I understand you are skeptical. As you should be given what we've seen. We haven't invested because there has been nothing to invest. Fundraising has dried up. No fans, so no ticket or concession revenue. We can barely afford to operate.
I mean I can make the same argument. If you can prove to me and point to something that says - if we had the money (over what our normal operating expenditures are) - they would use it for something like one of the examples you came up with last week vs. facility improvement, then I would shut up. The bottom line is you can't prove that anymore than I can prove they would use it for facilities.
But more importantly (and maybe the most important) what we do know is without it we damn sure are never getting new facilities. At least with it there's a chance. Going to the MAC there's no chance. So, here's the thing. If we're not going to take risk to be competitive then why do you care if we go somewhere stable? What difference does it make to be in a stable conference, know that we're never going to have the facilities to be competitive and reside in a conference just as shitty as the one we're leaving that's located in places we all know we're never going to take the road trips to. And without those improvements plus the impacts to our recruiting pipelines we're never going to be competitive in it. So, you're advocating for the same thing you're advocating against at the same time.
Going to the MAC, is giving a .500 coach a lifetime contract. Literally, it's the same mindset. Because, let me tell you there isn't a college football program in the country as "stable" as MT's. Where has that gotten us except a heap of mediocrity? So, that's why I'm having such a hard time seeing why everyone supports this. It's the same decision as not firing McDevitt and the Stockstill contract. We're making the same decisions with this conference decision instead of taking a chance and figuring out how to make it work.
Good post.
Are we settling?
I know it seems like settling to go to the MAC.
But here's where I am as approaching a 20 year fan of the MTSU program. I don't think we're ever going to reach the heights that we all envisioned or hoped we would 15 years ago. I had a glimmer of hope that we could Boise ourselves into the limelight. But I don't believe that's ever going to happen. I believe there's structural systems that would keep us (not just us, G5/lower budgeted schools in all) from getting into the upper tier.
If you want to run with the biggest dogs, you're going to need a 75 million dollar budget. That's just not going to happen for us here on the bottom end. There's no # of donors, no amount of on-field success, that would provide that to us.
If some folks want to take the "why even bother then" view, or we should go back to FCS so we can win a championship or that's loser talk, or something or whatever - that's all fine and valid. I disagree, but really, that's personal preference. I'd rather be at the bottom end of FBS than the top end of FCS.
So, what is success for us?
I kind of like the idea of our level of college football returning to a simpler, more regionally focused view. I like the idea of sticking with WKU and continuing to build a big rivalry. I like the idea of winning a conference title on ESPN. I like the idea of fun MAC-tion games on weeknights. I like the idea of a smaller, more compact conference that we might be able to travel to one day. I like the idea of other MAC fan-bases looking at our trip as a road trip they'll want to make. I like the idea of shocking P5 programs from time to time.
Here's a little more about why I'm a little more enthusiastic about the MAC:
So, if you liken each G5 conference to individual small ponds - AAC is one, Belt is another, MAC, CUSA - i think we're set up well to be the biggest fish in the MAC pond. And i'm not sure that, nationally, most folks are going to see much of a difference between those conferences. From a national perspective - winning the MAC is going to be seen exactly the same as winning the Belt or the AAC or CUSA.
Looking at the MAC - we have a recruiting advantage over all of those teams. We have a budget that puts us near the top. We have a staff payroll that should (if it were going to a coach with a pulse) give us an advantage over the MAC peers. Our facilities (or lack thereof) are not a hinderance in the MAC.
I like the idea of swinging the biggest you-know-what in the MAC.
I'm not sure that MT has advantages over anyone in some of those other conferences.
I'm in Knoxville, and as a student at UTk before transferring to MT (over half my credits on my degree are from UTk), I see where the Vols program is. And the fact is, no matter what they do, they're going to be at a disadvantage to programs like Florida, Alabama, Texas, LSU, Georgia when it comes to recruiting territory and some other issues. But they have the massive $$$$'s to try and even that playing field. We do not.
We have the same problems in some of those other conferences. As CUSA pivots to Texas, we're losing our recruiting territory, and we're playing against programs in their home state with massive recruiting advantages.
In the Belt and AAC, i'm not sure we have the program cache to be anything more than a middle of the pack try-hard. And that's if we even are trying hard. We certainly will never have the recruiting grounds, budget, etc that would put us probably in the top half of those conferences. Which I think has been a problem and will continue to be.
Here's the crux if it all - If I felt that this program was ever going to really go all in on athletics, I might feel differently. We simply don't have the will as a program, as a fan base, as a state, as a region, as a university/school system, as an alumni base to really devote all that's needed to be really great.
I look at what happened to UAB. That program was a dead as we are. Then they dropped football, the whole state rallied, and look where they are now. If we dropped football - could any of us really see us doing what UAB did? Me neither.
Let's go to the MAC, and let's enjoy it for what it is, not for what it's not and what we'll never be.