by GoldenWarrior11 » Fri Nov 21, 2014 11:31 am
I understand that I am in the minority with my opinion on the subject, but I think this is more realistic than most people realize. UCONN, while still being a basketball school, wants to continue building up its football program. Who's to say that they can't do that in the MAC (or C-USA)? The AAC was really a dreadful conference this year. With the exception of ECU, none of the schools won OOC games against P5 opponents. Despite the intention of Mike Aresco, and his marketing campaign #AmericanRising, the AAC is still no better than a G5 conference (some would argue below the C-USA or MAC). Perception says that, its TV contract says that, and the prestige and history of its football schools say that. Losing Louisville (and replacing it with Tulsa, East Carolina and Tulane in all sports) has been a huge downgrade in football and basketball. In today's world, you are as strong as the conference you belong to (and the schools you are associated with).
If UCONN moved football to the MAC (or C-USA), it would allow its football program to develop more over time (with other Eastern and Midwestern schools). UCONN has nothing, absolutely nothing, in common with schools like SMU, UCF, Tulsa, Tulane, East Carolina and Houston. Arguments can be made that they have similarities with Memphis (Basketball), Cincinnati and USF (prior conference affiliation and similar strength in football). At the core, however, UCONN has no business being with those schools.
If UCONN decided to be all-sports (minus football) with the Big East, they would able to bring their baseball, cross country, tennis, soccer and track and field programs to schools in closer geography and location (it's insane to be sending your soccer teams to Tulsa, Oklahoma, for conference match-ups). The basketball addition would be a no-brainer, as they would rejoin Villanova, Georgetown, Seton Hall, Providence and St. Johns (5 programs with tremendous history in competition).
Fox would be happy. The Big East would be happy. UCONN would be happy. To me, it's a no brainer.