester started this week most places and last week some places. My point is that it doesn't matter who wins, as long as several of our teas perform well in the non-conference and the NCAA.Bill Marsh wrote:Just as an aside that doesn't really matter . . .
There is no comparison between St. John's and DePaul historically. St. John's has been the far better program. Historically, you can't just look at NCAA finishes because there was a time when the NIT was just as important and then a time when it was still important although not as important. St. John's won 4 NIT's between 1943-65 while DePaul won one.
Another piece of historical trivia is that the Helms foundation named mythical national champions for a long time. They are generally used for the era before tournament play and polls. St. John's was named national champion by the Helms Foundation for 1913.
Again, none of this really matters, but with St. John's we're talking about a program whose success at the highest levels goes back a century with just the past decade being down as a program. The St. John's program has won about 300 more games in its history than DePaul, which is another way of demonstrating the relative success of the two programs over their histories.
Fair points, and I agree that DePaul is not the equal of St. John's. Just pointing out some interesting similarities between our two largest market teams. If we count Helms championships then Butler all of a sudden enters the equation. With 2 recent national runner-ups and 3 Helms titles Butler is pretty much the historical class of the league.
@Boxer
No, I don't have a Tom Crean altar anywhere in my apartment, so I must not be Chicos. I'm the annoying poster who's always trying to make FS1 seem like a juggernaut based on the niche fanbases of the UFC and NASCAR (what can I say, I see the world through blue and gold colored glasses). Please don't have too much of a 180 in your opinion of me.
TheHall wrote:marquette wrote:
You know, I keep asking myself this same question (yes I know I'm part of the problem). Fact of the matter is winning creates brand recognition, failing to perform hurts it. I live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin but just yesterday I saw a kid wearing a Florida Gulf Coast University shirt. You could not find a place more different from Fort Meyers than Milwaukee. I know this kid isn't a student there as the semester started this week most places and last week some places. My point is that it doesn't matter who wins, as long as several of our teas perform well in the non-conference and the NCAA.
Another piece of historical trivia is that the Helms foundation named mythical national champions for a long time. They are generally used for the era before tournament play and polls. St. John's was named national champion by the Helms Foundation for 1913.
I agree winning helps but it seems to me that putting players in the league outweighs even winning in cbb today. Just look at the BE's current flagship program Gtown. JT3 has had too many spectacular flameouts to count since that Final4 run but Gtown has become a NBA launching pad so he & the program are rightly revered. Same thing (minus the 1st round flameouts) for marquette recently under Buzz. He's won a decent amount but he's made marquette a beast on the recruiting trail with his NBA talent development success. Example:
http://painttouches.com/2013/09/02/why-trent-lockett-is-nba-bound/
When a program starts having success putting players in the league it most times gives a boost to recruiting, which is the lifeblood of all programs. I actually think winning is more important for mid majors & below (your Florida Gulf Coast example or Loyola Marymount back in the day), but I think Harkless going in the lottery was more significant for the perception of SJU's program than winning a few more games that season.
Also, If the players wind up doing well in the league or over-performing like Jimmy Butler or Roy Hibbert it's a double bonus. But even if the school has a history of putting busts in the league there's still a measurable boost to the program's perception...Syracuse/Duke.
I think Fuquan Edwin will have a helluva senior year (1st Team All-BE) and will get a shot at making the league next year, which would definitely help the Hall's perception going forward.
marquette wrote:I guess I misspoke. It is only 2 championships instead of 3, but according to their wikipedia page it was pre-tournament Helms Championships in 1924 and 1929.
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