Posted by rtmsf on October 26th, 2012
From the moment it was first rumored, the relocation of the conference tournament to Las Vegas has created quite a buzz among Pac-12 basketball fans. Adam Butler (@pachoopsAB) of PacHoops will be here every week as he offers his unique perspective along our March to Vegas.
Bear with me a moment as I beat the dead horse that was the 2011-12 Pac-12 basketball season. I need to preface it that way as we dive into why the conference is back. Or will be sustainably back, and it all stems from the top. You see, the world works in such a way that leaders drive innovation. There’s a reason Samsung infringed on Apple. There’s a reason the spread offense is everywhere in college football. If this works for them, by all means it can work for me. When one climbs to the top – and the top is usually achieved by recreating the mold – others will follow that path. And when those at the top begin to falter, the next tier has two choices: collapse or recreate the mold again. Unfortunately, we’ve found ourselves with a group struggling with the mold and a leaderless conference. As of recently, the Pac-12 bar has been set low. Which hasn’t always been the case.

An Example of the Standard-Bearers
For years – since the mid-80’s – the Pac-12 horses were Arizona and UCLA. Stanford squeezed in to make it interesting, but between 1985 and 2008, 19 times the conference champions were Bruins or Wildcats. Meanwhile the conference as a whole was pumping out NBA talent. Take a peek at this study and you’ll find that the Pac-10 between 1988 and 2008 produced the most talented draft picks among all major conferences. They sit behind a number of mid-majors on the list but that’s indicative of the wee sample set produced from the smaller leagues and the major NBA contributions from those draftees. But, point being, the Conference of Champions while championed by the likes of Arizona and UCLA, was good. And now it isn’t. Historically bad last year, so much so that the conference champion wasn’t even invited to dance. That’s like the prom queen not getting asked to prom. The headless conference can only be as good as its best team and if their best team is an unimpressive 21-9, then yikes. But that will be it for picking on 2011-12. Because the story of the Pac-12’s crumminess began long before Washington lost to Oregon State in the Pac-12 Tournament.
Read the rest of this entry »
| microsites, pac 12
| Tagged: arizona, ben howland, pac-12, sean miller, ucla
Share this story