valleychamp wrote:Now, if you are talking about one of the few basketball only leagues like the A10, fine. But I still don't understand what the point would be of moving from one mid-major conference (at least a good one like the MVC) to another mid-major conference just for MBB. Unless you are going to get an offer from a BCS type league, which isn't happening (and it is 100% not happening for non-football schools), its just silly. Sure, maybe A10 looks like the better basketball conference right now. But will it be that way in the future? Who knows. Its certainly not worth moving your entire athletic department to a mostly east coast based league just for some perceived better competition in MBB for the time being, at least in my view.
I'll try to explain it to you, but I don't think you are going to like the answer....
Instead of being saddled with tons of broke teams that have warned the rest of the league that future investment may be limited and the need to limit expenses is great, the A10 has situated itself as the premier midmajor conference for hoops. They are passionate about expanding the conference to take advantage of opportunities as they are presented. Their votes on conference wide decisions aren't based only on the economic impact (i.e., the fear that adding a school may result in greater travel costs).
The A10 routinely garners many more at large bids to the NCAA tourney, thereby automatically increasing a chance's team of making the tourney simply by joining (the A10 didn't just come off of an approximate 5 year period in which they were a single bid league like the MVC). Further, a large number of the conference's members are in big metropolitan areas, meaning they are both better situated to getting quality TV deals, and have more fertile recruiting opportunities within the conference's footprint. The A10 has their own media deals with both ESPN and the new CBS Sports network, in which the conference actually gets paid instead of paying to buy the time like the MVC does.
One league has positioned itself as a dynamic, fluid group doing everything it can to improve its standing and create additional NCAA tournament opportunities for its members. The other league looks to be anything but dynamic and is shrinking in both national perception and financial status.
I hope that helps you understand. If it doesn't, well you don't really need to worry about it anyway as UNI won't be in position to have to worry about making such a decision.
EDIT- What it really comes down to is situating yourself for the future. Is future stability worth more than the temporary inconvenience a change in conference would make? Butler thought so. So did VCU. And Utah St. All of those teams went from one mid major to another because they felt it gave them a more solid future.