calumnus said:
berserkeley said:
calumnus said:
wifeisafurd said:
calumnus said:
wifeisafurd said:
sycasey said:
juarezbear said:
MrGPAC said:
southseasbear said:
I'm probably in the minority here, but after thinking about the situation for the last several months, I hope the PAC (at least the 10 schools remaining) stays together. Maybe the Southern Branch changes its mind and SC is replaced by SD St. which would work out well by keeping regional rivalries. Alternatively, Southern Branch leaves and is replaced by UNLV, which expands the conference footprint to a growing metropolitan area.
I agree with Pawlawski who said this will hurt Southern Branch recruiting, particularly in the Bay Area. Parents will have to travel far to see their kids play. Tickets to many of the games (played in the midwest, will be expensive. Players can come to Cal where parents can watch their kids play home games close to home and travel to any other conference game for less the $200. And they won't have to worry about the impact of extensive traveling on their kids' academics.
In the meantime, the PAC should screw SC (and Southern Branch if it leaves) but not permitting its members to play them. Let them travel farther for OOC games or else play the likes of SJ State and Fresno.
If UCLA were to return to the Pac then Stanford would most likely be leaving. San Diego State makes sense to replace USC, but who would we replace Stanford with? San Jose State?
This is the first time I've read that Furd would leave if UCLA returns. What's the logic there?
The logic is just people making stuff up.
The logic is that SC need a companion (and probably was promised one) and Stanford leaving for the B!G would not require government approval, unlike with the State schools. For those that think Washington or Oregon can just leave behind the other state school, that sentiment is wrong.
Money talks, even at Furd. Whether a 100% share in the B1G does that depends on the PAC media contract.
The original statement was that if the Regents block UCLA, the B1G will come after Stanford. I think that is almost certain. Maybe Cal and Stanford (with UCLA) if the Regents haven't completely pissed off the B1G. That is my concern with this action. We need to push for what we want, more than just being obstructionist.
You then raise the secondary but very interesting question, if UCLA is blocked and the B1G comes after only Stanford, would Stanford go? My sense is no, they don't need the money, they don't like the NIL era and their other sports and Directors' Cups are even more important to them than at Cal, but you never know. If they go, I think it would be more for the prestige than than the money.
Some take aways from the Stanford Daily article posted this thread regarding the faculty senate meeting:
1) Furd is in discussions with the B1G (this is subtly stated: "Confidential conversations are underway about whether Stanford should pursue conference realignment").
2) Furd and 9 other Pac teams are negotiating for a new media contract as the Pac
3) The difference in revenue between the B1G and Pac may be as much as $50 million annually
4) Furd athletics is running a significant operating deficit that despite all the love from faculty and administrators (something you don't hear at the Cal faculty senate meeting), some faculty expressed concern that the size of the deficit may start taking away from other priorities.
5) Furd has 817 athletes which is around 10% of the student body. [my add is there are around 7,500 undergrads, and if you add non-scholarship players, around 1,000 athletes].
6) Any solution would look at what is best for the athletes given the large number of athletes, The focus seems t be trying to make the Pac work.
It still seems that there could be a deal where the PAC-12 negotiates a merger with the B1G to form the Super Conference. It is the perfect time, the PAC-12 TV rights have not been negotiated, the PAC-12 is leaving the SF offices. Consolidate most admin costs in the Midwest.
Football could be split up into 4 team regional pods, retaining traditional rivalry games, but creating interesting intersectional games. Whether there would be a separate "PAC-12" champion would depend on the CFP rules, if the PAC-12 would have an auto bid, then "yes." If not, maybe work with the Rose Bowl Committee to have the CCG be the new date of the Official Rose Bowl game?
The B1G and Kliavkoff would negotiate the "PAC-10" TV rights for the remaining schools based on the above, nationally attractive intersectional games in exclusive time slots. People on the East Coast watching the late night game on the West Coast because their team is playing in it. There would be an agreement to merge the two money pools and equalize payments to schools over time.
For all other sports the PAC-12 could essentially continue as before, as a "separate" league, but with lots of OOC games against other B1G teams, or maybe, the same 4 team pods but with greater emphasis on playing the nearby pods to reduce travel costs. Then, league playoffs (good TV content) would determine the conference champion in each sport.
I sincerely doubt the Big Ten would support a merger with a conference that includes OSU and WSU. I don't think they would take those two schools even if that was the only way to land USC.
Iowa? Indiana? Nebraska? Pitt? They are comparable. OSU is ranked higher in US News.
We are talking about taking San Diego State and UNLV.
OSU comes with Oregon, WSU comes with UW. It avoids a lot of trouble, including antitrust.
Iowa and Indiana have been in the Big Ten since 1899. There's a big difference between not inviting teams that add no value to your conference versus expelling teams that have been part of your conference for 123 years because they don't carry their weight.
But, unlike OSU and WSU, Iowa and Indiana do carry their weight. Iowa and Indiana have better academics, football attendance, athletic history, and TV draws than OSU and WSU plus they're their state's flagship public university.
As for Nebraska, you're right, they're equal to OSU and WSU in academics, but that's where the similarities end. Nebraska is a college football blueblood. OSU and WSU are the opposite of that.
As for Pitt, not really sure the relevance. They're not in the Big Ten and I don't see them getting invited to the Big Ten because Big Ten has already captured the Pennsylvania market. That said, Pitt's academics, football attendance, media market, and athletic history are all significantly better than OSU's and WSU's.
And if UCLA can go to the Big Ten without Cal (we'll see what the Regents say), Oklahoma to the SEC without Oklahoma State, Texas to the SEC without Texas Tech, then Oregon and Washington can go to the Big Ten without OSU and WSU. And if their states decide they cannot separate their schools, then Oregon and Washington will get left behind.
And the Pac-12 is considering SDSU and UNLV because we're desperate. The Big Ten is not. There's just no way Ohio State shares revenue with Oregon State. I mean, the reason USC is leaving is because they don't want to share revenue with the likes of Oregon State any more.