-Temple is on the verge of re-joining the Big East as an all sports member. They will be able to join the conference in time for the 2012-13 season, giving the Big East 8 teams. Temple was one of the most obvious candidates for Big East expansion, but it's mildly surprising that the basketball schools allowed this to happen, as they run the conference and Villanova was vehemently against adding Temple for obvious reasons.The only remaining obstacle is the exit fee the Owls would have to pay for leaving the MAC and Atlantic 10.
Schedule wise, Temple could just take over for West Virginia, but is it fair that they would get 4 conference home games while others get 3? If they make Temple play 4 road games, the Big East would have to decide whether they'll give Rutgers, Syracuse or Louisville a 4th home game. Rutgers needs the home game more than the others (in order to pay off the stadium renovations) but knowing the Big East, they'll give it to Syracuse even though they're leaving the conference. An extra home game could improve Louisville or Rutgers stock should conference realignment strike again.
The addition of Temple effects Rutgers in two other ways as well. Recruiting wise, moving to the Big East could improve Temple's recruiting in New Jersey. I don't think it will help in north and central Jersey (CJ is very pro Rutgers and there was a lot of backlash amongst NJ HS coaches when Steve Addazio was a candidate to take oer for Greg Schiano) but Rutgers could go to battle with the Owls for South Jersey prospects. Temple has built ties there taking lesser prospects who didn't receive a lot of interest elsewhere. Rutgers would also have a void in their non conference schedule form 2015-2018, since they had a scheduled series with Temple. This won't be a big deal if the Big East goes to a 9 game conference slate or if RU joins another conference playing a 9 game slate.
-Former Scarlet Knights Mohamed Sanu, Justin Francis and Desmond Wynn participated in the NFL Combine earlier this week. Sanu is projected to go in the late first or early second round, and ran a sub par 40 yard dash, clocking in at 4.67 seconds. In reality, this isn't a big deal. Sanu is a possession receiver and isn't a track star like some other guys. This years' wide out class is pretty deep, so he will likely fall into the second round. Potential landing spots for Sanu are the Colts at 33 (they might lose Pierre Garcon and Reggie Wayne) , Patriots, 49ers, Texans, and Jets. Francis and Wynn are projected to go in the late rounds.
-Last week in his mailbag, Bruce Feldman fielded a question about Rutgers' future.
From @ChrisMonti Rutgers '12 outlook, one step back, then forward?There is a grain of truth to what he is saying, but I don't necessarily agree. Rutgers has already "lost"* the top prospect in New Jersey for 2013's recruiting class, Eli Woodard of Voorhees to Ohio State, but the last two recruiting classes have proved one thing to me: Jersey kids want to stay home and win together, no matter what the conference landscape is or who the coach is. High School coaches in New Jersey still feel comfortable sending their players to Rutgers, and they approved of Kyle Flood's promotion to head coach. The kids being recruited now remember the Ray Rice and Kenny Britt glory days of Rutgers football and don't remember the sinkhole of a program it was before Greg Schiano.
I'm not overly optimistic about that because the Big East is going to be so watered down, the perception is the conference is gonna be even less relevant. My hunch is it'll be that much harder for RU to compete with schools from the Big Ten and others when they go head-to-head on top talent around the Northeast. Can Kyle Flood do much more than Greg Schiano did? We'll see. It has become a tougher spot because of the conference's situation
*Recruiting isn't over until the prospect signs the dotted line. There's still 11 months for Woodard to change his mind.
No comments:
Post a Comment