StillNoStanfurdium said:
I think you're overlooking the scenario in which the top MWC schools essentially merge into the PAC and retain the PAC branding for its (now diminished) prestige and any NCAA Tourney tie-ins and what not. It allows a modicum of saving face (even if it's MWC in all but name).
There's a clever way of doing this, with the goal of preserving the NCAA automatic bids of both conferences, instead of merging with the result of one of those bids going away.
First, the minimums: Each conference has to have 8 full members to be an FBS football conference, and 7 to keep automatic bids to NCAA tournaments.
That leads to the first issue to be resolved: The Pac will have 4 members remaining. The MWC has 11 full members, plus Hawaii for football only. This is one short of the minimum 16 needed to have 2 full FBS football conferences. The solution is to add one more full member to either conference, and the first choice is to have Hawaii become a full member of either conference. If they decline, a school outside the current 15 would have to join. SMU if they are still interested, perhaps UTEP if both Hawaii and SMU say no. Let's work with the assumption that Hawaii agrees to participate.
Then, the conferences need to negotiate which 4 schools join the Pac-4. As a compromise, say the Pac gets the MWC team they most want, SDSU, and balances that by taking Hawaii, the most expensive school to have as a conference mate. The Pac lets the MWC keep the other two California members (assuming the MWC wants to keep them -- but if the MWC would rather ship them off to the Pac, then adding SJSU and Fresno makes the new Pac pretty compact) and, again as a compromise, takes one with a higher football profile (Boise State) and one with no football profile (New Mexico).
Both conferences execute a binding agreement that (a) bars any team from leaving the MWC for the Pac or vice versa, and (b) provides that if one or more teams leave either conference, the two conferences will then merge into one. The conferences also agree to cooperate in scheduling so that teams in each league, in all sports, can schedule teams from the other league and make filling schedules easier.
Too difficult to get 16 schools to agree to all that? Maybe, if not probably. But it's the only way to preserve the automatic bids of two conferences instead of merging into one and letting the other conference dissolve.
But, yes, for Cal this is a last resort, if the only alternative is joining the MWC.