I don't see how the Big East survives this.
Two days ago in Washington D.C., Big East commissioner John Marinatto met with officials from Boise State, Houston, SMU, UCF and Navy, but no official invitations were extended. Air Force did not attend the meeting. Representatives from other Big East schools also attended.
The Big East hopes to add those schools – along with Air Force – to get to a 12-team football league. Even if the Big East adds those schools, without West Virginia, they still would need another school.
The Western contingent of the Big East's possible future members - Boise State, Air Force, Houston and SMU - are pushing for the Big East to pursue BYU. It's unknown if the Cougars, who had talks with the Big 12, would be interested in joining a 12-team Big East.
If the Big East could land BYU - along with the other six new schools - it would have two divisions: West - BYU, Air Force, Houston, SMU, Boise State and Louisville and East - UConn, Rutgers, USF, Cincinnati, Navy and UCF that Big East officials are confident would be worthy of retaining its BCS automatic qualifying status.
Besides BYU, other possible candidates for the Big East's 12th member would be Temple or East Carolina.
So it's ACC for all sports or Big 12 for all sports but football? Would we play a minimum amount of games against Big 12 schools? Maybe Baylor, TCU, and Texas/Oklahoma? Or BYU if they join?
Very interesting. Would not mind going to the ACC at all at this point. Also wouldn't mind joining the Big East and just curb stomping that conference.
I never thought I would say this, but I actually agree with Dennis Dodd on something. I would much prefer this solution to going all-in in the Big Ten or the ACC. I was reading somewhere else that they would maintain their independece, but have a 6-game Big 12 schedule each year basically. By it's nature, that would dumb down their schedule a bit (since some of those games are bound to be against bottom-feeders, like any other conference schedule), but still leave another 6 games to play with and travel across the country. It would limit them a bit, but it would be a lot less than going all-in and having a full conference schedule. Plus, who knows? It may even help them open up more of a recruiting pipeline in the Holy Land....err, I mean Texas.
Not sure it makes sense for the B12. Built in inequity between members is what made their conference ripe for the picking in the first place, cutting a deal that favors one member seems short sighted on their part. Of course, they are fighting for their life so they may take a less than ideal deal, but they did that after Nebraska left and the whole thing fell apart in a year.
Can we have a little mini discussion on ACC vs. Big 12? Clearly the choice is going to EVENTUALLY end up being Big 12 for all sports or ACC for all sports... because once moves start getting made the Big East dissolves and after a couple years (as few as maybe 2, as many as 10) you are going to have 5 "super" conference calling all of the shots. It makes sense because these conferences will all be 25% to 50% larger than they are now... with much more national exposure... and that will give them ridiculous power/leverage. ND won't be "needed" anymore. So while we've got some leverage, we're best to make a move. The only other option is to join the Big East for all sports and then try to resuscitate the damn thing.
So let's compare hypothetical long term Big 12 vs. ACC
SUPER ACC - 16 teams, 8 to 9 game conference schedule, 2 divisions. Would probably look something like:
NORTH SOUTH
Pitt Florida State
Syracuse Miami
Maryland Clemson
Boston College Duke
UCONN Wake Forest
Notre Dame NC State
Virginia North Carolina
Virginia Tech Georgia Tech
Pros: east coast exposure (for recruiting and other reasons), with a 9 game conference schedule we could probably get Miami as a "protected rival," maintains rivalry with BC, good academic fit, good fit for other sports, maintain some Big East rivalries, and the division we would play in wouldn't be world-beater. Could also probably maintain rivalry with USC and also fit Navy + Purdue and/or a regional warm-up into our schedule. Travel really wouldn't be any more difficult than current Big East arrangements.
Cons: Would almost surely lose rivalry with Michigan and Michigan State (is that really a con?)
SUPER BIG 12 - 12 to 14 teams, 8 to 9 game conference schedule, 1 or 2 divisions. Would probably look something like:
Texas
Texas Tech
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
TCU
Baylor
Kansas
Kansas State
Notre Dame
Iowa State
WVU (?)
BYU (?)
Louisville (?)
Cincinnati (?)
USF (?)
SMU (?)
Rice (?)
New Mexico (?)
UNLV (?)
Pros: Could preserve independence for awhile (hypothetically long enough for some sort of change to playoff hypothetically), exposure to Texas and we could probably keep rivalries with USC and maybe some other teams to stay national, the religious aspect of a lot of these schools, lots of big games.
Cons: A lot of damn good teams, tons of travel, regionalized to mid-america on many levels, not many rivalries preserved.
So yeah... when you add it all up... is it just me or is the ACC awesome and the Big 12 a little less awesome? Thoughts anyone?
If we keep Stanford ands USC we should be ok. Stanford will be back down again within 5 years
5 years. How about next year... Unless Andrew Luck Jr. is on the roster.
Theyve recruited well ecently which will keep them between 8-4 and 6-6 for a while
I think a con for the ACC could be regionalizing recruiting because you probably start to lose out on TX, CA and other west coast recruits in the ACC.
If we keep Stanford ands USC we should be ok. Stanford will be back down again within 5 years
Why? ND already struggles in Texas and will keep USC on the schedule.
Texas and ND about to team up.
That would suit me fine! The two Universities that sell more Memorabilia and make more money than the others schools could start an elite conference. The could call it "The Elite 10" lol!!
My proposed list: Not necessarily in any order folks & this is only for laughs obviously.
Notre Dame
Texas
Alabama
Ohio State
USC
Oklahoma
Nebraska
LSU
Florida
Michigan
I wonder how many champions this conference could produce?
A Duke graduate, Corrigan was Swofford’s direct predecessor and orchestrated the expansion that brought Florida State to the league in 1991 and elevated its football. He also served as athletic director at Virginia and Notre Dame.
But even in retirement Corrigan is connected. He wouldn’t reveal details of his conversations but said he speaks with Swofford and Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick.
Moreover, Corrigan’s son Kevin coaches the Irish’s lacrosse team. Another son, Boo, was an associate athletic director at Notre Dame and is the AD at Army.
So if anyone knows the Irish way, the influence of the school’s governing body and its most well-heeled donors, it’s Corrigan.
“All the (other) sports the ACC is good at, lacrosse and tennis and soccer, Notre Dame is good at,” Corrigan said. “From a competitive standpoint, it couldn’t be better.”
Indeed, the Irish fit the ACC not only athletically but also academically and culturally. Pitt would be the only league school less than 500 miles (372, according to Mapquest) from Notre Dame, but when Boston College joined the ACC, the closest conference rival was Maryland at 433 miles.
Will it happen? Will the ACC and Notre Dame navigate the scheduling and contractual – the Irish’s TV deal with NBC runs through 2015 – minefield that their varying interests create.
Corrigan said he doesn’t know, but this much seems clear: What was once impossible is no longer.