by purple&orange » October 16th, 2014, 12:24 pm
I could probably cherry pick various facts to argue either side of this thing and make a compelling case because like beauty, being a mid-major is often in the eye of the beholder. For me I think of a mid-major as a league that has their title game on ESPN/ESPN2 during Championship week, typically with a double digit seed that can often be the obsession of a talking head who hypes them up as a legit upset candidate in the early rounds. Also by definition if you're a member of what was the BCS leagues in football, now the Power 5 + Big East (remains to be seen) you never fall into that category.
As an example, Gonzaga hasn't reached a Final Four but has proven to be a threat to get to and win games in the NCAAs over the last 10-15 years. They've gotten all sorts of non-conference games and at least most programs will listen if they call inquiring about a game.
My take on the Shockers is that they are an emerging power. You have to respect these last 3 seasons. The optimism for this season being very successful is warranted. WSU has the resources, fan/booster support that is at a high major level. Part of the struggle at the top is staying there obviously and to me continuing to be a threat on a national stage. It can be hard to get there and change that perception because any sort of decline, a missed NCAA, etc provides the fuel that they are "coming back down to earth" or just had a nice run, etc. "Major" programs typically get the benefit of the doubt to where they can have a bad year or two and it's just a blip, not a indicator of things to come. What makes you a power/elite is sustained success.
It's hard to be an elite, it's hard to get to whatever level WSU is at this point going into the season, regardless if you believe them to on the scale of an elite to a fluky mid-major. Conference affiliation is often the easy cop-out answer and respect from the blue bloods and major programs is often a slow process but I would venture that a number of programs who feel that way, rightfully so or not, aren't exactly chomping at the bit to go prove their dominance by scheduling WSU either.
A stronger MVC certainly does nothing to help the reputation for WSU.....hopefully this is the beginning of an emergence for The Valley back into the national discussion of a league worthy of multiple bids and not just the name of the league WSU plays in where it's hard to tell how good they were according to some last season.