Just three years ago twenty wins were expected, and this year the Cajuns won just eight division one games. Only one of those games was out of conference, and the Cajuns beat only one team with a winning record (Louisiana-Monroe).
The Cajuns are ranked at 271 in the latest RPI. There are now five teams with fewer wins ahead of the Cajuns in the RPI. San Jose State, from the lowly WAC, has four wins and ranks fourty three spots ahead of the Cajuns.
The Cajuns scheduling hurts chances to create local interest, sell tickets, sell advertising and entice transfer students to play for the Cajuns.
This year's OOC schedule hurt the Cajuns and destroyed local interest. The Cajun played just two teams going to the postseason and played many, at best, bubble teams from tiny, one bid conferences. The latter hurts the Cajuns RPI and resume for postseason play.
The NCAA permits teams to have 13-14 OOC games each season. The Cajuns can use this time to prepare for the SBC schedule. There are a few principles that should guide the Cajuns in their schedule making.
1. All home games must be wins. They should be wins before the tip. In addition, they must be games against teams from Louisiana or surrounding states to drive down the payout the Cajuns must pay and also to sell some tickets to fans of the opposing teams, if they can make the game. Home losses are destructive from a ticket sales standpoint. The games against Nevada and UTK were nice, but the damage was obvious. Attendance, which used to get the Cajuns ranked in the average top 100 of all programs, was at an all time low this year. Home wins, even against terrible teams, sell tickets.
Also, Games played around holidays and near finals can be played at Blackham to drive down cost, generate some tickets sales from the old timers wanting to see a game or two in Blackham.
1a. All games must be against D-1 teams. There are 337 basketball programs playing division 1. Excluding LSU, who should never play the Cajuns in any sport, there are 336 programs the Cajuns can schedule. It's financially irresponsible to play a team who will not help you in the win column.
2. Road games must be in areas with easily navigable airports close to the schools to drive down travel cost. Road games, for the most part, will likely have to be losses against high RPI teams who can offer a signifcant payout and time for the Cajuns on TV. As it stands, the ESPN family shows more games for OJ Mayo, West Virginia's basketball freak of nature, than it does for the Ragin Cajuns. When mothers ask coaches when they can see their baby play on TV, it matters not if the Cajuns have a chance of winning (though that never hurts), it just matters that a mother can see her son or daughter on TV.
3. The Cajuns should roll into conference play with 8-9 wins, especially if they play 13-14 OOC games. Just like football, the number of division one wins generates local interest, sells tickets, develops a winning tradition the Cajuns no longer have, and makes advertising with the Cajuns an easier sell.
If the Cajuns can roll in with 8-9 wins, they can conceivably win 16-17 games a year, even if Robert Lee is the coach. The SBC is an awful conference and the Ivy League, which cannot and does not offer athletic scholarships, ranks higher than the SBC. So, the Cajuns can get quite a few wins in the SBC; this year, with very little talent and experience, the Cajuns won seven.
The Cajuns, under Lee, are probably a 16-18 win team.
All that being said, the following schedule was suggested at the beginning of the year. It follows the three rules and would certainly improve the Cajuns' RPI, increase ticket sales, generate local interest and keep the program from drifting toward mediocrity.
vs Centenary
vs Texas San Antonio
@ Pittsburgh
vs Southern (BLACKHAM)(games after Thanksgiving are usually not well attended)
vs Nicholls St
@ Duke
vs Southeastern
@ Kansas
vs McNeese (BLACKHAM) (should no longer be a 1-1; game must always be in Lafayette)
vs Grambling
@ UCLA
vs Texas Arlington
@ Memphis
@ Northwestern (chance for Cajuns to get an upset. Unlikely, but worth a shot because Big10 RPI will rub off on Cajuns and Chicago is a great recruiting area)
vs Rice
CONFERENCE
Predicted OOC record: 8-6 or 7-7. That's the difference between a 15-16 win season and an eight win season. The Cajuns would still be a long shot for the NIT, but they'd be closer than this year.