Veritas wrote:Metro Populations and/or school's enrollment should support good attendance at all MVC venues
CITY......................METRO.............. ENROLLMENT
WICHITA.................636,105...............14,555
TERRE HAUTE...........172,493...............12,114
EVANSVILLE..............313,433................3,050
DES MOINES.............588,999.................3,164
CHICAGO..............9,522,434................15,068
SPRINGFIELD............444,617................21,059
CARBONDALE...........126,745................18,847
NORMAL.................188,715................20,052
PEORIA..................380,447.................6,000
CEDAR FALLS...........167,747................14,150
Not to nitpick, but the Evansville metro is about 360,000 as of 2010, around 500K if you include Owensboro, which is supposedly in the works. Your point, however, is spot on, all markets have the potential for decent crowds.
I think the purple teenager is pretty off base claiming Wichita should draw more simply on populations. If that is the case, Loyola would outdraw everyone by a large amount. The numbers could and should be better, but historically, the MVC has drawn better than any other upper tier, non-bcs conference...A-10, MWC, MAC etc. The A-10 and MWC have larger markets, which apparently mean little.
Not always, but in most cases, winning has to come before the crowds. In the 90's, both Bradley and Evansville were outdrawing Wichita State. In fairness to the Shockers, they were pretty bad, and still were in the upper half of attendance every year. A final four appearance now has secured large crowds for years to come. There is no argument Wichita State supports well. I would also argue that Bradley, UE and several others would sell out a season following a final four run.
If market size is all that mattered, it wouldn't have taken two final game appearances for Butler to crack 5K in a market like Indianapolis. Even with those appearance, Butler still takes a back seat in Central Indiana to both IU and Purdue. Kind of scary considering the liklihood of them ever going back to back again.