- November 27th, 2009, 12:11 am
#288563
I was thinking about that earlier today, as I was thinking about past Thanksgivings and me staying up all night to watch LU get slaughtered by Duke. By sheer coinsidence, Luke Winn wrote an article on Tuesday that addressed exactly what happened to them, and many other early season tournaments. Pretty interesting stuff. Basically, the NCAA indirectly and maybe unintentionally made ESPN a tournament godfather. Maui will probably be next on the chopping block since ESPN doesn't own it.
here's a pretty sweet quote excerpt:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/w ... index.html
On a side note, Luke Winn is probably one of the best sports writers out there these days. He's a straight shooter and seems to do a lot of research and digging in the articles he writes. A refreshing change from most of the other hack jobs trying to be edgy.
here's a pretty sweet quote excerpt:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/w ... index.html
The other 21 tournaments, unable to use TV as a lure in booking teams, fight for the scraps. Says Lee Frederick, the president of Milwaukee-based Sport Tours, which ran the San Juan Shootout from 1987 until it died in 2008, "ESPN is the gorilla that's coming after all of us, trying to eat us all up."
Frederick is bitter -- obscenely bitter -- on the subject of ESPN's push into the tournament market. He still runs two multi-team events, the Glenn Wilkes Classic in Daytona, Fla., and the Las Vegas Holiday Hoops Classic, but neither is on TV. "F--- ESPN," he says. "Print that. F--- ESPN. They think history started with them. Well, they didn't create s---. They just have more money than God."
On a side note, Luke Winn is probably one of the best sports writers out there these days. He's a straight shooter and seems to do a lot of research and digging in the articles he writes. A refreshing change from most of the other hack jobs trying to be edgy.
*please disregard this post if dated before 2017 and accept my apologies*