Hall2012 wrote:Maybe I'm misremembering again, but I thought the original plan was for UConn to go to the ACC along with Syracuse. However, Boston College blocked them so they got replaced by Pitt.
I'm by no means saying UConn is solely responsible - there are plenty of parties responsible for the breakup of the old Big East, but I don't believe that they're totally innocent either and just got screwed by everyone else (the C7 in particular, as many of their fans claim).
He (Gross) said he didn't know Pittsburgh was having conversations with the ACC, or whether reports that later appeared in the Boston Globe that UConn had been blocked by Boston College were true.
"We were kind of in our own personal vacuum," Gross said.
McMurphy said the talks were kept so quiet that, on the night the news broke, the Big East's top officials were stunned.
NJRedman wrote:Apparently from a Cuse blog the Orange and Pitt were in the dark about the other one joining the ACC with them.
http://www.syracuse.com/orangesports/in ... split.htmlHe (Gross) said he didn't know Pittsburgh was having conversations with the ACC, or whether reports that later appeared in the Boston Globe that UConn had been blocked by Boston College were true.
"We were kind of in our own personal vacuum," Gross said.
McMurphy said the talks were kept so quiet that, on the night the news broke, the Big East's top officials were stunned.
Bill Marsh wrote:NJRedman wrote:Apparently from a Cuse blog the Orange and Pitt were in the dark about the other one joining the ACC with them.
http://www.syracuse.com/orangesports/in ... split.htmlHe (Gross) said he didn't know Pittsburgh was having conversations with the ACC, or whether reports that later appeared in the Boston Globe that UConn had been blocked by Boston College were true.
"We were kind of in our own personal vacuum," Gross said.
McMurphy said the talks were kept so quiet that, on the night the news broke, the Big East's top officials were stunned.
Two points about that:
1. Sources for the Globe story were obviously from BC. (Where else would a Boston reporter get ACC news?) Especially under DeFilippo had a lot of animus toward UConn because they bore the brunt of the criticism as a result of the lawsuit on behalf of the rest of the league. I wouldn't consider that story reliable because DeFilippo was heavily invested in making it appear that BC would be able to block UConn forever. BC's motivation was also motivated by an interest in getting as much of the New England market as possible and by an interest in protecting the regional base. As a result there was. A. Lot of posturing going on at BC, which has to be taken with a large grain of salt.
2. The fact that Big East officials were stunned speaks directly to the treachery perpetrated by Nordenberg. As Chair of the Executive Committee, he had a clear conflict of interests between pursuing what was best for Pitt and doing what was best for the league. He should have resigned immediately upon engaging in any talks with the ACC and should have told the rest of the Big East why. If he wasn't going to re-sign, then it was incumbent to keep Big East officials informed, which he didn't do. He kept them completely in the dark.
billyjack wrote:While they were far from being the worst schools when it came to realignment, UConn's and Cincinnati's actions in late 2012 were the last straws in the C-7's decision to leave. West Virginia and Pitt in 2011 were clearly the biggest snakes. BC and Miami (Fla) were the biggest snakes in 2004.
After Louisville left a few days past Thanksgiving 2012, and even after Tulane was added the next day, there was still a chance for the remaining schools to show solidarity and keep the hybrid conference together.
What the remaining 12+ of us needed was to show solidarity, put out a statement about the strong bond between us all, and move forward together.
Instead, in the first days of Dec 2012, we heard of a Powerpoint presentation email sent by Cincinnati to the ACC; and we had the UConn president, Herbst, and some other UConn guy whose name I've forgotten, literally begging for an ACC invitation into every microphone and every newspaper they could find. This went on for like 10 days. I mean, wow, it was embarrassing. For this entire week and a half or so, the C-7 was asking Herbst to STFU, but she kept on babbling. This was around the time of the Newtown tragedy.
At that point, the C-7 had just had enough. It was obvious that UConn and Cincinnati would continue to beg into the indefinite future. This football bullsh-t was just not going to end. So we got the hell out by mid December.
Our leap took some serious brass balls, looking back. I think 99% of Big East hoops schools' fans were thrilled. I was totally in favor of the move. But there were like 500 dangerous hurdles that we had to jump.
Anyway, Herbst's begging at UConn and Cincinnati's Powerpoint showed that they would ditch the C-7 at the first opportunity. Here in 2017, I'm generally in favor of UConn going indie in football and joining the Big East. However, as I've typed this post I'm taken back to a time where these crackhead football schools were so cut-throat and dishonest, that i can be swayed into not wanting UConn back.
One other thing, which is kind of a circular thought... if UConn doesn't have the cajones to go indie in football, then i don't want them. But if they show some balls and go indie, trust in their brand, then I'd be more apt to support them.
crussomd wrote:Hi all, Longtime reader first time poster but I had to register to add to this thread. IMO you are all setting your goals way too low. UCONN who the hell needs them? We don't need a middling academic state school who has delusional dreams of grandeur regarding their football program regardless of how good their basketball program is (was).
I say we stay exactly where we are and if we are so lucky that the ACC implodes down the road maybe we can hope to have Duke and Wake fall into our laps. Maybe ND stays independent in football and joins us in all other sports. If we are going to change the league that is working so great it has to be for some scenario like that. In a scenario like that I would even consider adding an academic superstar school like (hopkins) along with the other 3, even if they don;t currently play D1 basketball.
We should build a brand around all private schools with great academics and great fun to watch basketball. I love college BB but in the end it is about the entire university and we should seek to not only grow the basketball tradition but raise the caliber and reputation of the schools we associate with.
Eventually I would like to see the majority of our schools all play FCS football and compete in the big east against each other for bragging rights. We are never going to compete with the ohio states and alabamas of the world and it is a big waste of time, money and energy to try. But if we all has competitive fcs programs; would i drive down from CT to Nova to see the wildcats play the hoyas for a homecoming football game. Damn straight.
Bill Marsh wrote:
The ACC will not implode. They have won the war.
The New & Observer wrote:
The ACC is generating more revenue than it ever has, but the gap between it and the richest of the rich college sports conferences remains tens of millions of dollars wide, according to an analysis of federal tax returns.
During the ACC’s 2014-2015 fiscal year, the conference reported a record $403.1 million in revenue, which allowed it to disperse approximately $373 million to its member schools.
The ACC’s $403.1 million of revenue ranked fourth among the Power 5 conferences, ahead of the Big 12’s $267.8 million . . .
In the ACC, each of the 14 schools that received a full share of conference revenue – every one except Notre Dame, which is a part-time member that remains independent in football – received an average of $26.2 million in conference revenue, according to a tax filing the ACC recently released. Notre Dame received $6.2 million.
The Big 12 distributed $227.2 million to its 10 members, which received an average of $22.7 million in league revenue.
More than half of the ACC’s $403.1 million of revenue – 54 percent – came from its broadcast rights. The ACC’s contract with ESPN runs through the 2026-27 college sports calendar. The league and ESPN renegotiated the contract after Notre Dame became a part-time ACC member, and so it’s unlikely that the league would receive another significant jump in base TV revenue before the deal expires.
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