NorthEndZoneDan said:
I'm not certain I buy the financial argument. This scenario now means each school has travel costs, food and lodging for the mens and womens team for roughly 4 or 5 days? I can see the hotels and restaurants in Reno saying this makes financial sense but what am I missing from the school's perspective? How does this possibly save them money? From the revenue stream side, there will be probably a couple hundred tickets sold? There is no word of a tv deal. If the bobkitties wouldnt make the tourney under the old format and now they have to pony up travel bucks for the new tourney format how is this a cost savings? What am I missing?
First of all, we haven't heard what the format will be for the tournament. If the conference wants to save money and lost class time, it could hold the women's tournament the first three days followed by the men's tournament the next three. That way, no school has to be in Reno longer than 3 or 4 days.
Secondly, the conference tournament has usually been a money loser. That's why the league instituted the requirement several years ago that the regular season champion had to pony up $160 K in order to host. That money was redistributed to the teams attending the tournament to cut down on travel expenses. By going to a a pre-determined, neutral site and making every team eligible for the tournament, every school can now start searching for the best airfares a year in advance, instead of trying to book last-minute tickets to places like Fargo or Missoula. The cost difference of a last-minute plane ticket to a remote market vs. an advance ticket to Reno, multiplied by 40 to cover all the coaches, trainers and players for both men's and womens' teams, is quite significant.
I would also assume Reno made the league a very good deal on hotel rooms and meals, which also cuts costs.
Finally, the decision to go to a neutral, pre-determined site wasn't just about money. It was also about travel "fairness," if you will. Idaho State's women's team wound up busing 18 hours to the women's tournament in Grand Forks last year, because 1) the cost of flying was prohibitive; 2) they couldn't get tickets for the entire travel party on one flight; and 3) By the time they bused to Salt Lake City, flew to Minneapolis and bused to Grand Forks, well, they might as well just get on the bus from Pocatello and head straight to North Dakota.
Let me say, I personally enjoyed the current tournament format with the regular season champion hosting. I've been able to watch ISU host the women's tournament three times in the last 15 years, and that's been great. I doubt I'll ever make it to Reno to see a men or women's tournament, and not having the opportunity to see either tournament in Pocatello makes me sad.
But from the coaches and AD's perspective, I fully understand why they want a pre-determined, neutral site with every team in the tournament. I understand why fans don't like it, but there will always be a tension between the competing values of fans wanting the opportunity to host the tournament and having that excitement of an on-campus venue; and the coaches and ADs wanting travel certainty and fairness. It's why the league has changed its format so many times over the past 25 years -- because there is no perfect fix to that tension. And I fully expect more changes in the future.