NJRedman wrote:
P.S. Funny how all of our friends from CSNBBS are finding their way over here.
billyjack wrote:NJRedman wrote:
P.S. Funny how all of our friends from CSNBBS are finding their way over here.
That's cool... TerryD, Frank, and Bearcat, and others, are good, sensible posters.
Xudash wrote:I'm not hoping for 4 x 16. I just see the logic in it.
I certainly care mostly about the NCAA Tournament as it presently exists. There are too many good hoops schools, including AAC schools (including UC) that deserve further participation in that key tournament as it exists now.
Nonetheless, whether it becomes 4 x 16 or something else, I reasonably suspect that conference realignment isn't finished yet, and anyone who has had any experience in negotiations and with attorneys can tell you that CONTRACTS are not and are never IRONCLAD. Exit/termination provisions exist in virtually every material long-term agreement, simply because things can materially change. And even if such provisions still require some maneuvering to effect a break, that is why two (or more) parties will come to the table if it serves their interests to break it.
BTW, as for Notre Dame and the ACC versus the B1G, I'll go with what I've heard and others can go with what they've heard or think. As I noted on that topic, there are two key groups to consider when it comes to ND: the alumni (who will fiercely fight for independence) and the administration.
Bill Marsh wrote:Xudash wrote:I'm not hoping for 4 x 16. I just see the logic in it.
I certainly care mostly about the NCAA Tournament as it presently exists. There are too many good hoops schools, including AAC schools (including UC) that deserve further participation in that key tournament as it exists now.
Nonetheless, whether it becomes 4 x 16 or something else, I reasonably suspect that conference realignment isn't finished yet, and anyone who has had any experience in negotiations and with attorneys can tell you that CONTRACTS are not and are never IRONCLAD. Exit/termination provisions exist in virtually every material long-term agreement, simply because things can materially change. And even if such provisions still require some maneuvering to effect a break, that is why two (or more) parties will come to the table if it serves their interests to break it.
BTW, as for Notre Dame and the ACC versus the B1G, I'll go with what I've heard and others can go with what they've heard or think. As I noted on that topic, there are two key groups to consider when it comes to ND: the alumni (who will fiercely fight for independence) and the administration.
Dash, as a practical matter I don't see how they logistically get to 4 conferences of 16 even if they want to. Let's start with the PAC-12 because they have the farthest to go.
The only way for the PAC-12 to get to 16 is to raid the Big XII because there is no one else close enough who is viable except BYU and Boise, neither of whom they want any part of. Just for the same of discussion, let's say that they take the 4 Texas schools - Texas, Texas Tech, Baylor and TCU. That means that the Big XII is dead and the 4th conference is the ACC.
So, we need 5 more schools to get the other 3 to 16. Let's assume that the SEC take Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Where does the Big Ten go? They care about academics, so Kansas would be next on their list, but do they care about the Kansas market? Or Kansas football? They could have had Missouri, which offers a bigger market, but they walked away from that opportunity.
Even if they took Kansas, whos's their other option? The only other school with academics remotely close to what the Big Ten is looking for is UConn, the east Coast's mirror image of Kansas. A basketball school with a similar market to Kansas. The good news is that they solidify the big ten's grip on theNY market. The bad news is that their football is terrible. This is all about football.
The other option is for the Big Ten to raid the ACC. But doesn't that defeat the purpose of this whole thing? You now have only 3 strong conferences with a wounded ACC trying to piece things together from the remnants.
Even if the Big ten takesKansas and UConn, who's left for the ACC. I'm assuming that Notre Dame stays with the ACC. But they still need #16. Like the big ten and the PAC-12 and unlike the SEC, the ACC cares about academics. So, I don't see them taking West Virginia, which could actually find themselves in the SEC instead of OK State. So, where does the ACC turn Cincinnati? I don't see that. ECU? No way. UCF? USF? Possible but not likely.
Even if you resolve the question of how the final conference gets to 16, you're still left with those who are excluded. BYU is a past national champion and brings 60,000 fans into their stadium for every game every year. They meet every criterion Division IV could establish. How are they denied a path to a championship? K State and Iowa State both averag around 50,000 in attendance. How are they left out? Either West Virginia or OK state is likely left out in this scenario. Same question for either of them.
And then, there is the question that I avoided in contriving this. The Big ten doesn't want Kansas or UConn. They want Texas + some other major market or some other football power. That's been their strategy moving forward. Is the Big ten going to take something less than what they want just to satisfy some neat 4 x 16 formula? I don't think so.
If The Big Ten were successful in wooing Texas, who would the PAC-12 want? Would they stretch their conference half way across the country to add left overs?
Bottom line for me is that the Big 3 need incentives to take on new members. I don't see enough of that out there to satisfy the Big Ten and the Big XII. (The SEC will take anyone as long as they can fill a football stadium. ECU still has hope. LOL) And you still need enough other viable candidates for a 4th conference.
What am I missing? Help me out with the logistics. Maybe in 15-20 years UConn is AAU and the B1G will want them. Maybe Cincy has more appeal than I realize. Maybe the ACC would abandon their historic objections to West Virginia membership and would welcome a university that offers a major in "how to build a still: moonshine 101".
Bill Marsh wrote:Xudash wrote:I'm not hoping for 4 x 16. I just see the logic in it.
I certainly care mostly about the NCAA Tournament as it presently exists. There are too many good hoops schools, including AAC schools (including UC) that deserve further participation in that key tournament as it exists now.
Nonetheless, whether it becomes 4 x 16 or something else, I reasonably suspect that conference realignment isn't finished yet, and anyone who has had any experience in negotiations and with attorneys can tell you that CONTRACTS are not and are never IRONCLAD. Exit/termination provisions exist in virtually every material long-term agreement, simply because things can materially change. And even if such provisions still require some maneuvering to effect a break, that is why two (or more) parties will come to the table if it serves their interests to break it.
BTW, as for Notre Dame and the ACC versus the B1G, I'll go with what I've heard and others can go with what they've heard or think. As I noted on that topic, there are two key groups to consider when it comes to ND: the alumni (who will fiercely fight for independence) and the administration.
Dash, as a practical matter I don't see how they logistically get to 4 conferences of 16 even if they want to. Let's start with the PAC-12 because they have the farthest to go.
The only way for the PAC-12 to get to 16 is to raid the Big XII because there is no one else close enough who is viable except BYU and Boise, neither of whom they want any part of. Just for the same of discussion, let's say that they take the 4 Texas schools - Texas, Texas Tech, Baylor and TCU. That means that the Big XII is dead and the 4th conference is the ACC.
So, we need 5 more schools to get the other 3 to 16. Let's assume that the SEC take Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Where does the Big Ten go? They care about academics, so Kansas would be next on their list, but do they care about the Kansas market? Or Kansas football? They could have had Missouri, which offers a bigger market, but they walked away from that opportunity.
Even if they took Kansas, whos's their other option? The only other school with academics remotely close to what the Big Ten is looking for is UConn, the east Coast's mirror image of Kansas. A basketball school with a similar market to Kansas. The good news is that they solidify the big ten's grip on theNY market. The bad news is that their football is terrible. This is all about football.
The other option is for the Big Ten to raid the ACC. But doesn't that defeat the purpose of this whole thing? You now have only 3 strong conferences with a wounded ACC trying to piece things together from the remnants.
Even if the Big ten takesKansas and UConn, who's left for the ACC. I'm assuming that Notre Dame stays with the ACC. But they still need #16. Like the big ten and the PAC-12 and unlike the SEC, the ACC cares about academics. So, I don't see them taking West Virginia, which could actually find themselves in the SEC instead of OK State. So, where does the ACC turn Cincinnati? I don't see that. ECU? No way. UCF? USF? Possible but not likely.
Even if you resolve the question of how the final conference gets to 16, you're still left with those who are excluded. BYU is a past national champion and brings 60,000 fans into their stadium for every game every year. They meet every criterion Division IV could establish. How are they denied a path to a championship? K State and Iowa State both averag around 50,000 in attendance. How are they left out? Either West Virginia or OK state is likely left out in this scenario. Same question for either of them.
And then, there is the question that I avoided in contriving this. The Big ten doesn't want Kansas or UConn. They want Texas + some other major market or some other football power. That's been their strategy moving forward. Is the Big ten going to take something less than what they want just to satisfy some neat 4 x 16 formula? I don't think so.
If The Big Ten were successful in wooing Texas, who would the PAC-12 want? Would they stretch their conference half way across the country to add left overs?
Bottom line for me is that the Big 3 need incentives to take on new members. I don't see enough of that out there to satisfy the Big Ten and the Big XII. (The SEC will take anyone as long as they can fill a football stadium. ECU still has hope. LOL) And you still need enough other viable candidates for a 4th conference.
What am I missing? Help me out with the logistics. Maybe in 15-20 years UConn is AAU and the B1G will want them. Maybe Cincy has more appeal than I realize. Maybe the ACC would abandon their historic objections to West Virginia membership and would welcome a university that offers a major in "how to build a still: moonshine 101".
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