shocktheheart wrote:When is the last Evansville sell out?
See my post from yesterday.
shocktheheart wrote:When is the last Evansville sell out?
Rambler63 wrote:The point of posting the A-10 attendance was in part that attendance has little to do with won/loss record, RPI, or NCAA bids. It DOES have something to do with NIT bids, but not much else. If attendance was the most important thing, Dayton would have an NCAA Championship and San Francisico would have zero. Attendance happens AFTER success, not before.
I lived in Richmond, VA in the 1970s, and VCU was nothing--- less than Virginia, Virginia Tech, and most ACC teams. I lived in DC in the early 80s, and worked at the radio station that broadcast the Georgetown team, and they didn't capture the imagination of the city until they were well into the NCAA tournament.
Attendance helps sustain a program, but it doesn't make it. If it did, Dayton would be a perennial NCAA team, and Bradley would always challenge for the MVC crown. Butler didn't have great attendance until it made the NCAA Final after a decade of NCAA appearances. This obsession with attendance is really misplaced.
One of the highest rising conferences is the West Coast, and if Loyola was added to the West Coast, they'd be 7th in attendance out of 11 teams. Santa Clara is currently averaging 850 fans per game at home. St. Mary's has a smaller arena than anyone in the MVC, including Loyola, and they're 9th in RPI. The West Coast Conference has an average attendance of 3500 per game, roughly 32% lower than the MVC, and the only reason it's that high is because BYU was added to the conference and they're averaging 15000 per game. Yet their Conference RPI is 8th, compared to the MVC's 11th. Maybe we should all become Mormons.
rlh04d wrote:Rambler63 wrote:The point of posting the A-10 attendance was in part that attendance has little to do with won/loss record, RPI, or NCAA bids. It DOES have something to do with NIT bids, but not much else. If attendance was the most important thing, Dayton would have an NCAA Championship and San Francisico would have zero. Attendance happens AFTER success, not before.
I lived in Richmond, VA in the 1970s, and VCU was nothing--- less than Virginia, Virginia Tech, and most ACC teams. I lived in DC in the early 80s, and worked at the radio station that broadcast the Georgetown team, and they didn't capture the imagination of the city until they were well into the NCAA tournament.
Attendance helps sustain a program, but it doesn't make it. If it did, Dayton would be a perennial NCAA team, and Bradley would always challenge for the MVC crown. Butler didn't have great attendance until it made the NCAA Final after a decade of NCAA appearances. This obsession with attendance is really misplaced.
One of the highest rising conferences is the West Coast, and if Loyola was added to the West Coast, they'd be 7th in attendance out of 11 teams. Santa Clara is currently averaging 850 fans per game at home. St. Mary's has a smaller arena than anyone in the MVC, including Loyola, and they're 9th in RPI. The West Coast Conference has an average attendance of 3500 per game, roughly 32% lower than the MVC, and the only reason it's that high is because BYU was added to the conference and they're averaging 15000 per game. Yet their Conference RPI is 8th, compared to the MVC's 11th. Maybe we should all become Mormons.
You're being deliberately deceptive here. You are clearly ignoring programs that don't fit your argument. You mention Bradley for the MVC, yet ignore WSU's success.
GoRamblers wrote:
What kind of attendance numbers did WSU have during the 90's?
GoRamblers wrote:rlh04d wrote:Rambler63 wrote:The point of posting the A-10 attendance was in part that attendance has little to do with won/loss record, RPI, or NCAA bids. It DOES have something to do with NIT bids, but not much else. If attendance was the most important thing, Dayton would have an NCAA Championship and San Francisico would have zero. Attendance happens AFTER success, not before.
I lived in Richmond, VA in the 1970s, and VCU was nothing--- less than Virginia, Virginia Tech, and most ACC teams. I lived in DC in the early 80s, and worked at the radio station that broadcast the Georgetown team, and they didn't capture the imagination of the city until they were well into the NCAA tournament.
Attendance helps sustain a program, but it doesn't make it. If it did, Dayton would be a perennial NCAA team, and Bradley would always challenge for the MVC crown. Butler didn't have great attendance until it made the NCAA Final after a decade of NCAA appearances. This obsession with attendance is really misplaced.
One of the highest rising conferences is the West Coast, and if Loyola was added to the West Coast, they'd be 7th in attendance out of 11 teams. Santa Clara is currently averaging 850 fans per game at home. St. Mary's has a smaller arena than anyone in the MVC, including Loyola, and they're 9th in RPI. The West Coast Conference has an average attendance of 3500 per game, roughly 32% lower than the MVC, and the only reason it's that high is because BYU was added to the conference and they're averaging 15000 per game. Yet their Conference RPI is 8th, compared to the MVC's 11th. Maybe we should all become Mormons.
You're being deliberately deceptive here. You are clearly ignoring programs that don't fit your argument. You mention Bradley for the MVC, yet ignore WSU's success.
What kind of attendance numbers did WSU have during the 90's?
GoRamblers wrote:And the size of your arena then? Was it around 10?
sixth ace wrote:Wichita 385,577 (2012)
Terra Haute 61,112 (2012)
Evansville 120,235 (2012
Des Moines 206,688 (2012)
Chicago
Springfield 162,191 (2012)
Carbondale 26,241 (2012)
Normal Il 53,837 (2012)
Peoria IL 115,687 (2012)
Cedar Falls 39,993 (2012)
Town populations compare to attendance. Wichita State is the biggest city in the MVC so I would expect that they would have the largest attendance Evansville is 1/3 the size of Wichita so I believe that Evansville attendance is similar to Wichita considering the draw size.
GoRamblers wrote:
What kind of attendance numbers did WSU have during the 90's?
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