Oklahoma Prepairing to Apply to Pac-12
-
krambmanhttp://texas.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1263940
Sources say that the Board of Regents should vote by the end of the month. Oklahoma State is expected to follow suit.
RIP Big XII -
se-alumIf, in fact, the B1G didn't reach out to Oklahoma, they neeed some new leadership.
-
ts1227Oklahoma just fucked A&M by way of Baylor.
-
j_crazyAgreed se-alum
-
krambman
I'm sure that they did, but I honestly don't think adding OU and Ok State would be the best decision financially for the B1G, and I think that joining the Pac-12 is the best decision for them.se-alum;892987 wrote:If, in fact, the B1G didn't reach out to Oklahoma, they neeed some new leadership.
Besides, there are reports floating around that Texas and Notre Dame and jointly working on joining the B1G. Adding them and then adding two eastern schools would be a better way for the B1G to get to 16 than by adding the two Oklahoma schools. -
krambman
How so? It was A&M who screwed OU and everyone else last year when they decided they didn't want to go west and join what would have become the Pac-16.ts1227;892991 wrote:Oklahoma just fucked A&M by way of Baylor. -
ts1227krambman;893006 wrote:How so? It was A&M who screwed OU and everyone else last year when they decided they didn't want to go west and join what would have become the Pac-16.
Baylor basically said they would drop it if OU stayed put, so A&M will be pissed (regardless of if they have a reason). -
OneBuckeye
They have bigger fish in mind. OU's academics apparently don't align with the BIG10. (But I didn't think Nebraska's did either)se-alum;892987 wrote:If, in fact, the B1G didn't reach out to Oklahoma, they neeed some new leadership. -
vball10set
too funny (the irony in the spelling, that is)OneBuckeye;893027 wrote:They have bigger fish in mind. OU's acidemics apparently don't align with the BIG10. (But I didn't think Nebraska's did either) -
OneBuckeye
my bad FIFYvball10set;893028 wrote:too funny (the irony in the spelling, that is) -
se-alum
Texas and Notre Dame would be great, but I don't see it happening. I can't imagine the B1G would let Texas have their own network without distributing equally among the teams, and I can't see Texas wanting to share.krambman;893005 wrote:I'm sure that they did, but I honestly don't think adding OU and Ok State would be the best decision financially for the B1G, and I think that joining the Pac-12 is the best decision for them.
Besides, there are reports floating around that Texas and Notre Dame and jointly working on joining the B1G. Adding them and then adding two eastern schools would be a better way for the B1G to get to 16 than by adding the two Oklahoma schools. -
OneBuckeyeAlso another factor in BIG10 not getting oklahoma is that they are a package deal with OkieState. Not sure they wanted both.
-
vball10set
sorry, but it was too good to pass up (btw, I do agree with your post)OneBuckeye;893034 wrote:my bad FIFY -
OneBuckeye
Eh, I would have pointed it out too. I type faster than I can think.vball10set;893042 wrote:sorry, but it was too good to pass up (btw, I do agree with your post) -
krambmants1227;893008 wrote:Baylor basically said they would drop it if OU stayed put, so A&M will be pissed (regardless of if they have a reason).
There's no way that Baylor would be able to win their suit against Texas A&M if OU and OK St both left and they didn't sue them as well. Besides, forcing TAMU to stay won't even matter if those other two schools leave. If OU and OK St head west, Baylor will either have to sue all three schools or drop their suit against TAMU. They will drop their suit.
OneBuckeye;893027 wrote:They have bigger fish in mind. OU's academics apparently don't align with the BIG10. (But I didn't think Nebraska's did either)
Nebraska is the lowest ranked school in the B1G academically, but they have been climbing in recent years and they weren't too far behind the rest of the schools. They were also a member of the AAU when invited to join, however, they were also recently the first school ever kicked out of the AAU. People try and downplay the academic side of expansion, and probably because it doesn't matter to most conferences, but the B1G is the second highest rated D-1 conference academically behind the Ivy League, and they would like to keep it that way.
I believe Texas has a clause in their contract that allows them out of the Longhorn Network if they join a conference. ESPN would then likely make the Longhorn Network into just a regional ESPN. If Texas could join a conference with equal revenue sharing and still earn more than they are now, I think they would join. Besides, not being allowed to carry HS football games and only having one carrier currently, it's very possible that the LHN isn't going to be as viable as originally estimated, and therefore, it's likely that they aren't going to make as much money as promised.se-alum;893035 wrote:Texas and Notre Dame would be great, but I don't see it happening. I can't imagine the B1G would let Texas have their own network without distributing equally among the teams, and I can't see Texas wanting to share. -
Scarlet_Buckeye
This. The B1G is really going to be screwed if they miss out on Oklahoma.se-alum;892987 wrote:If, in fact, the B1G didn't reach out to Oklahoma, they neeed some new leadership. -
enigmaax
At the moment, it isn't about any real lawsuit. It is solely about the threat of one that the SEC doesn't want to deal with. If the SEC says they won't let TAM in until they're assured there will be no lawsuit, then TAM is screwed. If OU and Ok St leave and the Big XII is stuck trying to expand...and the SEC still won't take TAM because they don't want to deal with any nonsense, TAM is screwed. Whether Baylor would win or not, it would be costly for the SEC and the SEC doesn't need to waste money and resources on it.krambman;893057 wrote:There's no way that Baylor would be able to win their suit against Texas A&M if OU and OK St both left and they didn't sue them as well. Besides, forcing TAMU to stay won't even matter if those other two schools leave. If OU and OK St head west, Baylor will either have to sue all three schools or drop their suit against TAMU. They will drop their suit.
As for what Baylor would do if the other schools leave, (and again, whether they'd win or not) they could just point to TAM as the cause of the whole thing. Oklahoma and Ok State were forced to start looking at options because of what TAM did. It does all seem like bullshit, but it could be pretty expensive bullshit. -
krambman
What good does it do Baylor to gain TAMU, but lose all of Oklahoma? There's no way for this to work out well for Baylor. TAMU will eventually leave the Big XII and join the SEC, and Baylor may just lose a lot of money, and make themselves even less appealing to another conference that may want to take them, or to other teams that the remaining Big XII members may want to invite.enigmaax;893108 wrote:At the moment, it isn't about any real lawsuit. It is solely about the threat of one that the SEC doesn't want to deal with. If the SEC says they won't let TAM in until they're assured there will be no lawsuit, then TAM is screwed. If OU and Ok St leave and the Big XII is stuck trying to expand...and the SEC still won't take TAM because they don't want to deal with any nonsense, TAM is screwed. Whether Baylor would win or not, it would be costly for the SEC and the SEC doesn't need to waste money and resources on it.
As for what Baylor would do if the other schools leave, (and again, whether they'd win or not) they could just point to TAM as the cause of the whole thing. Oklahoma and Ok State were forced to start looking at options because of what TAM did. It does all seem like bullshit, but it could be pretty expensive bullshit. -
Classyposter58Gahh I hate this. You know the thing is won't these Super Conferences create Mini Conferences? I mean if you have a 16 team conference then you'd get 7 division games and 2 cross divisional games...so essentially you'd never see anyone in the other division. Idk I just have a big problem with such large conferences because everybody will just beat each other up and essentially we'd be left with a 10-2 SEC Champ vs other team every year for a title
-
enigmaax
I guess the 16 team thing is a money issue and I agree, it is kind of pointless from a competitive standpoint. The "beat each other up" effect will depend largely on the distribution of teams. As it is, there are typically, at most, a couple of teams that make it through with 0-1 losses. That will still happen. The thing that you hope happens as a conference is that you set up a kick ass championship game because the best teams from each division don't have to face each other during the regular season.Classyposter58;893683 wrote:Gahh I hate this. You know the thing is won't these Super Conferences create Mini Conferences? I mean if you have a 16 team conference then you'd get 7 division games and 2 cross divisional games...so essentially you'd never see anyone in the other division. Idk I just have a big problem with such large conferences because everybody will just beat each other up and essentially we'd be left with a 10-2 SEC Champ vs other team every year for a title -
sportchamppsTAM is not screwed the SEC will still take them eventually. Every conference is gonna need 16 teams. Schools like Baylor and Kansas are fighting it because they know they are on the outside looking in. They can sue all they want but TAM Oklahoma and OK State can just make to much more money by leaving.
I think the B1G will be going after Norte Dame, Mizzou, and two eastern schools. Texas is gonna have to figure something out with the Longhorn network before anyone agrees with them. Texas would be the crown jewel to any conference though. -
krambman
Super conferences are likely to bring down the NCAA, at least in terms of D-1A football. What could happen is that the four super conferences that end up getting formed (Pac-16, SEC, Big ACC, and B16) break away from the NCAA and create their own bowl based playoff. All four conference champions square off in a two round playoff. Conference championship games would essentially serve as the first round of the playoffs. Those who want an 8 team playoff would basically get just that.enigmaax;893707 wrote:I guess the 16 team thing is a money issue and I agree, it is kind of pointless from a competitive standpoint. The "beat each other up" effect will depend largely on the distribution of teams. As it is, there are typically, at most, a couple of teams that make it through with 0-1 losses. That will still happen. The thing that you hope happens as a conference is that you set up a kick ass championship game because the best teams from each division don't have to face each other during the regular season. -
j_crazykrambman;893755 wrote:Super conferences are likely to bring down the NCAA, at least in terms of D-1A football. What could happen is that the four super conferences that end up getting formed (Pac-16, SEC, Big ACC, and B16) break away from the NCAA and create their own bowl based playoff. All four conference champions square off in a two round playoff. Conference championship games would essentially serve as the first round of the playoffs. Those who want an 8 team playoff would basically get just that.
Good. -
Tobias Fünke
Not good. Not good at all. I think the maximum number of teams in a conference should be 12. It's the perfect number. A 16-team conference is retarded.j_crazy;893769 wrote:Good. -
krambman
Please explain how 12 teams in the perfect number? 10 is the perfect size. Anything bigger than that and you can't have everyone play everyone each year.Tobias Fünke;893971 wrote:Not good. Not good at all. I think the maximum number of teams in a conference should be 12. It's the perfect number. A 16-team conference is retarded.