CRUNIFan wrote:As a UNI fan this setup sucks. UNI has been to 5 NCAA tournaments in the last 10 years, ISU and Iowa have two appearances. We are 5-5 against Iowa in that time and 6-4 against Iowa State, yet we are continually treated like the annoying little school that should be honored to share the same court with them. If UNI wants to move to the next level we need to start acting the part, and participating in this "tournament" is just a reminder that we and this state think we cannot do any better than accept hand outs from Iowa and ISU.
CRUNIFan wrote:Nebraska and Creighton play every year.
Wisconsin also plays its in-state schools.
Iowa uses the excuse it wants more freedom to schedule bigger games, but until they stop playing the Maryland-Eastern Shores, Campbells, and Chicago States of this world, then this is just Iowa and ISU getting out of trips to UNI and Drake because they are now too dangerous.
CRUNIFan wrote:Nebraska and Creighton play every year.
Wisconsin also plays its in-state schools.
Iowa uses the excuse it wants more freedom to schedule bigger games, but until they stop playing the Maryland-Eastern Shores, Campbells, and Chicago States of this world, then this is just Iowa and ISU getting out of trips to UNI and Drake because they are now too dangerous.
Tickets to go on sale for Hy-Vee Big Four Classic
Iowa's four NCAA Division I institutions will host the inaugural Hy-Vee Big Four Classic, a men's college basketball doubleheader, at Wells Fargo Arena on Dec. 15. The University of Iowa and University of Northern Iowa will tip off at 1:30 p.m. and the teams from Drake University and Iowa State University will square off at approximately 4 p.m. Tickets to the event go on sale to the public Oct. 26 at 10 a.m. The tickets, priced at $25, $50 and $70, can be purchased at http://www.dahlstickets.com, the Wells Fargo Arena ticket office, all Dahl's Foods locations and by calling (866) 55-DAHLS.
dogbo wrote: Hopefully it can be tweaked in future years but having this AFTER Iowa State and Iowa have already played just seems a bit odd to me. Granted, Iowa and ISU don’t ever meet in the Big Four Classic, but it just seems to me it would be a bit more of an intriguing event if the opposing fan bases were able to get a glimpse of each team during this weekend and then settling it amongst themselves on a date later in the schedule.
Finally, I can’t help but hope the future might mean this could evolve into a two-day tournament where there actually is a champion crowned on the 2nd day. In addition to adding intrigue, it would mean some pretty nice added hotel/restaurant/bar activity over what you get out of a one-day event. That said, probably won’t happen as the two big schools don’t have a lot of incentive to give up the home game every other year
Mastermind wrote:The problem is they didnt split the games up, so ticket prices are double what they should be.
Emil wrote:Mastermind wrote:The problem is they didnt split the games up, so ticket prices are double what they should be.
if you're going to split the games, it defeats some of the purpose of having them at WFA.
Of course, therein lies the problem. the overall product offered by the four schools isn't very good. Tickets for ISU or Iowa at Drake have usually been around $30. Assuming I want non-terrible seats, I'm paying at least $50. Maybe I value a Drake-ISU ticket at up to $35...but I don't really value a ticket to UNI-Iowa that much, particularly since it means sitting in an arena for 5 hours.
Mastermind wrote:Emil wrote:Mastermind wrote:The problem is they didnt split the games up, so ticket prices are double what they should be.
if you're going to split the games, it defeats some of the purpose of having them at WFA.
Of course, therein lies the problem. the overall product offered by the four schools isn't very good. Tickets for ISU or Iowa at Drake have usually been around $30. Assuming I want non-terrible seats, I'm paying at least $50. Maybe I value a Drake-ISU ticket at up to $35...but I don't really value a ticket to UNI-Iowa that much, particularly since it means sitting in an arena for 5 hours.
Why would splitting the games defeat the purpose? They split games all the time in other tournaments, haigh school basketball, high school wrestling, etc. This is not a tournament. Rather just 2 in state games played on the same court on the same day. Drake was charging more like $35 + taxes and fees for Iowa a few years ago.
Because then it isn't a "Big Four Classic", it's two random neutral games.
I shouldn't say "the purpose", but it certainly removes a benefit to playing two games. The schools aren't even filling up on-campus arenas against each other. Move them to Des Moines, and you get two 6000-fan crowds in a 16000 seat arena.
Emil wrote:ticket sales are supposedly very strong. I'm surprised. It also means that maybe it wasn't a bad idea to combine the games.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/articl ... ter.com%29
GoVerticalDSM wrote:The guy said 14,500 is capacity, they must have dropped a lot of seats for this game. The published capacity is over 16K.
dogbo wrote:Attendance was 13,180. I believe all parties will be please with this number for the first year of this event. In time, hopefully this will be a sold-out event each year.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/articl ... ck_check=1
Keepgrowingdsm wrote:dogbo wrote:Attendance was 13,180. I believe all parties will be please with this number for the first year of this event. In time, hopefully this will be a sold-out event each year.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/articl ... ck_check=1
Was that total attendance between both games or just 1? I watched Iowa/Uni and it looked like a very good crowd. Because I don't have cable I couldn't watch ISU/Drake and couldn't see the crowd. Keep in mind this was held during the holiday season. Most colleges are either in finals or done with finals and starting holiday break so the migration of students here was probably pretty light. People had work parties (Like me) or family outings with the holidays upon us. This probably took priority over the games, especially if you could watch it on TV during the party like I did with a loaded glass of holiday cheer and plate of some unidentified dip with crackers. I did happen to watch the Crossroads classic afterwards held in Indianapolis. Indiana (#1 team in the nation) vs. Butler (Located in Indy and a very good team) looked 'almost' full in the same arena where the NBA Pacers play. The second game I watched from the same venue was Notre Dame vs Purdue. The place looked nearly empty and both schools have large fan bases. I think the Big 4 Classic is a great addition to WFA and hope it comes back bigger and better next year!
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