They’ve even hired Mark Adams as a scheduling consultant.
So, how is scheduling going to change that? The most radical difference will be that when the conference schedule is released, built in will be dates for games, but with opponents to be determined. Those dates will be filled with league opponents after the conference seeds the teams following the first 14 games.
"We're going to play 13 games and your travel partner twice, which would be Western Kentucky for us," said D'Antoni. "Then they are going to seed the schools. If you finish in the top five, No. 1 through No. 5 will play each other for the next four games to get 18 games.
"Like, if you're No. 1 you will play No. 4. And you'll play, I think, No. 4 and No. 3 at home and then travel to No. 2. ... There are four games in that five-team slot. No. 1 will play No. 5 and No. 4, I think. And No. 2 and No. 3 will come to No. 1.
"Then, if you're No. 2 you will play No. 4. It just reverses all the way down until you get everybody in that top group playing each other once. That will give you 18 games."
"And then No. 6 through No. 10 will do the same type of thing. They can't fall out of six through 10. And then No. 11 through 14 play and the same thing goes there. They can't get any higher than No. 11 and, obviously, no lower than No. 14."
CUSA 3.0 seedings?
‘15 - (14) Birmingham
‘16 - (15) Middle Tennessee
‘17 - (12) Middle Tennessee
‘18 - (13) Marshall
But they’re 4-0. Middle Tennessee stunned a national championship favorite Michigan State in 2016 before demolishing Little Pitino the year after.
CUSA could’ve been a 10-team double-round-robin league with rich mid-major history...Western Kentucky, Middle Tennessee, Birmingham, Charlotte, Old Dominion, El Paso, Louisiana Tech, Southern Miss, Marshall. Add Independent UMass for 10.
But they’ve got some FB-hyperfocused anchors (FAU, FIU, Rice, North Texas, San Antonio) killing the hoops schools.