socaltownie said:Instructive to see how the Big West UC's do it (UCSB, UCSD, UCI, UCR). They don't provide much in the way of scholarships, the travel is essentially local and they don't field football. I leave it to others on a Sunday to go onto their websites and count teams.Big C said:Golden One said:Only a very few people would really care.eastcoastcal said:Big C said:
What if they weren't "ivies", but just schools in the west? Start with the former Pac schools that didn't go to the "B1G": WSU, OSU, the Arizonas. Maybe Colorado and Utah (maybe not). Nevada, UNLV, maybe UC Davis, Boise St, SDSU. Sac St? Air Force? We play Stanfurd every year as our last game. The top teams from this "lesser Pac" conference would go to some sort of piss ant bowl game.
I don't know exactly, but some combination of some of the above schools.
Sure, recruiting would drop off a bit, as would quality of play. But probably not all that much. I really don't see how it would be all that much different than what we've been doing, except no LA schools, no UW or Oregon.
Our TV deal would be absolutely terrible with these teams and we'd have to fold many, many sports as a result
What we'd have to do is come up with a new model for the other sports, one that wasn't dependent on subsidies from football revenue. If we value the experience that these student athletes get from competing, we find a way to fund them. Or we eliminate them.
I have zero problem with every non-revenue sport being made up of mostly Kids from California with a scholarship covering only in-state tuition or less. Most Olympic sports will survive with just preferential admissions. If we put together booster NIL packages for the sports boosters care about, maybe all scholarships are eventually eliminated?