I think your original comment was a pretty good one Fordham. If you're going to blame Marinatto it should be for something concrete he could have done to prevent this mess. Because it's definately true that this ship was put in motion long before him based on the competing interests of the basketball-only schools and the football schools. It was an unbalanced conference when he took over, no question.
Here's what he could have done differently: he could have been proactive in branding the conference and assigning it's media rights. Pitt and Syracuse left because the ACC could gurantee them substantially more revenue, plain and simple. If Marinatto had expanded the Big East's pot, maybe he could have prevented that.
And one way to do that would have been to take the risk of forming a conference network. That's partly how this whole game of musical chairs started, when the BIG 10 started pulling in huge revenue for their member schools through the Big 10 network.
Marinatto didn't have the quality football programs to make the network worth as much as the Big 10's; but what he did posses (and the BE still has), is a footprint in the major media markets along the east coast. The Big 10 might have successful programs, but Madison, WI and Bloomington, IN have less people than Staten Island alone. When it first started the B10 had to fight tooth and nail to get cable providers on the east and west coast to pick up that channel and pay for it.
If Marinatto had taken the risk and formed his own network, or packaged Big East basketball and football and sold it as block to YES or SNY, and then NESN in Boston/CT area, and MASN in the DC area, the Philly cable network etc... he probably would have been able to increase the size of the pie.
As it is, the BE got stuck with a second-rate ESPN deal. ESPN takes a profit off the top, and the BE is typically relegated to horrible football slots midweek or on ESPNU on saturday afternoons. If they had their own network the schools would take all the profits and have much more flexibility in scheduling game times.
It's not guranteed, but that's something he could have done. Make a BE network, or package the games as a network and sell them to various cable channels; either way the channel/network would've been picked up by the east coast cable companies immediately. Now who knows how the details would work out, because initially they'd still have to complete their ESPN contract, or buy themselves out of it...... but it's something he could have done.
And it's not that far out of the box because clearly that's how most entities are making money off their rights, be it the Yankees, Mets, Red Sox, Texas, or the Big10.