the reality is that school presidents and athletic directors are often as shallow as the fanbasesIf the Championships and the brand were this big then we wouldn’t be in this fix,
We’re about to get passed over for SMU.
the reality is that school presidents and athletic directors are often as shallow as the fanbasesIf the Championships and the brand were this big then we wouldn’t be in this fix,
We’re about to get passed over for SMU.
SMU’s “momentum” was a direct result of the activities that earned them the death penalty.SMU would've been in the Big 12 way before TCU, WV, Cinci, UCF, and BYU if it didn't get the death penalty that killed it's program and stunted it's momentum for decades
They bring the Dallas market, although that's like saying BC brought the Boston market and Syracuse and Rutgers brought the NYC market. Also some inroads into recruiting in Texas.Really? In SMU's heyday before the death penalty, they had a hard time attracting 30k fans per game unless they were playing Texas or Texas A&M. The poor fanbases at TCU, Houston, SMU, and Rice is why they were left behind when the Big 12 was formed.
BTW, SMU averaged 25k fans per game last season and they have ~7k undergraduates. What do they bring to a conference?
SMU would've been in the Big 12 way before TCU, WV, Cinci, UCF, and BYU if it didn't get the death penalty that killed it's program and stunted it's momentum for decades
I know you're being sarcastic, but it is definitely true that the University has no control over boosters. The only threat there was that they could hurt the program, which they did. Now everybody wants those boosters setting up NIL. It's wild how much has changed.What really sucks is the university had no control over the actions by its boosters, coaching staff and university administration which led to the death penalty.
It is amazing how many AAC fans this board still has.
Is this 2008? Where carriage is guaranteed? Lol.They bring the Dallas market, although that's like saying BC brought the Boston market and Syracuse and Rutgers brought the NYC market. Also some inroads into recruiting in Texas.
With streaming however, schools will have to demonstrate there own media value down the road.
I don't disagree, but you could apply that statement to every school in TX and we'd be naive to think they were the only school doing it, then or since. Their problem was they were the right size for the NCAA to make an example and not have to expose the big offenders and kill the golden goose. I think we can relate.SMU’s “momentum” was a direct result of the activities that earned them the death penalty.
Your usual schtick aside, the consolidation of conferences into larger groups, and the increasing count of conference-only scheduled games, is a real problem for independents not named Notre Dame.
does the football program have that long?You have convinced me. Let's join the Big 10.
Given UConn's realistic options, burning all of our sports to the ground so football can play North Texas and Charlotte in conference games seems like a bad trade.
The best option appears to be waiting this out until FBS football has to break off from the NCAA or streaming forces leagues to re-evaluate their revenue sharing.
does the football program have that long?
Big East would probably never go for it, but the perfect opportunity to put together a hybrid conference again, starting with the PAC 12 remnants. They'd probably get more money overall.I think we will see football only conferences or a deal with a conference for football only. But it might be better to just stay Indy if we can put great schedules together.
You have convinced me. Let's join the Big 10.
Given UConn's realistic options, burning all of our sports to the ground so football can play North Texas and Charlotte in conference games seems like a bad trade.
The best option appears to be waiting this out until FBS football has to break off from the NCAA or streaming forces leagues to re-evaluate their revenue sharing.
You’re forgetting his schtick.Why do you think i was disagreeing with you? My statement was 100% factual, and had very little to do with the AAC.
Let’s put 25k in contextReally? In SMU's heyday before the death penalty, they had a hard time attracting 30k fans per game unless they were playing Texas or Texas A&M. The poor fanbases at TCU, Houston, SMU, and Rice is why they were left behind when the Big 12 was formed.
BTW, SMU averaged 25k fans per game last season and they have ~7k undergraduates. What do they bring to a conference?
There should be a rule that there can only be X number of consecutive comments without a relevant tweet
In theory it may be possible if the football conference in question is all very strong hoops brandsWhy do people keep suggesting the Big East merge with a football conference? Do some of you just not know the history or what?
SMU.They also never stopped paying the kids after they were caught and they knew the stiffest possible penalties were on the table. It was massive cheating from the top down.
Dickerson is from my buddy's hometown Sealy, Texas and he used to drive the gold trans-am all over town and would still drive it to the high school football games. My buddy was the star QB and his best friend and running back was Dickerson's nephew. He was supposed to be as good as Dickerson but he tragically died in a car accident when he was a senior in high school. His son Ricky Seals-Jones currently plays in the NFL. Insane amount of talent in that tiny town.
I still remember where I was when I watched that debacle.SMU.
Awful fact, the first win after the death penalty was was vs UConn. Tom Jackson team just collapsed in a horrible way in 4th quarter.
It has nothing to do with how strong or not strong the hoops is.In theory it may be possible if the football conference in question is all very strong hoops brands
They're not saying no if Cuse and Duke come knockingIt has nothing to do with how strong or not strong the hoops is.
It's a small religious school conference that wants to play basketball and a few other olympic sports with geographically convenient schools. Their Athletic Depts aren't interested in trying to compete with those of the P5. What makes you think they want more football schools when they worked so hard to get away from them the first time?They're not saying no if Cuse and Duke come knocking
Me too. In my Celeron Square apartment watching it on TV. I was in grad school.I still remember where I was when I watched that debacle.