Some time late Monday afternoon, the Big 12's presidents may finally provide a definitive decision on expansion.
A news conference has been scheduled after the conference's board of directors meeting, presumably to let everyone know whether the Big 12 will add new members, stand pat at 10 or punt.
Sources confirmed Wednesday that pretty much all the options are on the table, including the possibility of football-only membership with Houston and BYU the most likely members. The sources also confirmed that expansion has gone from likelihood about six weeks ago to maybe a 1-in-3 chance.
SJHooper wrote:Stever, those are not comparable. UConn was once in a major conference living in the top 15 seemingly every year. They were at the top of the crop. Now they DOWNGRADE to the AAC playing those no names. Gonzaga has been constant in the same conference. They are clearly a major program playing in a mid major conference i.e. Xavier, Butler, Creighton which is why we snatched those teams up. They have been very good throughout coaching changes. UConn has had almost all of its success with 1 coach: Calhoun. UConn has yet to show they are world-beaters without Calhoun's fingerprints on them in a mid major conference. Gonzaga is also a pretty big outlier. There are exceptions to everything. No offense to G'Town, but look how quickly they went from competing for Elite 8's and Final Four's to being perceived as declining (btw I think G'Town will be fine but that's the perception nationally). UConn's lore was directly tied to the Big East. MSG, the Northeast rivalries, the brand in the tri-state. Now they play in the boonies and are out of their region. They chose football and they are now paying for it. They tried to be something they weren't. Now they will have to come crawling back.
Yesterday David G wrote:SJHooper wrote:
It would be stupid for UConn to say no.
It may be stupid, but I'm pretty close to entirely convinced that is what they would say. The few people who would actually be making a decision like that don't seem to have any desire to cut football, or reclassify football to FCS, or leave their current situation to join a league in all sports that is not an FBS conference. I think they would let everything collapse around them before they'd look to join a non FBS league.
This morning SJHooper wrote:
UConn was once in a major conference living in the top 15 seemingly every year. They were at the top of the crop. Now they DOWNGRADE to the AAC...
UConn's lore was directly tied to the Big East. MSG, the Northeast rivalries, the brand in the tri-state. Now they play in the boonies and are out of their region. They chose football and they are now paying for it. They tried to be something they weren't.
This morning SJHooper wrote:
Now they will have to come crawling back.
On August 8, 2016 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Barley wrote:
But what about UCONN?
The Big East is open to UConn's return, but it's a highly unlikely scenarioUConn could drop football (or move to the FCS) -- but why would they?
UConn isn't getting a lot of TV money currently and the state is in a ton of debt. Let's say they miss out on a Big 12 invite this time around. You could argue the football ship has sailed since the program isn't very competitive. So if they did drop it, or even went back to the FCS, then yes, they would be a perfect fit for the Big East.
Dropping football would be admitting failure, not exactly a common trait among politicians or collegiate administrators. It would also be giving up the Power 5 dream and all that money. And it would definitely piss off some influential boosters.
I just can't see it happening that way for the Huskies. And that means a Big East-UConn reunion probably isn't in the cards.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I'm not sure if anyone watched the March to Madison Square Garden video that was released by the BE yesterday, but I did notice that UConn was shown a considerable amount for not being a conference team (more so than Louisville - which wasn't shown at all, Notre Dame - which wasn't shown at all, Pittsburgh - which was just shown in highlights where UConn beat them, and Syracuse - which had a considerable amount of memories in the Big East Tournament over the years).
I have no doubt that was intentional. Perhaps with the Big 12's conference expansion announcement on Monday, some ripples will be made.
BEX wrote:
They are losing 20 million a year on football.
Here are the USA Today figures of the top 20 non-Power-5 schools, with athletic budget and school subsidy. The subsidy gives you an idea how much revenue the departments generate (by subtracting) but also give you an idea how much the school is committed to athletic success.
1. Connecticut $72 million ($28M subsidy)
2. Cincinnati $52 million ($23M subsidy)
10. Houston $44 million ($25M subsidy)
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:With each passing year, it becomes clearer and clearer that the C7 made out like bandits in the Big East/American split. Not only did we get the Big East name (which was a priceless asset for the basketball schools in itself), Madison Square Garden (which was equally as valuable to the Big East name) and our freedom from the football schools, but - with the move - we secured our place as finally being able to be in a position where we, the basketball schools, got to make the choices and decisions in realignment - not simply be relegated as a bystander or an unwilling accomplice for more revenue. It is unfortunate that schools like Tulane, East Carolina, UCF, USF, Houston and SMU receive bad reputations in basketball (history and lack of prior success drive that), but (by being in a basketball league with those schools) it was a long-term building process that the C7 could not and did not want to afford (not to mention make more revenue without them).
Unfortunately, UConn is part of that long-term building process with those schools in a different and more unique way. They need schools like Tulane, East Carolina, UCF, USF, Houston and SMU to do well in basketball and football. If they don't the prestige and reputation of their league suffers - as does their own athletic program. It is a challenging situation for them because, with those schools eventual and hopeful success, UConn needs to ensure that it does better than those programs in order to be firmly situated in the driver's seat when a realignment wave hits again. If they continue to lose to Houston, SMU, Tulsa, East Carolina, Tulane, UCF and USF in football and/or basketball, then their athletic program prestige drops while those programs are elevated.
I said it three years ago, but UConn staying in the American was a lose/lose scenario. They had nothing to gain and everything to lose - and still do. They may not realize it today, and they certainly did not realize it three years ago, but perhaps there will be a day where they finally pull the plug on the American experiment and pursue other options. I think it can be universally assumed that UConn is not destined to be in the American long-term.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I'm not sure if anyone watched the March to Madison Square Garden video that was released by the BE yesterday, but I did notice that UConn was shown a considerable amount for not being a conference team (more so than Louisville - which wasn't shown at all, Notre Dame - which wasn't shown at all, Pittsburgh - which was just shown in highlights where UConn beat them, and Syracuse - which had a considerable amount of memories in the Big East Tournament over the years).
I have no doubt that was intentional. Perhaps with the Big 12's conference expansion announcement on Monday, some ripples will be made.
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