Wizard of Westroads wrote:UConn will not get a Big Ten offer because it's not a member of the prestigious Association of American Universities, and the BIG presidents fashion themselves as just a step below the Ivy League. Nebraska is the only non-AAU member in the BIG, but they were a member when invited and were pushed out of the AAU later.
Kansas, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia Tech are all AAU members and would all be invited before UConn. Their presidents would all jump at the chance, although $ might dictate otherwise. Missouri, also AAU, wanted in the Big Ten but grabbed the SEC when it offered. Might seem like a good move footballwise, but their president wanted in the BIG desperately. Believe it or not, the BIG would even take Texas (AAU), but the Longhorns wouldn't go where they can't rule the roost.
UConn is very, very far down the list. Rutgers is a dumpster fire athletically, but it and Maryland are AAU members.
I don't think any Big East schools are in the AAU, but it's because they don't offer the full range of research programs that are required for membership, not because of quality of education.
http://www.aau.edu/about/default.aspx?id=4020
aughnanure wrote:Wizard of Westroads wrote:UConn will not get a Big Ten offer because it's not a member of the prestigious Association of American Universities, and the BIG presidents fashion themselves as just a step below the Ivy League. Nebraska is the only non-AAU member in the BIG, but they were a member when invited and were pushed out of the AAU later.
Kansas, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia Tech are all AAU members and would all be invited before UConn. Their presidents would all jump at the chance, although $ might dictate otherwise. Missouri, also AAU, wanted in the Big Ten but grabbed the SEC when it offered. Might seem like a good move footballwise, but their president wanted in the BIG desperately. Believe it or not, the BIG would even take Texas (AAU), but the Longhorns wouldn't go where they can't rule the roost.
UConn is very, very far down the list. Rutgers is a dumpster fire athletically, but it and Maryland are AAU members.
I don't think any Big East schools are in the AAU, but it's because they don't offer the full range of research programs that are required for membership, not because of quality of education.
http://www.aau.edu/about/default.aspx?id=4020
Don't buy it. That's what they like to say. But Notre Dame is not AAU and they would be welcomed in a heartbeat. There was also word a while back that B1G would grab OU to get Texas. At a certian point, you start running out of options. The GOR has stopped the poaching of the Big 12 and ACC (unlesssssssss you can grab a large number of them to "break" a clause...which is a rumor about the Big 12 one).
If there's one thing everyone's learned from all this crap, its that money first, and money alone, drives the bus. The constant drum-beating about academics is complete crap (also a very arbitrarily chosen and biased measurement for "academics"). It matches absolutely no other reasons for realignment and is really easy for them to claim. They had plenty of options, but now they've missed out on most of them. Texas A&M and Mizzou are the only two under this scenario that they could add (SEC has no exit fee and no GOR). Will they look at AAU status? Sure. Will it completely block a valuable candidate? No.
Professor_Bulldog wrote:That's some terrible football being played in pod 3
Wizard of Westroads wrote:aughnanure wrote:Wizard of Westroads wrote:UConn will not get a Big Ten offer because it's not a member of the prestigious Association of American Universities, and the BIG presidents fashion themselves as just a step below the Ivy League. Nebraska is the only non-AAU member in the BIG, but they were a member when invited and were pushed out of the AAU later.
Kansas, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia Tech are all AAU members and would all be invited before UConn. Their presidents would all jump at the chance, although $ might dictate otherwise. Missouri, also AAU, wanted in the Big Ten but grabbed the SEC when it offered. Might seem like a good move footballwise, but their president wanted in the BIG desperately. Believe it or not, the BIG would even take Texas (AAU), but the Longhorns wouldn't go where they can't rule the roost.
UConn is very, very far down the list. Rutgers is a dumpster fire athletically, but it and Maryland are AAU members.
I don't think any Big East schools are in the AAU, but it's because they don't offer the full range of research programs that are required for membership, not because of quality of education.
http://www.aau.edu/about/default.aspx?id=4020
Don't buy it. That's what they like to say. But Notre Dame is not AAU and they would be welcomed in a heartbeat. There was also word a while back that B1G would grab OU to get Texas. At a certian point, you start running out of options. The GOR has stopped the poaching of the Big 12 and ACC (unlesssssssss you can grab a large number of them to "break" a clause...which is a rumor about the Big 12 one).
If there's one thing everyone's learned from all this crap, its that money first, and money alone, drives the bus. The constant drum-beating about academics is complete crap (also a very arbitrarily chosen and biased measurement for "academics"). It matches absolutely no other reasons for realignment and is really easy for them to claim. They had plenty of options, but now they've missed out on most of them. Texas A&M and Mizzou are the only two under this scenario that they could add (SEC has no exit fee and no GOR). Will they look at AAU status? Sure. Will it completely block a valuable candidate? No.
OK, don't. But there's a reason UConn wasn't taken over Rutgers in the first place. The Big Ten would make a run at any of those other schools first. And I think we can all agree that Notre Dame is the exception to every rule in college sports. And OU did not get invited, it was only the subject of rumors.
But speculate away. Next up: The Big East presidents would take either VCU or Wichita.
hoyahooligan wrote:Um this part?: "Four 16-team leagues. And good luck if you’re not among those 64."
Yes it's not an issue in the short term. But long term if we do move to 4 16 team leagues there's nothing to stop those leagues from cutting everyone else out. I see no reason for them to not cut us out. I don't buy that people like the NCAA tournament the way it is so much that they wouldn't cut out the midmajors. Are people really going to not watch because all the teams are good? BS. Most people prefer to watch two ranked teams play. We could all be on the outside looking in in 10 years.
JOPO wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:Um this part?: "Four 16-team leagues. And good luck if you’re not among those 64."
Yes it's not an issue in the short term. But long term if we do move to 4 16 team leagues there's nothing to stop those leagues from cutting everyone else out. I see no reason for them to not cut us out. I don't buy that people like the NCAA tournament the way it is so much that they wouldn't cut out the midmajors. Are people really going to not watch because all the teams are good? BS. Most people prefer to watch two ranked teams play. We could all be on the outside looking in in 10 years.
Yes, but we aren't a mid-major! We shouldn't be cut out of the national basketball championship picture because we don't play football. That's bullpoop! Also, you can't have all 64 of those teams going to a national championship! Some of those schools notoriously suck in basketball (and football for that matter). Who would want to watch that?
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