Most recent blog post from Suellentrop:
He mentions that the root of the problem in the MVC is a lack of top-shelf players like those we had in 2006. Without them, scheduling up doesn't help much because it will be that much tougher to win. I largely agree with him.
Now, while Paul didn't really address the BracketBuster directly, an interesting correlation came to mind. The MVC was rising when the the BracketBuster was first unveiled (I think it was the 2003-04 season). And if you remember, the event only included the better "mid" teams, not the 100+ team conglomeration they have now. The better Valley players during that 2005-2007 stretch would have been recruited prior to the start of BracketBusters (with a few exceptions like Osiris).
Around that time the Mountain West, Atlantic 10 and to a lesser degree C-USA were struggling. In 2004-05, C-USA was #9, MWC was #11 and A10 was #18. The MVC was #8 that year and over the next two seasons would be #6. By the 2008-09 season (when those recruits prior to 2005 were gone), the MVC was #9, having been passed up by the MWC and A10. This season the top 3 non-BCS leagues are the MWC (#4), C-USA (#8) and A10 (#9). The MVC has fallen clear to #12, the worst in almost a decade.
I don't think the BracketBuster games themselves have been the problem. But there does seem to be a correlation between the timing of BracketBusters and how the recruiting in conferences that chose to particpate and those who didn't have fared.
If there is an argument for abandoning the BracketBusters it that the perception of our league is lower than that of the MWC, A10 and CUSA among recruits.
He mentions that the root of the problem in the MVC is a lack of top-shelf players like those we had in 2006. Without them, scheduling up doesn't help much because it will be that much tougher to win. I largely agree with him.
Now, while Paul didn't really address the BracketBuster directly, an interesting correlation came to mind. The MVC was rising when the the BracketBuster was first unveiled (I think it was the 2003-04 season). And if you remember, the event only included the better "mid" teams, not the 100+ team conglomeration they have now. The better Valley players during that 2005-2007 stretch would have been recruited prior to the start of BracketBusters (with a few exceptions like Osiris).
Around that time the Mountain West, Atlantic 10 and to a lesser degree C-USA were struggling. In 2004-05, C-USA was #9, MWC was #11 and A10 was #18. The MVC was #8 that year and over the next two seasons would be #6. By the 2008-09 season (when those recruits prior to 2005 were gone), the MVC was #9, having been passed up by the MWC and A10. This season the top 3 non-BCS leagues are the MWC (#4), C-USA (#8) and A10 (#9). The MVC has fallen clear to #12, the worst in almost a decade.
I don't think the BracketBuster games themselves have been the problem. But there does seem to be a correlation between the timing of BracketBusters and how the recruiting in conferences that chose to particpate and those who didn't have fared.
If there is an argument for abandoning the BracketBusters it that the perception of our league is lower than that of the MWC, A10 and CUSA among recruits.
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