A while ago
@ELA suggested that we could include every team in the B1G Tournament by holding (IIRC) two mini-tournaments hosted by the #7 and #8 seeds to get down to eight teams, then move on to an eight-team tournament at some pre-determined neutral site on Friday-Sunday leading up to Selection Sunday.
The more I think about this, the more I think we should actually go even further with this idea for several reasons.
In the past the Tournaments have mostly been held in either Indianapolis or Chicago. Both of those are pretty accessible for most of us. They are pretty far from New Jersey and Maryland but even there:
- Lucas Oil Stadium is 689mi/10:40 from Jersey Mike's Arena
- The United Center is 697mi/10:44 from the Xfinity Center
Those are REALLY long drives but the other 12 teams in the league are all closer to Chicago and Indianapolis.
I'm looking at this as someone who has actually attended two Big Ten Basketball Tournaments. I went to one in Chicago and one in NYC:
- The United Center is about five-and-a-half hours from me
- Madison Square Garden is about seven-and-a-half hours from me.
Those are fairly long drives but not completely ridiculous. When I attended I saw fans from all the B1G Schools at both tournaments.
With the league expanding both in number of teams and in geographic footprint, I think it will be harder to get fans to the tournament. When you have teams from SoCal, the PacNW, the NYC Metro area, the DC Metro area, and all of our traditional midwestern teams there isn't any "neutral" site that isn't REALLY far from at least some of them.
The league's solution is probably going to be to try to rotate the thing so we'll end up having it at something like:
- Target Center in Minneapolis in 2024
- Lucas Oil in Indianapolis in 2025
- Staples Center in LA in 2026
- United Center in Chicago in 2027
- MSG in NYC in 2028
- Lucas Oil in Indianapolis in 2029
- Capital One Arena in DC in 2030
As I see it, there are a number of problems with this:
- It sucks for the "outlying" schools that the tournament will only come to them something like once every 10 years?
- It sucks for the "core" schools that the tournament will be away from them every other year.
- I think we'll have trouble selling tickets in far-flung places because there will be a limited number of interested fans. Fans of teams that suck that year probably aren't going to be interested even if they are close geographically and I'm not sure that there will be enough fans of the good teams to fill up the Staples Center.
- The new solution was announced for the 18 teams that will be in the league next year but there is already smoke about adding FSU/ND and possibly beyond and I don't see the current solution as being scalable.
My solution is to take
@ELA 's idea and go even further with it. Instead of having #7 and #8 host two mini-tournaments then getting the top-8 together at a neutral site, lets have the top-4 host mini-tournaments then have ONLY the four winners get together at a neutral site for a two-day tournament.
As I see it:
- Tickets will be MUCH easier to sell at the top-4 schools because their fanbases are almost inherently interested because their teams are, by definition, doing well.
- Tickets for the semi-finals and CG at a Neutral site will not be too difficult to sell because the games will all be on a weekend and they are all BIG games. There are no #11 vs #14 clunkers.
Using current projections and a rough guess as to where the four new teams would slot in, here are the 18 seeds based on next year's membership with this year's results:
- Purdue
- Illinois
- Nebraska
- Northwestern
- Wisconsin
- Michigan State
- Oregon
- Washington
- Minnesota
- Maryland
- Penn State
- Iowa
- Rutgers
- USC
- UCLA
- Indiana
- Ohio State
- Michigan
So my tournament would be:
Monday, March 11:
- #18 Michigan vs #15 UCLA at Illinois
- #17 Ohio State vs #16 Indiana at Purdue
Tuesday, March 12:
- IU/tOSU vs #1 Purdue at Purdue
- M/UCLA vs #2 Illinois at Illinois
- #14 USC vs #3 Nebraska at Nebraska
- #13 Rutgers vs #4 Northwestern at Northwestern
- #5 Wisconsin vs #12 Iowa at Northwestern
- #6 Michigan State vs #11 Penn State at Nebraska
- #7 Oregon vs #10 Maryland at Illinois
- #8 Washington vs #9 Minnesota at Purdue
Wednesday, March 13:
- PU/IU/tOSU vs Wash/MN at Purdue
- IL/M/UCLA vs Ore/UMD/ at Illinois
- UNL/USC vs MSU/PSU at Nebraska
- NU/RU vs Wisc/IA at Northwestern
Thursday, March 14 and Friday, March 15: Travel Days
Saturday, March 16, neutral site:
- PU/IU/tOSU/Wash/MN vs NU/RU/Wisc/IA
- IL/M/UCLA/Ore/UMD vs UNL/USC/MSU/PSU
Sunday, St. Patrick's Day, March 17:
PU/IU/tOSU/Wash/MN/NU/RU/Wisc/IA vs IL/M/UCLA/Ore/UMD/UNL/USC/MSU/PSU
With the 15-team tournament method any expansion results in more teams left out. With this method expansion simply results in more Monday games as necessary:
- With 20 teams you'd need four games on Monday (one at each site)
- With 22 teams you'd need six games on Monday (two at two sites and one at two sites)
- With 24 teams you'd need eight games on Monday (two at each site).