The SEC has been vastly superior. I actually had this discussion with one of your conference's coaches in Vegas last December. He readily admits the SEC is a superior league.I agree. But remember your comment was that the SEC was VASTLY superior. not trying to get into semantics here, ok maybe i am.
Sounds familliar.The PAC 10 next year breaks down like this:
UCLA and Arizona will be very good. USC will be immensely talented, but suffer significant growing pains. Washington State will fall back to earth. Washington will be decent. Stanford will be a top 25 team if they can get competent guard play. Cal will be what they have generally been under Ben Braun, mediocre. Oregon will return to mediocrity. Arizona State will be improved, but still bad. Oregon State will be disgraceful.
Taj Gibson's better than Cowgill, so are Pendergraph at ASU, Love at UCLA, and the Lopez twins at Stanford. I'll be nice and give him the benefit of the doubt over Brockman at UW and assume Hardin at Cal is going to stay in the draft.he's a good shot blocker. No team in the pac-10 has much of an inside presence. Maybe that changes with love and mayo, but I'm not sure. I was actually pretty surpised UCLA went as far as they did.
Taj Gibson's better than Cowgill, so are Pendergraph at ASU, Love at UCLA, and the Lopez twins at Stanford. I'll be nice and give him the benefit of the doubt over Brockman at UW and assume Hardin at Cal is going to stay in the draft.
The Big East has 16 teams. Further, history benefits the Big East in that measure because many of their members have come from other leagues, thus the days when a given conference only got one bid allowed, for example, Louisville to win the MVC, Villanova to win the Eastern Eight, and Marquette, Notre Dame and DePaul to get bids as Independents. The SEC and ACC would have only had the opportunity to get one bid in those years. Also, run those numbers for the last 15 years and you'll get a somewhat different picture.I know you said past 15 years, but I still think this is an intersting stat:
Total NCAA bids:
Big East: 340 (21 per school) (largest % Louisville 9.7%)
ACC: 212 (17 per school) (largest % North Carolina 18%)
SEC: 192 (16 per school) (largest % kentucky 25%)
Pac-10: 164 (16 per school) (largest % UCLA 25%)
The Big East has 16 teams. Further, history benefits the Big East in that measure because many of their members have come from other leagues, thus the days when a given conference only got one bid allowed, for example, Louisville to win the MVC, Villanova to win the Eastern Eight, and Marquette, Notre Dame and DePaul to get bids as Independents. The SEC and ACC would have only had the opportunity to get one bid in those years. Also, run those numbers for the last 15 years and you'll get a somewhat different picture.
I think he's just competent enough to remain employed. However, I think the style they play leads people to overrate their personnel. Some equate scoring a bunch of points with good basketball. The Ducks are perennially weak on the boards and woeful on defense.what do you think of kent as a coach? seems to me that if he was even half decent oregon would be challenging for final fours ever year.
I think he's just competent enough to remain employed. However, I think the style they play leads people to overrate their personnel. Some equate scoring a bunch of points with good basketball. The Ducks are perennially weak on the boards and woeful on defense.