RacerJoeD wrote:It’s happened twice. The OVC was founded in 1948. And it’s happened twice. I’m not a big gambler, but the odds sure don’t seem in favor of it happening again any time soon.
And a conference is a means to an end. The end is that our program is successful, respected, serves as a great advertisement for our university, is a point of unifying pride among our community, our alumni, and our students. The means in this case is to join a group of like-minded programs who see investment into quality basketball as a good way to achieve the ends stated, while understanding the existential threat posed by a power structure that wishes to distill college athletics into a single, large school, money machine that neglects the smaller, locally and regionally focused schools, despite a greater level of success.
We currently do not have a group of like minded schools working towards a common goal.
You bring up two schools that are a type of model for overarching success for MMs; Gonzaga and Butler.
Gonzaga has chosen to stay in the WCC and the WCC has invested in being better than they were 30 years ago. Their reward is that St Mary’s is a quality program, San Francisco has had success, Pacific, Santa Clara, Pepperdine and Portland have all gotten better. So much so that the conference has added BYU, a good program in their own right.
Butler took a very different road. After being suspect in the years between 1963 and 1996, they seized upon success, used it as a tool for engaging their school and community, and moved up to more difficult conferences as it fit their goals. They Grew with the MCC (later the Horizon) and when the opportunity to advance they took it.
There is no fool proof recipe for success. For every Butler there is a DePaul. But a program has to not get complacent. You have to push, to challenge, for growth to occur. In today’s college basketball world, you either grow or die. There is no third option.
I'm just not so sure the MVC with its "We're satisfied with 10, don't touch our pie" attitude is the path to growth anymore.