Jet915 wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:ECUAthletics @ECUAthletics 3h3 hours ago
Looks like @ECUAthletics would be an excellent travel partner along with @WVUSports!
Always nice to have a current member of a conference actively seek, through social media, to leave and join another conference - especially when said university has a 2% chance of getting a Big 12 invitation.
Well, this is what ECU's AD said: "I believe strongly East Carolina deserves to be in the Big 12 as we can deliver the entire state of North Carolina."
Paul Finebaum (SEC hack) and Sportscenter then made fun of the comments....
Finebaum said the AD should go into politics because he is making speeches/comments that he can't back up with facts....Finebaum mentions the 4 ACC Schools plus the "border" schools in South Carolina...
Host is laughing in hysterics...when he can barely say "ECU couldn't even deliver the greater Greenville area"...
Finebaum then said "I live in North Carolina...and until you read that statement, I had no idea that school was even IN North Carolina."
on July 20, 2016 Irishdawg wrote:
Brett McMurphy @McMurphyESPN - July 20, 2016
BYU & Houston (5 votes each) top @ESPN poll of Big 12 coaches on expansion. Next: Cincinnati, Memphis (4 votes each); CSU, UCF (1 vote each)
USA Today wrote:
Here are the five best candidates potentially in the running (in no particular order).
Central Florida
Why it’s good: The Big 12 gets a recruiting footprint in the state of Florida. It also gets the Orlando TV market. UCF’s athletic department is struggling right now, but Baylor can tell you its experience with the Knights from the 2013 season Fiesta Bowl when UCF pulled off a 52-42 upset.
Why it’s bad: UCF is coming off a 0-12 season and is in rebuilding mode. If another school from Florida — like say, South Florida — doesn’t come along, then does the Big 12 want to extend its brand out there?
Cincinnati
Why it’s good: Success in football and basketball, former Big East member, and it makes geographic sense for West Virginia and potential new school Memphis.
Why it’s bad: Not many cons here.
Houston
Why it’s good: In Tom Herman’s first year as head coach last year, the Cougars beat Florida State in the Peach Bowl. It’s another Texas school, which keeps things tight geographically, but do Texas, TCU, Baylor and Texas Tech want added recruiting competition?
Why it’s bad: What happens when the football program loses Herman for a bigger job?
Memphis
Why it’s good: Nice TV market, recruiting area and new BBQ for visiting fans to try. Football and basketball success and it’s in SEC country, which the Big 12 has to like.
Why it’s bad: Can the Tigers have sustained success down the road? Maybe this doesn’t matter after what Bowlsby said about members growing over time.
BYU
Why it’s good: National brand and probably the most successful football program over time of any other candidate. Very faithful fan base. The Cougars beat Texas back-to-back in 2013 and 2014, too.
Why it’s bad: No geographic partner out West, unless perhaps Colorado State also joined. Not playing on Sunday is an issue. BYU could come in as a football-only member, but that might not be in the best interest of the conference.
on July 26, 2016 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Abilene Reflector-Chronicle wrote:
THE FAVORITES
Houston: Few schools have enjoyed the kind of political push that Houston’s received during this past week. From the Texas governor to school officials at Texas and Texas Tech, it appears everyone is in love with the Cougars. Don’t be fooled, these Lone Star endorsements are huge and make UH an early front-runner in the race. It doesn’t hurt that the school is going through a football renaissance under coach Tom Herman and the Houston television market is among the top 10 in the country.
BYU: Bowlsby said one of the criteria for a candidate is fan base and few schools have as much of world-wide presence at BYU thanks to the Church of the Latter Day Saints. It’s one of the reasons the school created its own network — BYUtv — that is available in more than 65 million homes. And the Cougars averaged more fans at home football games (58,532) than eight of the 10 current members of the Big 12 last season. That said, the Cougars only make sense as a football-only member thanks to the school’s stance against playing sports on Sundays.
UConn: Let’s not sugarcoat it any further; the Big 12’s interest in Connecticut would be mostly for its basketball programs and television market. Football is somewhat of an afterthought in this scenario when you consider the Huskies have won less than 46 percent of their games since 2000. The men’s basketball program has won four national titles — twice in the past six seasons — while the women’s program is the gold standard for excellence after winning four consecutive national titles. Then there is the TV market, which could provide millions of eyes from the Northeast not traditionally exposed to Big 12 schools. The Huskies’ athletic department also is on par with most Power 5 schools in total revenue.
Cincinnati: It’s no secret the Big 12 had interest in expanding its foothold East the last time realignment reared its ugly head. The league missed out on Louisville, instead going with West Virginia. Adding Cincinnati would provide the Mountaineers with a geographic rival in the league. The Bearcats’ football and basketball programs have excelled and the television market is one of the top 40 in the country. Nippert Stadium has been upgraded, but it would need to be expanded past its current 40,000-seat capacity.
Memphis: Much like Cincinnati, Memphis would help expand the league’s footprint. And much like the Bearcats, the Tigers would provide a league with football and basketball programs on the rise. The football program has won 19 games the past two seasons, with quality victories over Power 5 programs Kansas and Ole Miss. With that success has come a spike in attendance at home games. FedEx founder and CEO Fred Smith, whose company is based in Memphis, has already thrown his support behind the Tigers, offering to sponsor the Big 12’s new championship game.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Texas AND UConn fans be like:
Times-Picayune wrote:
The Big 12 Conference apparently wants to handle expansion like checking out in a 10 items or less line at a grocery store.
Three persons with knowledge of the league's expansion process told CBS Sports on Thursday that the league wants to conclude the expansion process by September 2nd, when the conference opens the 2016 season.
The Big 12 announced July 19th it would begin a formal expansion process to add two to four teams.
The sources said the conference doesn't want a drawn-out expansion campaign to overshadow the league's football season.
Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby told CBS Sports that he has "not made any comment on time frame and do not plan any such statement."
If expansion teams are announced before the season, it could give the new members a chance to begin playing in the conference as soon as 2017. The league currently is discussing how it will decide participants for its championship game that has been reinstated for 2017.
The most frequently mentioned expansion candidates are independent BYU, Houston, Cincinnati, Memphis, UConn, UCF, South Florida, and Tulane of the American Athletic Conference, and Boise State and Colorado State of the Mountain West Conference.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:http://gridironnow.com/big-12-expansion-aac-mike-aresco?utm_content=buffer6bb15&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
The fearless leader, Mike Aresco, acknowledges that the AAC will be losing schools soon. Momentum growing that it'll be BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and Memphis.
hortle wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Texas AND UConn fans be like:
Go read their realignment thread on The Boneyard, they are CONVINCED they're getting an invite. I can't think of another athletics program that's been screwed over in each wave of realignment. Well, they chose the football life, so now they get to live with the consequences, while the basketball-only big east members can just sit back and chuckle at the morons scrambling for football tv money...
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