Syracuse-Georgetown Possible Nonconference Rivalry Provides Hope For Others

Posted by Chris Johnson on September 13th, 2013

Chris Johnson is an RTC Columnist. He can be reached @ChrisDJohnsonn.

Conference realignment is destructive and all-powerful. It is not all-conquering. The most recent frenzy of shifting league alliances, fueled by a nauseating blend of football, greedy athletic department officials and lavish broadcast rights deals, prompted all kinds of doomsday scenarios for college basketball. At one point, as the Big 12 inched closer and closer to a landscape-altering implosion, it looked as if Kansas, one of the true bluebloods of the sport, would be left without a conference to play hoops in. We actually reached the point where Kansas joining the Mountain West was a real, imminent thing. You know what happened next. The Big 12 survived, and the Jayhawks continued to win conference championships without blinking. The Border War – Missouri and Kansas’ long-standing rivalry, which dates back to a bitter slavery-motivated Civil War-era feud – was lost with Missouri’s move to the SEC, and a host of defections from the old Big East led to the creation of a new hoops-only Big East and a super-charged ACC. But in hindsight, the movement was less injurious for college hoops than most predicted early on.

The extension of the SU-GU rivalry should motivate others to remake similar games into annual nonconference fixtures (AP Photo).

The extension of the SU-GU rivalry should motivate others to remake similar games into annual nonconference fixtures (AP Photo).

The biggest casualty? Rivalries. I mentioned the Border war, but the GeorgetownSyracuse hatefest – which reached peak intensity in 1980 when John Thompson II ended the Orange’s 57-game winning streak at the old Manley Fieldhouse, Syracuse’s home before the Carrier Dome – was also cast aside by conference switches. The Hoyas and Orange had played their last game as co-members of the Big East last season – including a thrilling, emotional overtime match-up in the Big East Tournament semifinals – and unless the two schools came together and decided to rekindle the rivalry outside of league play, college basketball would lose another of its great annual hate-filled match-ups. Syracuse and Georgetown were parting ways, but was there a legitimate reason they couldn’t they toss scheduling logistics and lopsided recruiting benefits (the Orange playing in talent-rich Washington D.C. is eons more valuable than the Hoyas traveling up to the great rural countryside of Syracuse, NY) aside, and agree to some sort of home-and-home arrangement? Was there really no hope? Syracuse had already schedule out-of-conference series with former Big East rivals Syracuse and Villanova, after all. Setting something up with Georgetown seemed like the logical next move.

And it was. On Wednesday night, Syracuse athletic director Daryl Gross went on TK99 radio and discussed the probability of the Orange and Hoyas agreeing to a 10-year home-and-home series, with the possibility of games also being played at Madison Square Garden. Glass told the Syracuse Post Standard that the planned non-conference series is still in the “proposal” phase, but confirmed Georgetown athletic director Lee Reed’s eagerness to consummate the deal. “I know Lee really wants to do it,” he said.

If the two sides can iron out the details, one of the best college basketball rivalries in the country appears set to continue long into the future. This is wonderful news on its own; Syracuse and Georgetown typically wield some of the most heated, physical, irresistibly competitive match-ups. It also serves notice to all other desirably antagonistic pairings scuttled by conference realignment: conference membership need not dictate the longevity of rivalries. If two schools genuinely want to play each other every year, after playing each other every year for as many years as their previous conference co-existence allowed, all it takes is a little administrative cooperation, some logistical maneuvering and voila! Rivalry reborn. Conference title races won’t be on the line, but who’s to say the rivalry hate can burn just as deep in a non-conference incarnation? Syracuse and Georgetown aren’t about to suddenly clasp hands and sing Kumbaya as they waltz around the court together. No: the Orange and Hoyas will keep their relationship as unfriendly as possible. Within the confines of conference play or not, rivalries can continue with enough motivation from both sides. Syracuse and Georgetown are on the cusp of proving how.

Chris Johnson (290 Posts)

My name is Chris Johnson and I'm a national columnist here at RTC, the co-founder of Northwestern sports site Insidenu.com and a freelance contributor to SI.com.


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