Just saw that St. John's is last in the Big East in home attendance. And not JUST last, but last by almost a full 1,000 than 2nd to last South Florida. USF is averaging 5,124 fans while St. John's is averaging 4,195 fans. That is beyond awful for the largest media market in the world. While winning DOES cure most ills, our marketing and ticketing departments need to take a good hard look in the mirror here to see if they're properly reaching out to fans and the community.
This conversation has come up repeatedly and the answer is always the same. First, NY is a professional town and college sports will never be as big here as they are in other places. People who live in Lawrence live and die for their Jayhawks because they are the best show in town. People who live in Lexington keep every home game in their calendars because that's entertainment. NY has so many options and college sports ranks at the lower end.
But I will say this. If you put a winning team out there, people will come. Again, I remember going to the games in the late '90s and there weren't that many open seats in MSG back then. But here is the fact: St. John's has not won an NCAA Tournament game since 2000. Outside of Marcus Hatten and a team of seniors in 2010, this program has given fans nothing to cheer about in more than a decade. Former students, including this one, have very little pride in the program because it really has given us little back. I was too young to appreciate the '80s, so pretty much the Erick Barkley years were the only continued success I can remember growing up. If you want to put fans in the seats, you need to win. Plain and simple. You need to go out there and win 20 or 21 games a season and actually show up when you have home games (which they haven't done against Rutgers or Georgetown now). If you continue going down 33-10 by the 9 minute mark of the 1st half, nobody is going to care. They'd rather stay home and watch Duke face NC State and save the $50.
St. John's has had more than enough time to fix this mess of a situation. And it continues to be inept in terms of putting a competitive product out on the floor. I'm hoping over the next few years that trend comes to an end. Perhaps when this group of players gets older they will lead this program out of the cellar and back onto the national stage. But let's not pretend that fans are the problem here. When your players can't shoot, pass, rebound, or get back and play defense and the coach has no answers as to why his team comes out with minimal effort game after game, what do you expect the fans to do? Show up to MSG, swell up with pride at the fact that our team cut the deficit to 20 instead of 25?