marquette wrote:Que sera sera. I'm not really sure how this affects us other than possibly taking UConn of the table (which it was basically never on any way).
aughnanure wrote:marquette wrote:Que sera sera. I'm not really sure how this affects us other than possibly taking UConn of the table (which it was basically never on any way).
Honestly, the only football playing program that I could see realistically popping free for us is Memphis. Which would be great.
Bill Marsh wrote:A post identical to the OP is on the Pack Pride site at scout.com. The discussion there is really interesting.
One of the posts claims that it costs $50 million more annually to compete in all sports in the Bog Ten than in the ACC. I don't know if. That's true, but if it is, it would give ND a major incentIve to prefer the ACC over the Big Ten. It's certainly tough to compete against schools that have the revenue from stadiums that can hold 100,000+ if your stadium only holds half that or less.
Second, Notre Dame's chances of actually winning the ACC are greater than winning the Big Ten. If such a decision were made for football reasons - and what isn't in realignment? - then this would certainly be a strong reason for Notre Dame to prefer the ACC.
Finally, Notre Dame has hated the Big Ten for generations. They've made it clear since they were first offered a spot in that conference in the '90's that they have no interest in joining that bunch.
As for the Big Ten poaching the ACC, some at Pack Pride seem to think it could be the other way around. The OP claims to know 4 schools who are on the ACC's short list, but was given the names in confidence. Maryland had its own individual reasons for leaving the ACC. Their decision doesn't mean that it's automatic that any ACC school would be better off in them Big Ten.
Let's face it, unless Penn State were to come to the ACC, the big player that everyone wants is Texas. Would they go the ACC as #16? I don't know, but maybe if Notre Dame were part of the package they would. Stranger things have happened in realignment. The point is that it's unlikely that Notre Dame would be added in isolation. It's likely that #16 would be added at the same time and my guess is that the ACC would shoot high, preferring not to just settle for any warm body to fill the last spot. Bringing in ND would give them a lot of leverage to entice another P5 school to come on board.
marquette wrote:aughnanure wrote:marquette wrote:Que sera sera. I'm not really sure how this affects us other than possibly taking UConn of the table (which it was basically never on any way).
Honestly, the only football playing program that I could see realistically popping free for us is Memphis. Which would be great.
Given their academics I'm not sure the presidents would be interested. Every candidate that the presidents have mentioned has been light years apart from Memphis academically. I wouldn't be too surprised to see them wind up in the Big 12 though.
aughnanure wrote:marquette wrote:aughnanure wrote:
Honestly, the only football playing program that I could see realistically popping free for us is Memphis. Which would be great.
Given their academics I'm not sure the presidents would be interested. Every candidate that the presidents have mentioned has been light years apart from Memphis academically. I wouldn't be too surprised to see them wind up in the Big 12 though.
They mention it because ... PR. Not sure you can really take what the president say at a press conference that seriously. Regardless, there is no rush to add anyone for the foreseeable future.
Bill Marsh wrote:
I don't know if there is a plan to add anyone for the foreseeable future, but complacency will kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Fox took a gamble on the Big East, betting that the league would do for their new cable sports channel what it did for ESPN 35 years ago. So far it hasn't played out that way. If the Big East wants to get another lucrative contract after this one runs out, it better figure out a way to attract more viewers. An obvious solution would be to bring in some schools with bigger enrollments and/or a bigger names. VCU and UMass would be examples of basketball schools with bigger enrollments while Gonzaga would be a school with a bigger name.
cujaysfan wrote:all of the arguments for ND to the ACC as a permanent member (and the even more uninformed conjecture to the big ten) make me chuckle.
it's not happening
it's not being considered
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