![]() |
Missouri getting bashed at this press conference.
They really ****ed this whole thing up. |
Good for Mizzou. So, to summarize, the Big 12 has lost its doormat, Colorado to the Pac 10.
It is to lose one of the past legends of Big 8 football, Nebraska, to the Big 10. Next...... |
Quote:
|
So now Forsee has something to say.
That's a really really bad sign, MU fans. Yup, Mizzou ****ed this one up. Nicely done, gentlemen. Nicely done. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Allowed themselves to be deceived? Naivety? Ok, I could get on board with these claims. But, without more evidence, it's tough to say how they've mismanaged things. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
But I look at it this way. I don't go to MU. I no longer live in the state. I don't have kids who will go there - at the end of the day, all I care about is a competitive football team that wins more often than it loses. Wherever we end up, it seems, we will be in a bully-free zone. Hopefully there will be a way for me to watch some games. |
Quote:
Tuck Fexas. |
Even if all the remaining Big 12 teams decide to stay together and just replace colorado/nebraska, i want KU to continue to look for a new conference.
|
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/sp...-96137294.html
Remaining Big 12 schools to the Big East gaining momentum By: Jim Williams Examiner Sports Columnist 06/11/10 9:27 AM EDT Anyone who thought that the Big East was just going to sit around and watch the Big Ten take Rutgers and possibly Syracuse and Pitt simply does now know the passion of the conference. Once word began to spread that Kansas, Kansas State, Iowa State and perhaps Missouri would be looking for a home the Big East became very interested in talking to them about joining the league. Yesterday I began to contact some powerful members of the alumni associations at Georgetown, UCONN, USF, Louisville, Cincinnati, West Virginia, Pitt, and Syracuse and I found them all very interested in adding the Big 12 schools. One very high profile member of the USF Alumni speaking on the condition of anonymity told me “You can bet the Big East is being aggressive in expansion we will not be crushed by the Big Ten.” No doubt Big East Commissioner John Marinatto and his newly hired senior adviser former NFL Commissioner and Georgetown grad Paul Tagliabue will be talking to any of the Big 12 schools interested in joining the league. By the way C-USA members Memphis and Central Florida and working through back channels to gage the interest of the Big East in expanding. Meanwhile a 12 team Big East football conference and a 20 team super basketball conference would be a good move for the conference and one that is clearly being explored. Football wise there would be an Eastern Division with Pitt, West Virginia, UCONN, USF, Syracuse and Rutgers or UCF with a Western Division that could be made up of Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Iowa State or Memphis, Cincinnati and Louisville. They could hold a Big East Championship Game each year that could be rotated between New York, Washington, Tampa, St. Louis and Kansas City. The Big East basketball with the addition of Kansas and maybe Memphis would further enhance the best basketball conference in the country. They could also offer networks at many as 8 of the top 25 media markets putting them on the same level as both the PAC 16 and the Big Ten in terms of eyeballs. Because of their basketball and adding the new markets the Big East would have, New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, Boston (because of Providence), Tampa, and new markets St. Louis and possibly Orlando. I know what you are saying Pitt, Syracuse and Rutgers could be headed to the Big Ten. The truth is Pitt won’t get a Big Ten invitation because the Big Ten Network already has Pittsburgh as market for their Big Ten network thanks to Penn State. Rutgers to the Big Ten seems for the moment a lock but Syracuse might be falling behind as both Maryland and Georgia Tech keep popping up in the conversation. Maryland is a great fit because of the academics and they can deliver both Washington, D.C. and Baltimore a combined mid-Atlantic region that is equal to the fourth largest media market in the country. Meanwhile Georgia Tech would give the Big Ten a strong southern presence and the Atlanta market. It seems the two ACC schools MAY have passed Syracuse – for now- on the Big Ten list – a list that continues to be debated. There is another benefit to keeping the Big East strong and that is Notre Dame. The Irish make an estimated $22 million dollars a year from the NBC football contract as well as their relationship with the Big East in all other sports. Plus a new twist to the Notre Dame branding deal has been the team working out deals that allow them to play a additional home games in cities outside South Bend. So they add another game for NBC while also picking up a check for as much as $3 million a game while barnstorming across the country and keeping the brand a national one. A strong Big East means Notre Dame can continue to be independent and it also means the conference can keep the Irish happy and out of the Big Ten. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
It seems that privately, they were letting go of one branch before they grabbed onto the other one. It seems they were dead certain that they had that offer and didn't. They were entirely too cavalier for an institution which is so important for so many people. Pitt, Forsee has been saying nothing. Nothing at all. When he was deadly silent, I was confident. Now he's slowly hedging, as is Alden and Deaton. They can keep saying "we've been saying X all along" but the tenor has certainly changed. |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:50 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.