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Big East, Fear the D

10 May
A Reason to Fear DePaul Next Year? I've got Five. And a few leftover from last year, like this T-shirt slogan devised by the DePaul faithful.

A reason to fear DePaul next year? How about five? And a few leftover from last year, like this T-shirt slogan devised by the DePaul faithful.

Oliver Purnell heads into his fourth season as DePaul head coach with two reasons to be optimistic.

The first is a presumption that Purnell will find success in year four based on his previous two coaching stops. Purnell took over an abysmal Dayton squad in 1994 that went 7-20 in his first season. In his fourth season, he lead his team to twenty wins and an NCAA Tournament bid two years later.

When Purnell arrived at Clemson in 2003, he went 10-18 in his first year. After three years in the ACC cellar, his Tigers strung together four straight years of 20+ win seasons, including three NCAA tournament births. Continue reading

DePaul Blue Steel

17 Apr

Steel

The A. Finkl & Sons Co.’s moving of operations from their steel mill located at 2011 N. Southport Ave. to 1355 E. 93rd St. is about 60 percent complete officials told the Chicago Tribune.  That land is exactly one-half mile east and one-half mile west of the heard of DePaul’s campus at the corner of Sheffield and Fullerton.  Continue reading

DePaul Basketball: Vision 2020

20 Mar

It was confirmed with United Center owner Rocky Wirtz that DePaul had officially ruled out the possibility of the United Center hosting it’s Men’s basketball teams in the near future. The University will instead explore other options, the most talked about being a new building being built near McCormick place near 330 E. Cermak Rd.

The Tribune report has only reported what they’ve been told by United Center Officials; DePaul officials are yet to comment on the story.

If this is true, however, why completely rule out the United Center?

The McCormick Place deal is not even close to a reality yet. In fact, the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority does not even own the land on which the stadium would potentially be built; it goes up for auction next month.

How serious the University is in talks with McCormick Place is uncertain. But is a South Loop arena what DePaul is actually looking for?

As reported by the DePaulia in January, there are two main elements the Athletic Administration is looking for regarding selection of a new Men’s Basketball home:

“We’re also looking for a building that will have DePaul’s name on it,” said Ponsetto, “and be approximate for students to be able to get to.”

The article goes on to say that DePaul wants a building of it’s name on it so it could be used for multiple purposes. The envisioned building would host not only DePaul’s men’s team, but also its women and host concerts, ceremonies and other events.

It would be logical to think that a building like this would have to be located near the Lincoln Park campus.

The University’s dormitories house 2,300 students in its residence halls, and the surrounding Lincoln Park and Lakeview neighborhoods are home to thousands more undergrads. The high concentration of students on the near north side makes it the central location of DePaul’s fan base. But for that fan base, traveling to suburban Rosemont to cheer on the Blue Demons is a long, inconvenient trip. The quickest option for fans is  to take buses, free of charge, which leave from DePaul’s McGrath Arena in Lincoln Park to the AllState.

But even the buses are a half-hour ride along the Kennedy. And they only run from 1 hour and 15 mins before tip-off until 45 mins before tip-off.

DePaul Bus Schedule

As Ponsetto said, she wants an arena that is “approximate” for students to go to. A half hour, 15-mile bus journey is not approximate.

A half-hour, 9-mile CTA Red Line journey is no better.

From DePaul's Lincoln Park Campus to the Proposed McCormick Place Site

From DePaul’s Lincoln Park Campus to the Proposed McCormick Place Site

Even the drive from Lincoln Park to the South Loop would take fans 20 minutes, without traffic.

Essentially, a McCormick Place arena, though it would have DePaul’s name on it, would pose the same proximity and transportation issues as the AllState Arena.

Taking the problem and moving it south is not the answer.

To wait, however, might be.

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Last September, University President Rev. Dennis Holtschneider revealed Vision: 2018, his goals for DePaul over the next six years.

In September, DePaul embarked on Vision: 2018, a strategic development plan by University President Rev. Dennis Holtschneider and fellow administrators. The plan outlines the Two Strategic Priorities and Three Foundational Pillars which will guide the University’s development over the next six years:

  1. Enhance Academic Quality and Support Educational Innovation
  2. Deepen the University’s Distinctive Connection to the Global City of Chicago
  3. Strengthen Our Catholic and Vincentian Identity
  4. Foster Diversity and Inclusion
  5. Ensure a Business Model that Builds the University’s Continued Strength and Educational Excellence

 

Launched at the start of t he 2012-13 academic year, Vision: 2018 has already began making major improvements to DePaul. A new Theatre Building will open in September on the Lincoln Park Campus and McGaw Hall has been set to be demolished to make way for a new home to DePaul’s School of Music.

Absent from Vision: 2018’s construction goals is the building of a new basketball arena.

It’s not like DePaul has completely ignored athletics. They have upgraded all of their athletic facilities in the recent past. Wish Field, which hosts DePaul Soccer, and Cacciatore Stadium, which is home to DePaul Softball have both received multi-million dollar improvements in the past 15 years. The Sullivan Athletic was built in 2000 to be used as a training facility for Blue Demon Athletics, and serve as a home court for its women’s basketball and volleyball teams.

When Vision: 2018 finally runs its course (presumably by the beginning of 2019), the University may finally be in a good position to address its needs for a new basketball home. So potentially considering a move to the United Center for a short period time may be in DePaul’s interest until they’re finally ready to keen in on building their own arena close campus.

DePaul should settle for nothing less than what it wants, and what it needs.

After all, who knows what the Chicago landscape will look like in 2020?

Land could become available, and a strategy devised for the construction of a multi-purpose arena near campus.

After comments by Rosemont Mayor Brad Stephens, it isn’t completely ridiculous to rule out any options. Stephens recently offered the Cubs a plot of land near O’Hare airport, at no cost.

 

Could you imagine. DePaul basketball and Cubs baseball trading places?

Hey, anything can happen.

 

 

 

Video

Coming Up Next for DePaul . .

7 Mar

Judging by their 11-19 record, DePaul has not made much forward progress in Oliver Purnell’s third season as Head Coach. The team will finish  in the bottom of the Big East and fail to earn a postseason invitation for the sixth straight year. However, if we look at Purnell’s track record, in his last two head coaching stops (Clemson and Dayton), it was his fourth year in which his team really took off.

Next year’s roster will include a slew of seasoned senior leadership, and a freshman guard from Public League powerhouse Morgan Park who will have an immediate impact.

 

Just look at the banner that already hangs in his high school gym.

Billy Garrett Jr. set the Morgan Park High School record for points and assists.

Billy Garrett Jr. set the Morgan Park High School record for points and assists.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here’s more on the story in this week’s DePaulia.

For more DePaul news, check out Good Day DePaul on Vimeo.

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The Catholic 7’s Next Move?

13 Jan

When DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, Seton Hall, St. Johns and Villanova decided to leave the Big East a month ago, it was (and still is) uncertain what the schools will do regarding their conference fate.

Since the announcement, ESPN’s Darren Rovell has reported that the “Catholic 7” will look to add three-to-five schools in order to form a 10- to 12-team conference. This will make them a balanced conference, and attract a power conference-type TV deal. The question, however, is who should get the invite?

The seven former Big East schools share a lot in common. (Click to enlarge)

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They’re all mid-sized Catholic Universities located in or near major urban areas with storied basketball traditions and no Division I FBS football program. There are several schools in the A-10 and Horizon League that fit that description.

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Dayton and Xavier would be natural fits to join the Catholic 7. The two schools have a combined nine Tournament appearances in the past ten years, with Xavier reaching the Elite Eight in ’04 and ’08.

Butler might be the toughest catch, but it would be worthwhile. They would be the only non-Catholic school (they’re affiliated with the Christian Church). That aside, Brad Stevens is looking like the next great college coach, and they would add two more Final Four appearances to the Catholic 7’s existing 18.

Loyola is a program that seems to be on the rise, along with their North Side of Chicago neighbor DePaul. Renew that rivalry in an already basketball crazy town.

Valparaiso and Detroit also have a history with many of their Midwestern Catholic brethren. At roughly 3,000 full-time undergraduates, both schools have lower attendances than any of the school’s mentioned. Both schools are at the top of the Horizon League. Detroit has a bona fide star this season in Ray McCallum Jr. and who can forget current Valpo head coach Bryce Drew‘s 1998 buzzer beater (and subsequent swan dive.) His father Homer was his coach that season, just as Ray Jr. currently plays for Ray Sr. at Detroit.

Another school that would fit the bill could be MVC giant Creighton. The Blue Jays have a formidable father-son duo themselves in head coach Greg and high-scoring guard Doug. They’ve gone dancing eight out of the past fourteen seasons.

With the conference realignment epidemic crossing over to the basketball side of things, Depaul, Georgetown,, Marquette, Providence Seton, Hall, St. John’s and Villanova have a chance to form a basketball that is as strong top-to-bottom as any conference in the NCAA.

In the coming months, we will see.