bilbillyjack wrote:I like that each school gets a sport. Keeps every school active and being part of decision making. Campus conference tourneys, outside of mens hoops, make sense initially. This group of schools ran the Big East successfully for 33 years, so it's not like all of this is new to us. We're way ahead of where i thought we'd be at this point. I mean, how long does it really take to put together a womens field hockey schedule?
You might be surprised on how hard it is to make a schedule. Especially when you are missing the number of teams to field the schedule. Schools like to use non-revs as leverage to bring in quality opponents for the revenue producing sports. since the BE wisely chose 10 schools it will potentially be at the mercy of other schools in filling up its non rev schedules. Now in order to fill you field hockey schedule you need to coordinate with your basketball team and explain to them why they now have an away game at little sisters of the poor simply because no school would play your women's field hockey squad unless it got a home and home with the mens basketball team.
The problem is with these 10 schools while they make a great 10 team round robin basketball conference they have a non-uniform non-rev sports alignment. The non-revs in the BE will be a logistical nightmare as they have to scramble to fill dates in the fall. Some of the sports they need to add associate members or give up and tell the colleges they have to find new conferences for those sports.
I guess they could solve this problem by adding SLU and Richmond as associate members for all sports except for basketball