GoldenWarrior11 wrote:http://www.testudotimes.com/2016/4/10/11399802/b1g-expansion-primer-of-rumors-and-facts
Lots of juicy tidbits:
[i]Most of the current rumors come from twitter.com/bluevodreal a general Michigan insider who seems like he's been better than average talking Michigan football recruits, and basketball staff hires. I've never had him (or her?) as a source on conference realignment before, but he is purporting the rumors that UVA, UNC, G-tech, FSU, Duke, and Notre Dame to the B1G is a done deal with a timeline of this summer. He's certainly not the first to make those rumors, just the latest. Everything I have ever read suggests that the B1G would happily take all of those schools except FSU and possibly Duke. The rumored payout number is supposedly triple the current payouts, that puts it firmly the range of 70-90 million per school. Which, I can't fathom as being true, but that's what it is.
Except FSU, all of the mentioned schools instantly meet the requirements to join the B1G. But here are the sticking points for me. How much sense does it make to take both UNC and Duke? Do they both add enough TV eyeballs to make adding both schools financially worth it? But if a bloc of ACC schools leave, the GoR and the exit fees become negligible as the conference is basically dissolved with its core leaving. Yes Duke Basketball is a big deal, but that doesn't matter as much as it should. The best way to illustrate this point: Kentucky football makes more money for the school than Kentucky Basketball.
ArmyVet wrote:Just as likely as any of these sort of far fetched scenarios is that absolutely nothing occurs. And in that case, a lot of people will have wasted a lot of time hypothesizing about realignment.
DeltaV wrote:Interesting (to me) rebuild scenario to a heavily raided ACC:
Syracuse, Pitt, BC, Wake
Join with
UConn, Cincinnati, temple, Memphis
As the base of a conference. Might need a one or two to flesh out out (Vandy getting bumped) but they could survive with 8 teams, and maybe pick up VCU, George Mason to bring basketball up to 10.
Actually, at least as a basketball conference, that's not half bad...it avoids being full of directional state colleges, hits plenty of metro areas, and has some good rivalries, without being as spread out as the current AAC is.
Edit: Forgot about Louisville...i don't think anyone is hunting for them either. Keep VCU, scratch GM, and that's actually quite the rival conference I just built in our own backyard. Whoops...
adoraz wrote:If the ACC loses 6 members it could have a negative impact on the Big East. In addition to adding UConn, Cincy, and Memphis they may poach Nova, Georgetown, and less likely SJU (for MSG and an attempt to hold the ACC tournament there). Yes I know football drives the bus but they'd be losing their best basketball schools and I don't see 6 AAC candidates worthy of joining the ACC. It was rumored a few years ago Nova, Georgetown and SJU had interest from the ACC, and if the ACC lost 6 major basketball programs it could happen.
And yes I know there's plenty of reasons why this wouldn't happen but believe it would be a possibility.
muskienick wrote:adoraz wrote:If the ACC loses 6 members it could have a negative impact on the Big East. In addition to adding UConn, Cincy, and Memphis they may poach Nova, Georgetown, and less likely SJU (for MSG and an attempt to hold the ACC tournament there). Yes I know football drives the bus but they'd be losing their best basketball schools and I don't see 6 AAC candidates worthy of joining the ACC. It was rumored a few years ago Nova, Georgetown and SJU had interest from the ACC, and if the ACC lost 6 major basketball programs it could happen.
And yes I know there's plenty of reasons why this wouldn't happen but believe it would be a possibility.
Without the 6 conjectured loses from the ACC, the remaining nine schools would not have the same attraction for Nova, Georgetown and St. John's. Furthermore, those three would be exhibiting an extremely short memory in recreating the situation they (along with four other Basketball-centric schools) left just 3+years ago!
In addition, despite the current smarmy coaching situations at Louisville, I suspect the Cardinals would be "ripe" for the picking by the Big 12 if they ever decide to go to 12 (possibly along with BYU). Heck, even WITH Louisville, that depleted version of the ACC would only have two members (Syracuse and Louisville) who traditionally rank within the top tier of D-1 College Basketball. Nova, G-town and St. John's would do well to stay with 7 other schools that share mutual visions and whose basketball is easily on a par with the remaining members of the ravaged ACC.
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