Catsrback76
Well-known member
This morning in the Great Falls Tribune BSC Commissoner Fullerton noted his displeasure over the Big Sky Coaches scheduling a weak non conference schedule.
"The Big Sky finished last season ranked 31st out of 32 conferences in the Ratings Percentange INdex, which is based on strength of schedule.
"That's unacceptable for the type of conference we are, in my opinion. I've been working with some of the coaches, some of the athletic directors. Our efforts have been focused primarily on increasing the schedule."
" This season the Big Sky has the lowest schedule strength among the 32 NCAA Division 1 conferences for RPI."
" I think a lot of the times the coaches are weighing their jobs," Fullerton told the AP in a telephone interview.
Three Big Sky teams--Sacramento State, Montana, and Nothern Arizona--have a schedule strength 311 or below out of the 333 NCAA Division 1 teams. Six teams are at 291 or lower.
"When our schedule starts dropping off, you're going to have recruiting problems," he said which leads to worse win-loss records, possibly being relegated to the NCAA Tournament play-in game and the inability to schedule tough teams at home."
" They've got to quit looking at people like Boise State as their road money game," Fullerton saidof the Big Sky schools. "As long as your're going to play up, you might as well really play up," he said, suggesting league schools try to schedule Washington, Arizona,UCLA or Utah."
Coaches counter that playing such schools still wouldn't get the Big Sky a second berth in the NCAA Tournament and the road losses could all up to lower attendance at home, recruiting troubles and job insecurity. (end of article)
What say you? I find Fullerton's argument compelling. I understand coaches wanting to protect their jobs, but with our history of constantly losing ( and badly) in the Tourney we need to look at stepping up.IMO
What about Montana's record in light of their low strength of schedule rating?
How does this correlate to our discussions on scheduling weaker opponents for football?
"The Big Sky finished last season ranked 31st out of 32 conferences in the Ratings Percentange INdex, which is based on strength of schedule.
"That's unacceptable for the type of conference we are, in my opinion. I've been working with some of the coaches, some of the athletic directors. Our efforts have been focused primarily on increasing the schedule."
" This season the Big Sky has the lowest schedule strength among the 32 NCAA Division 1 conferences for RPI."
" I think a lot of the times the coaches are weighing their jobs," Fullerton told the AP in a telephone interview.
Three Big Sky teams--Sacramento State, Montana, and Nothern Arizona--have a schedule strength 311 or below out of the 333 NCAA Division 1 teams. Six teams are at 291 or lower.
"When our schedule starts dropping off, you're going to have recruiting problems," he said which leads to worse win-loss records, possibly being relegated to the NCAA Tournament play-in game and the inability to schedule tough teams at home."
" They've got to quit looking at people like Boise State as their road money game," Fullerton saidof the Big Sky schools. "As long as your're going to play up, you might as well really play up," he said, suggesting league schools try to schedule Washington, Arizona,UCLA or Utah."
Coaches counter that playing such schools still wouldn't get the Big Sky a second berth in the NCAA Tournament and the road losses could all up to lower attendance at home, recruiting troubles and job insecurity. (end of article)
What say you? I find Fullerton's argument compelling. I understand coaches wanting to protect their jobs, but with our history of constantly losing ( and badly) in the Tourney we need to look at stepping up.IMO
What about Montana's record in light of their low strength of schedule rating?
How does this correlate to our discussions on scheduling weaker opponents for football?