ArmyVet wrote:Let's say that OU and Texas go to the SEC?
What's the next move? ACC and Big Ten trying to get to 16 or the Big 12 quickly adding Houston/UCF/Cincy before that league collapses entirely?
Bogg wrote:ArmyVet wrote:Let's say that OU and Texas go to the SEC?
What's the next move? ACC and Big Ten trying to get to 16 or the Big 12 quickly adding Houston/UCF/Cincy before that league collapses entirely?
There's nothing magic about the number 16. The remaining Big 12 schools will all be looking for an invite to the PAC/B1G/ACC but I'm skeptical very many will find a home. Then they backfill with G5 schools.
Omaha1 wrote:Bogg wrote:ArmyVet wrote:Let's say that OU and Texas go to the SEC?
What's the next move? ACC and Big Ten trying to get to 16 or the Big 12 quickly adding Houston/UCF/Cincy before that league collapses entirely?
There's nothing magic about the number 16. The remaining Big 12 schools will all be looking for an invite to the PAC/B1G/ACC but I'm skeptical very many will find a home. Then they backfill with G5 schools.
The Big 12 would be screwed. Who wants TxTech or Okie State, not to mention Iowa St or KSt? Kansas might find a P5 league but the remaining league members would basically become AAC v2.0.
ArmyVet wrote:Bogg wrote:ArmyVet wrote:Unlikely that this move trickles down to the Big East right away, but it could be the first move toward 4 x 16 team leagues which might be a problem.
One thing that it could likely do for the conference is prevent Fox from totally blowing their budget on the Big 12. It doesn't mean the Big East would necessarily get more money than they would otherwise, but it could lighten up some of the downward financial pressure during negotiations.
EDIT: I also don't think 4x16 works because it requires the B1G and PAC to find 6 suitable adds between them and ND to join the ACC for football.
My question is whether the ACC would poach the Big Ten, or vice versa?
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:We are moving towards both the SEC and B1G acquiring and consolidating all of the top remaining brands in college athletics. I very much see, eventually, the B1G taking the AAU PAC programs, along with the "Holy Grail" - UNC, Virginia, Duke and Georgia Tech - that was the original Jim Delaney vision. The SEC, in addition to Texas and Oklahoma, would eventually acquire Florida State, Clemson, NC State, Virginia Tech, Oklahoma State, West Virginia and a few others. What we finish with is two national ultra-conferences that replace the NCAA as the higher authority in governance and oversight in college athletics. This is the start of slicing off the non-valuable entities in the P5 - the Kansas States, Washington States, Oregon States, Wake Forests, etc. - and keeping all of the revenues (and more) to the top grouping. Between the NIL and the expansion of the CFP, this is all coordinated. We are likely in for a rogue wave of realignment that will make the 2010-11 cycle look like a kiddy pool.
Bogg wrote:The PAC will kick the tires on the remaining schools. Geography dictates that the logical next adds are in that pile. Wouldn't be surprised to see Kansas get a serious look.
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