FriarJ wrote:Many do and they currently do thrive. PC has really made a jump in the last few years. New soccer stadium on campus is excellent as well. It's a shame about SHU not caring. They are in a hotbed of talent.
Big East soccer has a really promising future. There are roughly twenty D1 soccer conferences. I would rank the BE at roughly 4th or 5th best. Based on recent trends, I think the BE will soon rival the Big Ten as the second best soccer conference. I really hope the conference leadership prioritizes soccer as a sport where the BE becomes elite.
My DI conference soccer rankings, based mostly on recent performance:
ACC (Top tier: Clemson, UNC, Virginia, Notre Dame, Wake Forest, Duke. Next tier: BC)
Big Ten (Top tier: Indiana, Maryland, Penn State. Next tier: Michigan State)
Pac 12 (Top tier: UCLA, Stanford. Next tier: Washington, Cal)
American Athletic (Top tier: SMU, UConn, South Florida. Next tier: Tulsa)
Big East (Top tier: Georgetown, Creighton, Providence. Next tier: Xavier, Butler, St. John’s – historically successful)
The ACC is head and shoulders above the rest. At any given time, half the conference is in the top 25.
The Big Ten has a handful of powerhouses, led by Indiana, Maryland and Penn State.
The Pac 12 is barely a soccer conference, just six members, including San Diego State. But two of those members, UCLA and Stanford, are traditionally elite programs, with UW and Cal being strong programs.
The American Athletic is narrowly ahead of the BE, based solely on the strength and history of the top three.
Except for Creighton and St. John’s, the top programs in the BE have less historical success than their counterparts in other conferences. GTown, Providence, Xavier and Butler each have a handful of NCAA tourney appearances, and most of those are in the last decade or so. But the trend is favorable. Like in MBB, the depth of the conference should be our greatest strength. We have some really interesting rivalries developing.
Go Bluejays!