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SignUp Now!What's so compelling with this current conference schedule?It's nonsense.
Why would UT leave its sweetheart deal to join a Rust Belt league that's losing population, TV viewers and influence? What match-ups are compelling? Ohio State, Michigan and maybe Nebraska? Everything else about it sucks. The move would be terribly inconvenient for our traveling fans, too.
Last year, the B1G Network paid each member $8.2MM per team. UT already earns over $11MM annually for LHN. That number grows with addition of Time Warner Cable and a satellite carrier deal. Eventually, it will exceed the $15MM per year that sent aggie running for the SEC.
IF The University were to move it would be with partner OU to the Pac-12. Hell, the ACC is more desirable too.
Right - because Big Ten football is respected across the country for its amazing depth of quality.I have to agree about the ESPN rankings but it is not the fact that the SEC is on top. ESPN along with every other ranking has the ACC at the bottom of the power conferences. There is a reason why signing day is always their national championship. The ACC needs Texas for credibility much more than Texas needs them and joining the ACC would only bring down Texas football long term.
The BIG is a little more of a conference of equals (not saying it is the end all be all) but would not marginalize the Texas brand.
Big Ten football nationally is seen as both boring and poor in quality. One thing ND football boosters have been realizing even more after last year's blowout to Bama is that the more midwestern/Big Ten you are in recruits and playing style and schedule, the less your chances to play well on the national stage. If Texas were join the BT with OU going to the SEC, both OU and A&M would gain immeasurably in football at the expense of Texas.BlowU would go to the SEC and kill us on the recruiting trail. Dumb move.
Ridiculous speculation. In the history of college sports, a GOR has never been broken. Texas is wealthy, but it is basically run by humongously successful money donors. They didn't become mega wealthy by losing money, which is exactly what would happen if UT tried to get out of the GOR.Via BlueGoldSports.com
Texas is playing the Big12 for fools. Oliver Luck learned yesterday that UT had entered a non-disclosure agreement with the Big10 a few months back and have been hammering out details for UT to join the Big10 with another school(GT-according to what Luck was told) to make 16. The LHN, which was once considered the biggest hurdle to overcome, would remain UT's and Espn's but BTN would also get UT content-just not as much as the other 15. UT would take a smaller share of BTN revenues(which will grow astronomically after adding GA and TX) than the other members but still stands to make over $50 million per year for all tv money(non-postseason ) according to projections from the B10. That's all the info I have been able to obtain in regards to this matter and what I have now was obtained from eavesdropping on my sources part. Luck seemed shocked and surprised at this news but it doesn't seem to have deterred him from taking the job even though during his interview he pitched a 12 team B12 with 8 games and a CCG. I won't pretend to understand how the big10 plans on skirting the GOR but everything I've been hearing is hinting that the answer is in the details of what the networks are actually paying for-yes, they are TV rights to a university's athletic games-but those games have a specific name and description. Failing that, the B10 has stores of cash to pay for a broken GOR or 2 if need be. Will UT move to the Big10 and what does that mean for WVU and the rest of B12? Before anyone jumps off a bridge keep this in mind: last year the Big10 had as many as 8 of those non-disclosure agreements in place with various schools and only 2 came to fruition. But if UT were to bolt the B12...well, that changes everything.
You mean that you think Texas football would take a step backward in joining the ACC. And even with a resurgent FSU, which last year sent a record 11 players to the NFL via draft and is better this year with a team younger than last year's which should lead to an even better team in 2014, such a case might make sense if ND were not involved. If you think that our presence across ACC football is not going to help all ACC teams recruit better against especially the Big Ten and even the SEC, then you don't know much about the allure of playing ND.Irish - Join the SEC absolutely, it would be a benefit for the SEC and Texas.but to join the ACC is a big step backward. The facts on paper prove that.
The football giants Rutgers and Maryland will make 14 for the Big Ten.Just switch the names of the two conferences.
The Big 12 has only 10 teams now. So call it the Big 10.
The Big 10 now has 12 teams. So call it the Big 12.
then call the Big 10 "the Big 14" and call the Big 12 "the Big 10"The football giants Rutgers and Maryland will make 14 for the Big Ten.
There is another option you didnt mention, Pac.SEC is not an option in this scenario. Yes, that is where they need to be but between BIG and ACC, I say BIG
Game time is a legitimate concern but something Texas can easily get around. All home games can be played at normal times 2:30pm, 6pm, or 7pm central, hopefully we dont do 11am games anymore. We could do some type of rule that we dont do night games for road games on west coast. So games must start by 5pm PST.No thanks to the Big 10 and the dying Rust Belt. I think some merger of the Big 12 and ACC makes the most sense. My second choice is SEC. PAC is my last choice behind Big 10. Media is east and they go to sleep by 10-11. And so do I.
Well, judging by the record of Texas football under DeLOSSY Dudd, those money donors have done a lousy job facilitating the development of a top football program for the most part of the past three decades.Ridiculous speculation. In the history of college sports, a GOR has never been broken. Texas is wealthy, but it is basically run by humongously successful money donors. They didn't become mega wealthy by losing money, which is exactly what would happen if UT tried to get out of the GOR.Write this article off as someone trying to be a hit magnet.
I see what you are saying and you have some good points but you lied with the cities you used. No school is in New York City so you cant use a school thats far away. Also, No school is in Chicago. IF you are comparing large close markets then do that do.Hanna - You are not getting the rust belt with the BIG anymore. Unless you all Chicago, New York City, Washington DC, Philly, Indianapolis, Columbus, Minneapolis, Madison the rust belt. ( Yes they are upper Midwest but they would not be considered true old manufacturing towns. In fact, these cities are the financial and accounting centers as well as major biomedical research areas. It is no wonder why these schools are consistently the top public schools in the country.
The rust belt is Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Syracuse, Gary Indiana. The ironic thing is that there are more ACC schools in the "Rust Belt" than BIG 10 schools. There are more ACC schools closer to that footprint than BIG Schools. (Syracuse, Pitt, ND are all rust belt in the ACC, whereas the BIG besides MICH/MICH ST has no schools within a 2 hour drive of those rust belt cities).
Look at the BIG Cities v ACC cities and which inspire more excitement and growth. You have in the ACC
Ralaigh, Durham, Winston Salem, Atlanta, Tallahassee, Miami, Pittsburgh, Boston, Syracuse, Blacksburg, Charlottesville, Louisville, South Bend, Clemson.
In the BIG you have - Chicago, New York, Washington DC, Columbus, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, Madison, Champaign, Iowa City, Lincoln, State College PA (Philly,Pitt, Harrisburg), Detroit (Ann arbor), Lansing.
Where are the jobs?? where is the employment. In the ACC you have Atlanta, Research Triangle, Boston, Pittsburgh, and Miami, hell through CHarlotte in there too. IN BIG Country, there is Chicago, New York, DC, Minneapolis (All financial centers), Columbus and Indy, Pittsburgh and Philly.
Point being, there is still a lot more opportunity in the "rust belt" then the sleepy south.