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Womens- @ VCU Sunday 2/23 1:30 PM ESPN+

Our athletics as a whole has improved under Hardt’s leadership. I get that we primarily discuss men’s basketball here, and while our flagship sport, there are still 18 other Varsity sports we have to think about.

We have 6 teams that were voted to finish first/tied for first in the A10 in preseason polls:
- Women’s basketball
- Men’s lacrosse
- Women’s lacrosse
- Men’s golf
- Women’s golf
- Baseball

We have had 5 teams voted to be top 3 in the sport preseason poll
- Men’s football (2nd)
- Women’s tennis (2nd)
- Men’s tennis (3rd)
- Women’s swimming and diving (2nd)
- Women’s cross country (2nd)

* honorary mention of field hockey picked 4th in preseason poll and having 10+ wins for the first time since 2019

So far we have won 2 trophies: CAA football conference championship, A10 WBB regular season championship. Women’s swim and dive finished runner-up.

This is coming off of last season where 10 out of 19 sports finished 1st/2nd in either regular season/conference tournament and we won 5 trophies (football, men’s basketball regular season, women’s basketball regular season & tournament, women’s lacrosse tournament). Not to mention our graduation rate and team GPA’s have never been higher and garnered national attention or the facility upgrades we’ve had like the basketball practice center.

Hardt is doing an excellent job overall.
Smells of Patriot League.
 
Smells of Patriot League.
Genuinely asking here, do you base these statements under anything evidence based or just a feeling?

The evidence I base my thinking on is the commitment we have shown in excelling in the A10 as evidenced by our results (see above), the 10s of millions we have put in our basketball program, our president’s statement of benefit of high level athletics to a university over the summer, and JOC writing an article affirming our continued determination to commit to A10 basketball, paying $1-3 million a year now with the new house settlement. When the evidence changes, my opinion will change. Right now there is nothing I see to think we not only want to succeed in the A10, but we are doing so holistically. Even men’s basketball has had 2 championships the past 3 years under Hardt’s leadership.

What are you basing your rational off of?
 
Genuinely asking here, do you base these statements under anything evidence based or just a feeling?

The evidence I base my thinking on is the commitment we have shown in excelling in the A10 as evidenced by our results (see above), the 10s of millions we have put in our basketball program, our president’s statement of benefit of high level athletics to a university over the summer, and JOC writing an article affirming our continued determination to commit to A10 basketball, paying $1-3 million a year now with the new house settlement. When the evidence changes, my opinion will change. Right now there is nothing I see to think we not only want to succeed in the A10, but we are doing so holistically. Even men’s basketball has had 2 championships the past 3 years under Hardt’s leadership.

What are you basing your rational off of?
Well, we did just move to the Patriot League for football. So there’s that.
 
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Our two most followed/highest attended sports are mens basketball, and football. Football stepped down to Patriot League, even though some success last season, seems likely to be a step back in national relevance. Men's basketball, Hardt is woefully behind the times in every little thing he does, with a coach that is super mediocre.
 
Genuinely asking here, do you base these statements under anything evidence based or just a feeling?

The evidence I base my thinking on is the commitment we have shown in excelling in the A10 as evidenced by our results (see above), the 10s of millions we have put in our basketball program, our president’s statement of benefit of high level athletics to a university over the summer, and JOC writing an article affirming our continued determination to commit to A10 basketball, paying $1-3 million a year now with the new house settlement. When the evidence changes, my opinion will change. Right now there is nothing I see to think we not only want to succeed in the A10, but we are doing so holistically. Even men’s basketball has had 2 championships the past 3 years under Hardt’s leadership.

What are you basing your rational off of?
Schools that REALLY care about how they do in basketball do more than spend money and act like they've shown that dedication. Name another school at our level or higher that would be totally cool dumping tens of millions of dollars into its alleged flagship program and then have a losing season 50% of the time during its most recent 8-year period, the way we now have? So the administration, if it chooses, can point to all these investments (which are great) but the bottom line is not great and does not indicate a sustainable way forward in this NIL era.
 
Our two most followed/highest attended sports are mens basketball, and football. Football stepped down to Patriot League, even though some success last season, seems likely to be a step back in national relevance. Men's basketball, Hardt is woefully behind the times in every little thing he does, with a coach that is super mediocre.

but but but our women's cross country team was voted top 3 in a preseason poll, ALL IS WELL!!
 
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Genuinely asking here, do you base these statements under anything evidence based or just a feeling?

The evidence I base my thinking on is the commitment we have shown in excelling in the A10 as evidenced by our results (see above), the 10s of millions we have put in our basketball program, our president’s statement of benefit of high level athletics to a university over the summer, and JOC writing an article affirming our continued determination to commit to A10 basketball, paying $1-3 million a year now with the new house settlement. When the evidence changes, my opinion will change. Right now there is nothing I see to think we not only want to succeed in the A10, but we are doing so holistically. Even men’s basketball has had 2 championships the past 3 years under Hardt’s leadership.

What are you basing your rational off of?
Basketball is the flagship and pays the bills.
 
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Schools that REALLY care about how they do in basketball do more than spend money and act like they've shown that dedication. Name another school at our level or higher that would be totally cool dumping tens of millions of dollars into its alleged flagship program and then have a losing season 50% of the time during its most recent 8-year period, the way we now have? So the administration, if it chooses, can point to all these investments (which are great) but the bottom line is not great and does not indicate a sustainable way forward in this NIL era.
My statement is about our overall improvement in athletics. Like I mentioned before, basketball is our flagship sport but we do have other sports too. I can understand the perspective many have shared about firing Mooney, I really do, but the comment I am making now about the positive direction our athletic department has gone in, isn't just about Mooney and men's basketball. It also shows our commitment to A10 conference as whole to be as successful as we are in almost all sports. I don't think there is another University in the entire conference that has that kind of success throughout the entire department, except VCU.
but but but our women's cross country team was voted top 3 in a preseason poll, ALL IS WELL!!
Feel free to joke all you want, but I think many of us are glad to see us competing at the top of the A10 with practically all our sports teams. No one is pretending that cross country carries more weight than basketball, but its still nice to see.
 
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Well, we did just move to the Patriot League for football. So there’s that.
I can understand how one may feel that way on the surface based on that move. But thinking about it more, I believe the move to the Patriot League for football, if anything was to further support our commitment in the A10 for all our sports, mainly basketball. I think it was 97 who said in another thread that football was the sacrificial lamb in a way. I agree with that. The CAA - which is being watered down with the departure of us, Delaware, JMU, and the additions they brought in a league with too many teams already - is opting into the NCAA house settlement. I am willing to bet you the Patriot League is not. I don't think UR wanted to invest any more money in football, especially in a conference they feel is a sinking ship and don't have much say in, than they need to. I think they understand that while football is great at UR, that basketball and our affiliation with A10 is more important. If we are going to continue investing in the A10 and giving the $1-3 million a year Bernadette says our teams will need to compete, costs need to be saved somewhere else.

My only gripe with the move was that we moved now and without W&M/Villanova. But I can see why we moved when we did because of the NCAA house settlement. If W&M and/or Villanova join the conference one day and we schedule good FCS opponents OOC, than the Patriot League will actually be the better decision too.
 
Basketball is the flagship and pays the bills.
Correct but why does us not having fired Mooney detract from my statement in any way? Our commitment is there in terms of money, resources, opting into NCAA house settlement. You may think that the way we are spending our money for a coach who has a 55% win rate is foolish and we can ultimately do better to get greater return in the value of investments we are making in men's basketball. I totally get that perspective, but I think the statement of 1) UR is committed to excellence in the A10 and our sustained success in all our sports, financial investments, and actions have all supported that notion and 2) We are not getting a good enough ROI from Mooney who isn't capitalizing on the investments we are making for men's basketball, are not mutually exclusive of one another.
 
Correct but why does us not having fired Mooney detract from my statement in any way? Our commitment is there in terms of money, resources, opting into NCAA house settlement. You may think that the way we are spending our money for a coach who has a 55% win rate is foolish and we can ultimately do better to get greater return in the value of investments we are making in men's basketball. I totally get that perspective, but I think the statement of 1) UR is committed to excellence in the A10 and our sustained success in all our sports, financial investments, and actions have all supported that 2) Mooney is not a good enough coach for UR who can capitalize on the investments we are making for men's basketball, and we should be getting better ROI are not mutually exclusive of one another.
Is UR basketball really committed to excellence?

I'll see you at the A10 Women's track and field championship this weekend in Va. Beach.
 
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Our minor sports have historically been solid. Some ebbs and flows and maybe we're at a bit of a higher point right now, but I'm not sure whether things have been elevated all that much under Hardt. They were already good.
 
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My statement is about our overall improvement in athletics. Like I mentioned before, basketball is our flagship sport but we do have other sports too. I can understand the perspective many have shared about firing Mooney, I really do, but the comment I am making now about the positive direction our athletic department has gone in, isn't just about Mooney and men's basketball. It also shows our commitment to A10 conference as whole to be as successful as we are in almost all sports. I don't think there is another University in the entire conference that has that kind of success throughout the entire department, except VCU.
I was just responding to the part of your comment that referenced all the investments we have made in basketball and suggested that's why we are likely to stay in the A10. I don't view them as investments with a true endgame in place, other than for us to be able to say "Hey, we're really serious about basketball -- just look at how much money we're spending!" instead of "Hey, we're really serious about basketball -- just look at how much winning we are doing on the court!"

We can spend lots of money in any league, it doesn't have to be the A10. If winning in basketball and making the NCAAs somewhat regularly were our endgame, we'd do more of that. We know our administration over the years has always preferred the idea of being with similar schools academically, and the Patriot League offers that. Will we move there for all sports? I have no idea, but it seems a lot more possible now than a few years ago, especially after hearing the language we used when we moved football there.

And tbh, we probably might as well, because the only way we can make the NCAAs out of the A10 at this point is to win the tournament anyway, so we might as well try doing that against fewer (and worse) teams every year in the Patriot.
 
Our minor sports have historically been solid. Some ebbs and flows and maybe we're at a bit of a higher point right now, but I'm not sure whether things have been elevated all that much under Hardt. They were already good.
Women's basketball has never been this good. I don't remember the last time our baseball team was picked 1st in the preseason poll. I think it was the first time since 2005 or so, we had won 5 conference trophies in 1 year. Even sports that have historically been good like women's lacrosse, could go awry with the wrong hires and I think he did a good job with Harrington for lacrosse who has won back-to-back championships. Men's lacrosse is at highest ranking ever, #10 in USA magazine poll, so we must be doing something right in supporting Chemotti and the program to continue to have sustained excellence. Our field hockey team used to be a top program like 2 decades ago, and first year coach Loncarica showed promise in restoring that winning 11 games for first time in 5 years.
 
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I was just responding to the part of your comment that referenced all the investments we have made in basketball and suggested that's why we are likely to stay in the A10. I don't view them as investments with a true endgame in place, other than for us to be able to say "Hey, we're really serious about basketball -- just look at how much money we're spending!" instead of "Hey, we're really serious about basketball -- just look at how much winning we are doing on the court!"

We can spend lots of money in any league, it doesn't have to be the A10. If winning in basketball and making the NCAAs somewhat regularly were our endgame, we'd do more of that. We know our administration over the years has always preferred the idea of being with similar schools academically, and the Patriot League offers that. Will we move there for all sports? I have no idea, but it seems a lot more possible now than a few years ago, especially after hearing the language we used when we moved football there.

And tbh, we probably might as well, because the only way we can make the NCAAs out of the A10 at this point is to win the tournament anyway, so we might as well try doing that against fewer (and worse) teams every year in the Patriot.
If the point you're making is that our investments in men's basketball aren't returning results as good as it could/should be, then I think it's a fair one, even if there are aspects about that I disagree with and believe there's more nuance. Still, there is a commitment there, even if the ways we are showing that commitment isn't what many here agree with (i.e. continuing to employ Mooney as our coach). But I can appreciate, and agree with, your mentality of constantly wanting to achieve excellence in the things we are committed to.
 
Yeah, that is part of the point, but the bigger part in the context of this discussion is that nothing about the money we are spending on men's basketball should be viewed as locking us into the A10 forever. In fact, I think just the opposite. Someone in the athletics administration is not stupid and must (soon?) come to the conclusion that since we are committed to spending all this money regardless, shouldn't we do whatever we can do to maximize it? Do we stand a better chance of randomly earning an autobid the NCAAs from the 15-team A10 that includes a team we can't beat or surpass that also happens to be located in our own city, OR from the (with us added) 11-team Patriot League that includes a bunch of small fries like Colgate and Lafayette?

I mean, this is so stupidly easy, even Mooney should agree with it.
 
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Yeah, that is part of the point, but the bigger part in the context of this discussion is that nothing about the money we are spending on men's basketball should be viewed as locking us into the A10 forever. In fact, I think just the opposite. Someone in the athletics administration is not stupid and must (soon?) come to the conclusion that since we are committed to spending all this money regardless, shouldn't we do whatever we can do to maximize it? Do we stand a better chance of randomly earning an autobid the NCAAs from the 15-team A10 that includes a team we can't beat or surpass that also happens to be located in our own city, OR from the (with us added) 11-team Patriot League that includes a bunch of small fries like Colgate and Lafayette?

I mean, this is so stupidly easy, even Mooney should agree with it.
The university doesn't operate in a vacuum though. I have no idea if the administration within the University has that commitment intrinsically, or if its motivate by larger factors such as: recognizing that many big donors are fans of sports, a lot of donations go to sports, many fans in the community go to the games, a better team means the university can reach more national exposure and garner more attention, etc. So I don't think the administrations will ever come to the conclusion that it's better to drop conferences to better maximize the value, because a lot of those others factors will also drop.

Plus, who is to say that if we went to Patriot League we would have better chances of an an auto bid? Players will transfer and we won't be recruiting A10 level players anymore. Heck, we don't even have many A10 caliber players on our roster right now and we lost to a bad Bucknell team this year, lol. So in reality, we could easily just become a middle-of-the pack Patriot League team in this scenario too. So that logic doesn't hold in my opinion.
 
The university doesn't operate in a vacuum though. I have no idea if the administration within the University has that commitment intrinsically, or if its motivate by larger factors such as: recognizing that many big donors are fans of sports, a lot of donations go to sports, many fans in the community go to the games, a better team means the university can reach more national exposure and garner more attention, etc. So I don't think the administrations will ever come to the conclusion that it's better to drop conferences to better maximize the value, because a lot of those others factors will also drop.

Plus, who is to say that if we went to Patriot League we would have better chances of an an auto bid? Players will transfer and we won't be recruiting A10 level players anymore. Heck, we don't even have many A10 caliber players on our roster right now and we lost to a bad Bucknell team this year, lol. So in reality, we could easily just become a middle-of-the pack Patriot League team in this scenario too. So that logic doesn't hold in my opinion.
Mooney would be mediocre in the Patriot League just as he is in the A-10, agree with that. Also agree that we lack A-10 caliber players on the roster. I think our roster this year would finish in the lower half of the Patriot League.
 
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