Louisiana is and has been the second largest school in the State since 1939. Drawing students from every Parish.
The growth was so fast the state went on a school opening spree.
Ironically this growth was at a time when media was covering Louisiana Athletics first, before covering other schools. Coinciding with this was the schools heavy focus on Athletics.
Go back further and they were covering Ivy League schools before covering LSU.
It has taken decades but local media dug their own grave by propping up an artificial fan base and not covering local jewels. Coinciding with this is the schools efforts to kill the golden goose.
I don't think in fighting amongst g5 over who is better who is major who isn't who deserved who didn't, is the way to go.
The bigger question is why when a p5 makes playoff their ny6 slot is usually given to an extra conf mate, but when it happened to g5, the g5 lost its slot?
I think we are getting too much into the semantics of the term "major" college football. I think what lafman is trying to convey is that we are not the 15 or so P5 schools that have an enormous athletic budget, consistently compete for NC, and play in front of 85,000+ fans on a weekly basis. And having a school 45 minutes away (that has all of that) hurts us in that regard. It stinks, but it's the truth.
Right now, what we should be doing is getting ready to promote the 12-team playoff PLUS the new stadium as a 2-for-1 marketing plan. Once that first demolition ball hits the first piece of concrete of Cajun Field, start going into the 7 parishes around the area to say "we are here, and we are ready," because that 12-team playoff then puts us in that conversation. If we have another 2021 type season, we are in those conversations. Plus, I have always said that in order to promote this area, the plan needs to be as if you are running for public office. That's why Hud was able to get the average person to a game. He would go to offices, restaurants, random places on campus, and invite people to Cajun Field.
When you are competing with free events like Rhythms on the River, a day at Moncus Park, or many festivals we have here; we need to start thinking outside the box of how we attract people to the point where whether or not "major" college football is being played is an afterthought.
. . . sorry, but either generally or specifically posting that Louisiana does not play any major college sports is just ridiculous . . .
. . . if that is the case, then you could say in football that 6 or 7 games out of the year, LSU does not play major college sports . . .
. . . in college sports, are we an LSU, Georgia, Texas or Oklahoma, no, but we certainly are in the same category as Tulane, Boise St, James Madison, Coastal Carolina, Loyola Marymount . . . we all play major college sports . . . even football . . .
According to the Carnegie Classification of colleges and universities, colleges considered "small" have fewer than 5,000 students. These are typically private.
Many colleges fall into the "medium" category, between 5,000 to 15,000 students. For example, Yale, Brown, Howard, Duke.
"Large" usually means more than 15,000 students
100% agree, we need to create a festival atmosphere that embraces our culture. I actually really liked some of the Cajun/Zydeco music I heard over the tv broadcast the other day. Things like the 3rd down music etc... that half the schools across the country use don't really enhance the experience. The more things the gameday staff can come up with that make us unique the better. I really hope that is part of the main focus with the stadium upgrade.
The sun belt has tie ins just like every other conference out there. If you’re not in a Jan 1 bowl you go to a bowl tied to your conference. Since 2014 South Carolina, Va Tech, NC St, Vanderbilt, Fla St, Duke, Miami and BYU have all played in the bowl we played in last year. Does that make them not major college football too?
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