The meeting notice for the meeting prior to the one where they formally voted to leave the Big 12 back in 2010 was similarly worded. Means nothing, but it’s interesting. https://t.co/wu7O56Kpan
— Zachary Miller (@_ZacharyMiller) April 14, 2023
The meeting notice for the meeting prior to the one where they formally voted to leave the Big 12 back in 2010 was similarly worded. Means nothing, but it’s interesting. https://t.co/wu7O56Kpan
— Zachary Miller (@_ZacharyMiller) April 14, 2023
Stefano DiMera said:
And apparently ESPN and FOX agree to any combinations of 4 of these 5 schools being enough to kick in the pro rata clause for the Big 12: UA ASU CO. SDSU. UCONN.
historian said:
Primarily basketball. Does UConn even have a football team?
BluesBear said:
UCONN would make zero sense - almost like Gonzaga to the B12.
historian said:
Primarily basketball. Does UConn even have a football team?
Don't think 1 recently would qualify as "regularly", but they played in the Myrtle Beach Bowl this past season losing to Marshall.historian said:
Better question: is their football team competitive? Do they even go to bowl games regularly?
If they were to join the Big 12, unlikely, then it would be mainly because of basketball. That's the only reason that makes any sense. At least WVU & Cincinnati would have someone relatively close to play every year.
Hardly. CU doesn't want in the Big 12. There is a big fight internally. They don't want to play Baylor or BYU. They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.Russell Gym said:
The days of "fit" are over.
Straight runnin' cash, homie, rules the day. It's The American Way. Fit is now determined by TV execs. As in politics, financial gain can make strange bedfellows.
Bakersdozen said:Hardly. CU doesn't want in the Big 12. There is a big fight internally. They don't want to play Baylor or BYU. They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.Russell Gym said:
The days of "fit" are over.
Straight runnin' cash, homie, rules the day. It's The American Way. Fit is now determined by TV execs. As in politics, financial gain can make strange bedfellows.
Perhaps this will happen because of a new day just need to wait for another new day. One of the two constants about changes is 1) it always happens.
Bakersdozen said:
They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.
BaylorGuy314 said:Bakersdozen said:
They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.
Um, what kind of revisionist history is this?
The original Big 12 dissolved because of instability and inequality. Nebraska was the first to jump ship, seeing an opportunity to make more money and be apart from Texas at a time when there were flirtations between several members of the B1G and the PAC. Colorado jumped the gun shortly thereafter to secure their spot fearful that UT/OU/OSU/TT would get into the PAC and they'd be potentially left in a decimated Big 12.
Colorado to the PAC was nothing more than a reaction.
Aberzombie1892 said:
I'm simply fascinated that we are at a point where adding Colorado is a huge deal. Deion is a great catch, but, if he's successful, he probably won't be at Colorado for long. That would then leave us with whomever hires after he would (potentially) leave.
Hardly. PAC and West Coast is a much better fit. Still is or they would have already jumped. They may jump out of a plane before it crashes (the conference) but they won't until PAC options are no longer desirable because that is their #1 choice.BaylorGuy314 said:Bakersdozen said:
They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.
Um, what kind of revisionist history is this?
The original Big 12 dissolved because of instability and inequality. Nebraska was the first to jump ship, seeing an opportunity to make more money and be apart from Texas at a time when there were flirtations between several members of the B12 and the PAC. Colorado jumped the gun shortly thereafter to secure their spot fearful that UT/OU/OSU/TT would get into the PAC and they'd be potentially left in a decimated Big 12.
Colorado to the PAC was nothing more than a reaction.
Aberzombie1892 said:
I'm simply fascinated that we are at a point where adding Colorado is a huge deal. Deion is a great catch, but, if he's successful, he probably won't be at Colorado for long. That would then leave us with whomever hires after he would (potentially) leave.
There are no doubt some academics and alums who feel the way you describe here. But there are also some very powerful people at and around that university that have seen the largely negative impact that has come athletically as a result of Colorado's move to the PAC-12 and are not pleased. Those who want to see the university recommit itself to competing at a high level again aren't content to watch Colorado slip further into athletic mediocrity/obscurity to maintain its association with a dying conference.Bakersdozen said:Hardly. CU doesn't want in the Big 12. There is a big fight internally. They don't want to play Baylor or BYU. They left Big 12 for a reason. That reason remains.Russell Gym said:
The days of "fit" are over.
Straight runnin' cash, homie, rules the day. It's The American Way. Fit is now determined by TV execs. As in politics, financial gain can make strange bedfellows.
Perhaps this will happen because of a new day just need to wait for another new day. One of the two constants about changes is 1) it always happens.
It's not a huge deal. Big 12 fans are just excited that the league is in a position to poach anyone after the last 15 years the league has had and everything it's remaining members have been through.Aberzombie1892 said:
I'm simply fascinated that we are at a point where adding Colorado is a huge deal. Deion is a great catch, but, if he's successful, he probably won't be at Colorado for long. That would then leave us with whomever hires after he would (potentially) leave.
bear2be2 said:
I don't particularly want any of the PAC-12 schools, but most disagree with me.