ReZyNeZy wrote:TylerDurden wrote:ReZyNeZy wrote:I never claimed that their issues are caused by a diluted market. I just claimed that diluted markets can have an effect on attendance across the board. VU and UIC are in the largest market in the Valley, but both schools do not see attendance because of the diluted market. VU in particular has a multitude of issues as to why they don't see fans, but a lot of these concerns are being addressed by the new admin (Hopefully successfully). The new arena is actively being developed and will hopefully release renderings by next year. As for the ARC, there is no excuse for it. It has been a dated arena for years now, and local high schools seat more than it.
VU is in the wrong league? not really. Since joining they have not had great success, but if you think Valpo doesn't belong, you'd have to go tell Evansville the same thing considering they have performed on par or worse than VU on average since 2017 if you look at the standings (minus the most recent season). Now, if you were making a case based on overall university health, you'd have an argument that VU isn't sustainable which I accept, but basing things purely off of basketball success is not a good argument considering VU has either out performed or played on par with conference vets who have similar enrollment and COA metrics (According to US News).
Valpo is absolutely in the wrong league and I've said the same thing about Evansville. The difference between the two is that Evansville has fans and a good facility to play in.
Any attempt to frame Valpo as having any sort of competitive success is silly. Your criteria filters out everyone but Evansville. You're arguing Valpo belongs because you've been 11th out of 12th for seven years.
Can we also stop this idea that Valpo is in the Chicago market? You can get Chicago news stations on your TV and you can drive 1.5 hrs into the city to shop on Michigan Ave., congratulations. That's the extent of it.
Then you are going to have to pick a fight with the people who make the market share lists. They list UIC and Valpo as being in the Chicago market. The area where the school sits is considered a part of Chicagoland. Therefore the Chicago market.
Valpo has had good attendance numbers. Their issues came about when the law school shut down and a string of bad press, coupled with poor performance, drove people away. Evansville is the criteria I chose because Evansville is a mirror of VU. VU is a small Lutheran school with around 2k enrollment, Evansville is a small Methodist school with around 2k enrollment. The only differnce between the schools is that Evansville was able to partner with their city to build a civic center (IE the Ford Center). Valpo is a notoriously frugal community. That money is not just going to fall out of the sky, but again, the issue is being resolved. Hopefully Valpo can return to the way they were in the early 2010s, but claiming they don't belong is just silly.
You’re clearly not from IL then. I spent a year at VU and I never felt like I was living in Chicagoland (which probably would go as Far East as Gary if I were being generous.) I had to take a bus to the Dunes to the South Shore Line which (that Far East) was mainly a line to get people to and from South Bend on Saturdays.
Evansville… pop 118,414…. Metro pop 358,676. Valpo pop… 34,151 Metro pop… what is a metro? Evansville is way more similar to a slightly smaller Bradley/Peoria market. Add in USI’s 7k student pop (which I assume there’s a decent amount that go to Evansville events like Holy Cross/ND and ISU/IWU) and it’s not even close. I always describe Valpo as if you’d dropped Morton or Pekin halfway between Bloomington and Chicago on I-55 with nothing else around. Evansville and Bradley (as well as several other Valley schools) benefit from being “community’s team” in a mid market. Valpo doesn’t have that. Even if it does, the resources of the community are diminished due to the vast population differences.
Like Loyola, I think Valley membership helps UIC to rise to being a worthy Valley member. I have never, and continue to see year over year, believed that Valpo was a good fit. Horizon was, and always will be, their home.
EDIT: Up until a few years ago Peoria got both WGN TV and KMOX radio. We still get Chicago and STL sports broadcasts on local stations. Are we part of an MSA of over 12 million people? That would put us second in the MSA list ahead of LA and behind only NYC. If true that’s pretty cool.