cjsweat wrote:
And what's wrong with an organization making decisions to make more money? People act like it's such a crime. Any Big 12 fan, except maybe a UT fan, would tell you that Texas A&M isn't like any other Big 12 schools. They're rivalry with Arkansas and LSU will be much more intense than UT and Oklahoma. Furthermore, who cares if old rivalries are being ruined? New ones are forming and it's going to be exciting. There isn't anything that you can say or do to the current circumstances, so why not just embrace the change?
Thre is certainly nothing wrong with wanting to make more money -- but I think the NCAA created the climate that has made the realignment discussion such a fiasco.
Because the NCAA* said that A) You need to have 12 teams in order to schedule a lucrative championship game and B) only certain conferences get the right to compete in lucrative bowl games, everything went to heck. Go back a few years -- would the ACC have added Miami, VT & Boston College if they didn't need to get to 12 for a championship game? They only wanted Miami (and only a few schools did -- not the entire conference). Would the Big East have raided Conference USA and try to set themselves up as a basketball superconference? Would they still be strong enough to be a halfway decent conference? And if they didn't have one of the coveted automatic bids, would they be remotely attractive to someone like San Diego State & Boise State?
Would the Pac-10 / Big-10 be compelled to expand in 2010 if they could host a championship game with 10 or 11? What would have happened if the Big 12 remained at 12? Would Texas have been searching for a new conference (no really -- would they have)? Would Missouri and Texas A&M tried to seek SEC membership if the Big 12 wasn't on the verge of falling apart?
*NCAA / BCS, same thing. The NCAA enabled the BCS to happen.