Calcoholic;339830 said:
I just happened to be over on the Ute msg board myself and was struck by how fired up the Utes are by this invitation. Again and again the Ute posters were using words like "ecstatic," "overjoyed," "thrilled," and phrases like "best day in Utah sports history."
I had underestimated how big of it deal it is for a non-BCS school to be invited to a BCS conference. I don't think we BCS-school fans really appreciate what a sense of frustration and inferiority comes along with being a non-BCS school.
It's also pretty funny how much they relish leaving BYU behind in the MWC. They're almost as happy about this perceived humiliation of their rival than of the invitation itself.
Utah and Colorado fans and officals being ecstatic about joining the Pac-10 is probably the least surprising part of all of this. This is an
absolute windfall for them in every possible way except perhaps any penalty they may pay to their respective old conferences.
This is particularly true if they play in the Pac-10 South and USC/UCLA appear on their schedule every year as reported by the CU Athletic Director, with Cal/Furd being relegated to the Pac-10 North. Big SoCal recruiting and TV $$ bump compared to before for the newcomers. Some of that at Cal's expense since we would no longer play both SoCal schools every year.
Aside from CU's getting out of Texas' greedy shadow, Colorado-USC and Colorado-UCLA seem much more likely to get on ESPN, especially if Colorado and UCLA improve as expected, than Colorado's old match-ups against any of the old Big XII North teams except possibly Nebraska. The equation is even more skewed to the positive for Utah, coming from the Mountain West. TCU, BYU, and now Boise are good teams and tough to beat, but Utah would get very little credit for beating them compared to the relative benefit they will get from playing and beating Pac-12 South opponents. Actually, Utah probably thinks they have a great shot to make (and win) the championship game their first year, and they may be right.
I'm not sure that it could have realistically worked out in a more ideal fashion than it did for both Utah and Colorado.