Van wrote:Also, the Big East only has eight teams. Of course they're going to then have to play more OOC games than most other teams. Thing is, when you're doing your run down there, go ahead and list the names of those OOC teams the Big East played...
You won't find any real upper echelon teams there in the "W" column.
It's not for a lack of trying from the teams who play in the Big East. Here is an exerpt from Par Forde's column that should shed a bit of light on the predicament that some of the Big East teams face:
Vanderbilt backed out of a contract with the Cards that was to start next year. Everyone else in the SEC has passed at least once on home-and-home overtures from Louisville this century, according to senior associate athletic director Kevin Miller.
It's gotten to the point that Louisville is now offering neutral-site games with SEC teams. Miller said he's met with officials in Nashville about scheduling Louisville against Alabama, Arkansas or Tennessee. Athletic director Tom Jurich (10) said he's open to playing an SEC team in the Georgia Dome. They've asked ESPN for help in lining up games, too.
The takers are few -- and not just in the SEC. Among the others who have broken contracts with the Cardinals in recent years, according to Miller: Boston College, Georgia Tech, Duke and Texas Tech.
"[Football scheduling] has become the hardest part of my job," Jurich said.
SEC schools are busy filling out their schedules with home games, largely against chumps. So far in 2006 the league has produced exactly one road win against a nonconference opponent from a Big Six league: Vanderbilt over Duke. The Big East owns six road wins over Big Six opponents in 2006.
This is how you preserve the status quo: refuse to play up-and-coming programs, then howl about their allegedly weak schedules.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/ ... id=2652451
We've got future home and homes with Miami, Michigan State, NC State, Indiana and games at Florida and Auburn that were signed before we went into the Big East. I know we've talked with Nebraska and Oklahoma about 1 for 1's as well, so we're trying to make the schedule tougher.