I think we do agree. Boise is last on my list. I was only comparing them to the other schools and showing the disparity of how bad their market is compared to the others.Method Man said:I agree with you most of the time. One this point I'm going to veer left.bear2be2 said:The size of your market doesn't matter if you only carry a minute share of it. We're not adding any programs that move the needle in history or market share. Only on-field success and fun football will bring eyeballs to our teams' games. So you can keep your markets. I want the programs most likely to be playing important games the next decade plus, and Boise tops that list.BaylorGrad09 said:I look at downside vs. upside, and as they go through another coaching change this year, there's always the concern that they miss on the new head coach and go into a downward spiral. With all their resources, UT has had a decade of missing on coaches. A&M went through a number of coaches to start the 2000s.bear2be2 said:Why would Boise crumble? Teams that compete at a national level with piss poor resources don't get worse with better resources. Like TCU, Utah and Louisville, Boise's floor would get lower in a league with deeper competition. But their ceiling wouldn't change. And they've proven for years that their ceiling is higher than Houston's.Method Man said:bear2be2 said:I wouldn't be opposed to Houston, but I'm taking Boise first. If you look at the past two decades, no mid-major program has had more on-field success than Boise, which has earned a level of national respect that Houston has not. We need teams in this conference that help change the perception of the Big 12's overall strength. And BYU, Cincinnati, UCF and Boise are the best equipped to do that. All four of those, like TCU, Utah and Louisville before them, would become respected power conference teams in a hurry.BaylorGrad09 said:
The goal for expansion is two fold:
-get schools who have shown they get into the top 25 with limited resources.
-expand the footprint
I would argue that UH does both. Houston is a gigantic city and UH is minting graduates in a city currently filled with A&M and UT fans. The conference lost its foothold on the 4th largest city when UT left. Having 4-5 conference matchups that likely get close to 45-50k people (when counting the much larger away crowds baylor / tech / TCU / osu would bring) brings a different level of excitement for the school and the brand as a whole.
What if Boise ends up crumbling from the pressure of Power 5 competition and ends up being bad in basketball, and football.
At that point.....what value would they bring to the BIGXII?
I understand that Boise St is good now and has a great history, but I'm not sure what they bring to the table as a long term conference partner.
What value would Baylor gain playing in Idaho, as opposed to Houston and Memphis?
The metro areas of Memphis and Houston have more high end football and basketball talent than Idaho or Utah.
I want Baylor playing in cities/regions where recruiting can be made easier.
Any of the schools that are added need to have a major airport nearby.
Cincinnati, Houston, UCF and Memphis all fit the bill.
And the bulk of Baylor's talent will come, as it always has, from Texas. So the recruiting area doesn't matter a lick to me. I want the four best programs. Period.
Boise metro has about 750k people, and Idaho as a whole only has about 1.8 million people.
Memphis metro has 1.3m people in a state with 6.8m people.
Cincinnati metro has 2.2m people in a state with 11.7m people (and only one p5 team)
Tampa Bay metro has 3.1m people in a state with 21.5m people
Orlando metro has 2.5m people in a state with 21.5m people
Houston metro 7.1m people in a state with 29m people
Logistically they are way out of place in the conference, especially if you start adding schools in Florida and the midwest, and their floor is very low if they start losing.
My opinions on this subject matter are fluid. One day I'm for this school...the next day someone makes a great argument and I rank this school ahead.
BYU is easily a better choice than Memphis. Lets get that out of the way.
Where I'm differing from you is Boise St vs Houston. I completely understand that Boise St has a great football program. They would still be one of the last teams that I would add.
Its my belief that the new BIGXII needs to capitalize on marketing by playing games in the largest TV markets. DFW (7.5 million) and Houston (7 million) are each the population of medium sized states like Tennessee, Indiana and Arizona.
The BIGXII needs 4 schools in Texas. TCU (DFW), Baylor (Central Texas) Texas Tech (West Texas) Houston (Houston, SE Texas). That would also mean a hard NO for SMU.
The Baylor Bears need to be playing games in Dallas and Houston every year. The football and basketball talent in these cities is among the best in the entire country.
Edit: I see you were disagreeing about markets. nvm