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Some leagues are in major limbo: you want to be a high major? Recruit better players, pay for better coaches, or do what everyone else is doingjoin the Big East
Sporting News, The, July 1, 2005 by Mike DeCourcy
Of all the great debates in this sport, from the commotion surrounding the process for selecting NCAA Tournament teams and the formula for the Ratings Percentage Index to whether Rumeal Robinson was fouled in the 1989 championship game, perhaps none is as acrimonious as this simple question:
What is a mid-major?
Good thing we never really got that one resolved, because it might change. On July 1, Louisville, Cincinnati, Marquette, DePaul and South Florida will depart Conference USA for the Big East, and the "Big Six" conferences--the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10 and SEC--will become bigger than ever.
Conference USA now will have a much tougher time proving it's a high major. The Atlantic 10, Mountain West and WAC always had been competitive enough with C-USA to remain part of that club, but those four leagues all could begin looking more like one another and less like the Big Six.
"It ultimately comes down to the number of NCAA bids you can expect," says ESPN analyst Jay Bilas. "The big conferences are multiple bids no matter what. You could make a credible argument now that there's a danger the A-10 and Conference USA, if they're not careful, could become one-bid leagues. Probably not, but their margins for error are smaller because they don't have big games built into their leagues."
Some believe the term mid-major is overutilized, though it's a handy piece of the game's lexicon. Bilas says he'll call certain teams mid-majors "for lack of a better term."
Avoiding the label isn't easy because defining it is so difficult. Gonzaga has ridded teams so powerful that its affiliation with the West Coast Conference almost is irrelevant. Clearly, Memphis and coach John Calipari are stealing from that playbook. The Tigers pushed for C-USA's league schedule to consist of only 14 games, in the hopes of limiting exposure to its many lightweights.
Louisville, Cincinnati and Marquette were responsible for much of C-USA's NCAA Tournament success. Half of the 12 teams in the new Conference USA have made fewer than six NCAA appearances. In the six top leagues, there only are five such teams combined. Of the six teams remaining from last year's C-USA lineup, only Memphis and UAB have made it to the NCAAs while competing in the league.
This just isn't the same conference. For the past decade, programs such as Southern Mississippi, Tulane and Houston clung to major status by keeping company with Louisville, Cincinnati and Marquette, the way an overextended businessman might keep up appearances by hanging on to his country club membership.
It was only two seasons ago that the Atlantic 10 had two teams among the Elite Eight. But the fall from that perch was steep--a single NCAA bid and a No. 12 seed for league champion George Washington last season. Even with two likely top 15 NBA draft picks--Utah's Andrew Bogut and New Mexico's Danny Granger--Mountain West teams didn't do significant damage to other majors last season. And Bogut and Granger are gone. These leagues must work to reinforce their status.
"If you're unhappy being a mid-major, be a major," Bilas says.
"Ultimately, the system is fair. It may not he perfect, but it's fair."
Who can argue with that logic?
POWER DRAIN The new-look Conference USA won't be the March player it has been: Team NCAA bids GOING Louisville 32 Cincinnati 24 Marquette 23 DePaul 22 Charlotte 11 TCU 7 Saint Louis 6 South Florida 2 COMING UTEP 16 Tulsa 14 SMU 10 Marshall 5 Central Florida 4 Rice 4 STAYING Houston 18 Memphis 18 UAB 12 Tulane 3 East Carolina 2 Southern Miss 2
speed reads
Those predicting doom for Florida because of early-entry losses don't understand where the Gators have been lately. The final tally from three seasons with Anthony Roberson and Matt Walsh: 2,052 shots, two NCAA Tournament wins. They need a new direction.
Strictly as NBA prospects, this is how I'd rank the top point guards in the draft: 1. Chris Paul, 2. Deron Williams, 3. Raymond Felton. But Felton is the one who enters the league with a championship to his credit.
The best point guards are unselfish. You see that quality in Toney Douglas? He left for the NBA after one year as Auburn's busiest shooter and leading scorer.
Prep players have an extra draft option
Imagine this pregame introduction at some point during the 2005-06 season: "For the Texas Longhorns, at shooting guard, a 6-5 freshman from Dallas and second-round draft choice of the Utah Jazz ... C.J. Miles!"
The last time NBA picks played in college was 1994-95, when Voshon Lenard went back to Minnesota and Charles Claxton returned to Georgia after second-round selections. The NCAA changed its rule regarding draft entry soon after; now, only undrafted college players who haven't signed with agents can resume their NCAA careers.