Snaggletooth wrote:I think VCU talk is just from people who want to blow a lot of hot air and give themselves more to talk about.
A article I read that this is not as much about $$$, but these schools saw it as a bigger opportunity to reunite schools with common goals and getting back on mission and non-secular schools need not apply. Which if it is true would be breath of fresh air in a time where college athletic landscape is just being ruined by greed and all traditions are being destroyed.
In the interview they said their core identity was going to lie with the Catholicism but they were not going completely overboard with that identity because it could harm recruiting non-catholic students and possible expansion to schools that fit their profile. They said they ultimately want "reconnect their sports programs to their missions, and reinvigorate their religious identities at time when important groups on campus fear it is slipping away".
They said they would seek certain non-denominational schools that fit their profile of being committed to top-tier competition, are "attractive media entities" and "care about the holistic development of their student athletes". They felt felt Butler was one of those type of schools.
They also said 5 of the 7 schools are lead by Priests or the Catholic Church and they would like to put a "mission-related stamp" on the conference. They in fact were looking to the model of the the ivy league where no athletic scholarships are given, only awards for financial need. Also, games would only be played on the weekends. They would like to establish public service requirements and high ethical requirements for their students. They thought Butler might embrace these initiatives.
The other schools they listed in this article for joining this league were: Gonzaga, st. Marys (but admitted geography would be a issue for these two schools), Dayton, Xavier and St. Bonaventure.
thefish7 wrote:Snaggletooth wrote:I think VCU talk is just from people who want to blow a lot of hot air and give themselves more to talk about.
A article I read that this is not as much about $$$, but these schools saw it as a bigger opportunity to reunite schools with common goals and getting back on mission and non-secular schools need not apply. Which if it is true would be breath of fresh air in a time where college athletic landscape is just being ruined by greed and all traditions are being destroyed.
In the interview they said their core identity was going to lie with the Catholicism but they were not going completely overboard with that identity because it could harm recruiting non-catholic students and possible expansion to schools that fit their profile. They said they ultimately want "reconnect their sports programs to their missions, and reinvigorate their religious identities at time when important groups on campus fear it is slipping away".
They said they would seek certain non-denominational schools that fit their profile of being committed to top-tier competition, are "attractive media entities" and "care about the holistic development of their student athletes". They felt felt Butler was one of those type of schools.
They also said 5 of the 7 schools are lead by Priests or the Catholic Church and they would like to put a "mission-related stamp" on the conference. They in fact were looking to the model of the the ivy league where no athletic scholarships are given, only awards for financial need. Also, games would only be played on the weekends. They would like to establish public service requirements and high ethical requirements for their students. They thought Butler might embrace these initiatives.
The other schools they listed in this article for joining this league were: Gonzaga, st. Marys (but admitted geography would be a issue for these two schools), Dayton, Xavier and St. Bonaventure.
You have a link to this article?
Snaggletooth wrote:No I don't have a link, It was in the newspaper, story by the AP.
According to sources familiar with the talks now being held among the Catholic 7, the group will initially focus on a 10 team conference, which would mean invitations to Butler and Xavier of the Atlantic 10. An internal tug of war over the 10th team is being waged with Marquette leading a charge to include Creighton, while Georgetown and the Eastern Catholic schools are focusing on Richmond of the Atlantic 10.
MVCfans wrote:Who knows what to believe any more. After a report a couple of days ago by John Feinstein in the Washington Post saying that Creighton was too far west for the Catholic 7 schools, here is a report that says Creighton and Richmond are being debated as the 10th and final team for inclusion:According to sources familiar with the talks now being held among the Catholic 7, the group will initially focus on a 10 team conference, which would mean invitations to Butler and Xavier of the Atlantic 10. An internal tug of war over the 10th team is being waged with Marquette leading a charge to include Creighton, while Georgetown and the Eastern Catholic schools are focusing on Richmond of the Atlantic 10.
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