CaseyGarrisonforPrez wrote:Khan4Cats wrote:I could have gone either way on Loyola, but given Casey's track record, I must say, I think the conference presidents have made a good choice for an addition. They won't be competitive right away, but I think they will fit in just fine.
My track record on realignment is pretty good. I predicted Temple to the Big East before most others and did the same with UMKC to the WAC. I never had any inside info on MSU to CUSA and I always maintained as much. I fell for that one but wasn't the only one. But I'm not afraid to speak out and call things as I see them.
Now getting back on subject, after an afternoon of the Master's and review of Loyola I have a much more logical perspective of them than my preliminary, emotional response of last night. Still not my top choice, but I at least think that I see where the presidents and Elgin are coming from. And that is comforting. They do appear to be trying and so I am grateful for that.
Well, other than Temple is no longer in the Big East and the WAC is looking for anything breathing to add to keep their league a league....Besides, I was generally referring to your otherwise stellar track-record of predictingcommenting the exact opposite for just about everything that comes up and what actually happens.
I am not so doom and gloom on Loyola looking at this past season.
-They had a roster of 7 Freshman, 3 Sophomores, 4 Juniors and 2 Seniors.
-They beat two "Power 6" schools, albeit DePaul and Mississippi State, that's better than most of the Valley schools did.
-14-16 in Division 1 games, 15-16 overall, 5-11 in their conference but had 6 conference losses of 3 points or less (3 by 1 point) and lost in the conference tournament on the road by 2 points-7 losses in one-possession games with a really young squad. They also beat Valpo at Valpo by 9.
Not saying they are going to compete immediately in the Valley next year, but I don't think they are that far off. Their 221 RPI would have been the worst in the Valley, but it's really, in the scheme of things given conference foes, not far off from where Missouri State, Southern Illinois and Bradley were either. Not sure how their non-conference RPI stacked up, but they were 9-4 with losses to Michigan State, South Florida, Kent State, and Western Michigan (2 Power 6 schools and 2 others that won 20 games)