Exactly right, Mike. SFA & Texas A&M-Corpus Christi topped a Southland Conference that is bringing in better coaches and talent in large part due to their experience, but unfortunately is dragged down a bit by a few teams a year (due to APR issues, lack of resources or both). I'd argue the top three or four in the SLC is as good as those in the SBC right now. Underwood has taken SFA from program that won 20 games a season and was an annual league contender to nearly 30 wins a year and easily the class of the league (using both Kaspar's players and his own). The 'Jacks are winning because they're really, really good -- their recent league success is better than any in college hoops in recent memory -- and not just because the SLC is weak. In terms of national perception (fair or not), the SLC is probably on par with the Sun Belt right now just because of SFA's recent dominance in league play and NCAA tourney run a few years ago under Underwood, who is likely to land a power-league job this spring (the SLC hasn't had a coach move up to that level since Andy Russo and Pat Foster in the mid-1980s). Both the SBC and SLC, like other mid-major leagues, face big hurdles in terms of scheduling. Little Rock has a chance to make a run this year and has already given the SBC a needed national boost building off what Georgia State did last year.
Having covered the SLC so closely since leaving Louisiana I'll just say the league is much better than the average fan thinks.
TAMUCC brought back basketball in the late 1990s (when I lived there, with Ronnie Arrow as its coach) and the Islanders made the NCAA tourney in 2007. They dipped a bit after Arrow left for South Alabama under Perry Clark, but Willis Wilson has taken it from single-digit wins to 20 each of the past two years. TAMUCC has a complete team that would have represented the SLC in the NCAA tourney most other years. Rashawn Thomas is the SLC's top big and Hameed Ali is an all-league point guard. They beat OVC tourney champ Austin Peay (and its star 6-8 big) twice and stayed with Wisconsin on the road until late in the second half of a loss in what was Bo Ryan's final game there. Their five-point loss to SFA was the closest game for the 'Jacks this season in conference play.
Sam Houston State lost four all-league players from last season then its top two PGs (one a preseason all-conference, multi-year starter) to injury and Marlin's replacement, Jason Hooten, coached the Bearkats to a third-place finish in the league. (Last year TAMUCC, SHSU and Northwestern State were good enough to win the league, but SFA stood in the way.) Houston Baptist recently transitioned back to D1 and was on a roll until losing its 6-11 big to injury. Incarnate Word also is new to D1 (played the Cajuns in last year's CIT) and has more quality non-conference wins in that short stretch than the Cajuns do. Southeastern Lousiana hired a coach that won a junior college national championship and despite battling injuries is slowly putting together good program that could surprise in the league next season. Northwestern State has some nice non-conference wins in recent years - and actually won in the NCAA tournament in the 2000s - but struggled this season after its All-America/NBA potential point guard Jalan West got hurt vs. Ole Miss. He is better then any guard the Cajuns have had other than Elfrid Payton since they made the 2005 NCAA tourney.
So when is TAMU-CC heading here to Lafayette? And are they planning on flying? If they're driving, they may have to take a slight detour...
Wasnt really directing that at Z specifically but if the rubber boot fits ...
I understand the disappointment with basketball, especially this season. And I have said in other posts that I'm not sure if Marlin is the guy to get us where we want to be. I understand that when things are not going well, fans clamor for the backup QB, a different coach, etc. I also know that making a bad hire can set your program back years. I'm willing to be a bit more patient than some seem to be to give Marlin the chance to figure things out.
I like that we rarely hear about his players in a negative light and that his GPA and grad rates reflect positively on our University. I'm cool with one not showing up at a game to voice their displeasure but I think it's a bad look for a program that claims to be ready to take the next conference step to proclaim, in a public forum, that they will not be supporting the teams post-season play. It took some just 3 years of NOLA Bowl success to forget the previous dry decades and declare that they would not be going to NOLA.
Agreed that we should/could have more RCAF support but I would imagine that some of the issues with vision, communication, transparency, etc that have been discussed ad nauseum, have set those numbers back from what they could be. Of course, finances would be an issue. It may be that some can buy season tics with their entertainment dollars but cant swing the extra for the RCAF. Not sure what the ultimate answer is but I do know that, overall, our athletic program is miles ahead of where it has been.
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