Quote:
Originally Posted by Mosbonian
If chips start falling and Super Conferences start being created, then MU becomes more than just a "stray" team. Mizzou has markets that both the SEC and Big 10 would love to have. For the Big 10 that pretty much sews up everything in the state including the coveted St. Louis market. If the SEC manages to capture MU, then they steal away something that the Big 10 pretty much feels they can add at their convenience and catches the Big 10 with their pants down.
Super Conferences are going to happen.....it's just when and how. And quite frankly MU's situation isn't just slightly better than KU's...it's much better.
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I highlighted the only pertinent point of the discussion. "IF". IF all that happens, then yes, Missouri is in a good place. All I'm saying is that there has been no concrete message from either conference they want to expand. You assume the networks will say the St. Louis market is worth it. Fans throw around terms like "X metropolis" market like its some big bloc that will all automatically go where MU football goes.
When TV execs look at the numbers, they actually dissect it a bit more than that. They'll look at what percentage of St. Louis fans actually watch college football, what percentage of fans actually watch MU football (don't act like there's no Illini fans there). What percentage of fans watch SEC football anyway.
IF superconferences are the wave of the future, then yes, your situation is much brighter. But IF said conferences don't think it is advantageous to expand right now, they aren't going to expand just to expand.
And this, by the way, goes right into another of these myths about superconferences: "The good thing is that when we have four superconferences we're finally going to have a playoff system."
Yeah, right. The BCS, the organization that wants to preserve the bowls, is going to gather their teams together so they can get rid of the bowls. That's fan logic for you at its finest!