Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
I guess it will suck to be a UCLA lacrosse player. I guess the beach volley ball team will go independent or will it just get cut?
UCLA beach volleyball team will continue just as the Notre Dame ice hockey team plays in the Big Ten Conference.
https://uclabruins.com/sports/womens-beach-volleyball/schedule/2023
Who knew that Georgia State has a women's beach volleyball team ?
Also, Oregon, Stanford, & Cal may join the Big Ten Conference.
Big10 doesn't have beach volleyball. The only local conference is the Pac 12 and they don't have much reason to help UCLA and USC out
Examine UCLA & Georgia State beach volleyball schedules. Lots of non-Pac-12 teams.
https://georgiastatesports.com/sports/womens-beach-volleyball/schedule/2023
Lots of nice trips to Gulf Shores, Alabama and to Hawaii and to Charleston, SC
Title IX.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the University of Oregon reaching out to the Big Ten Conference with an offer to accept a lower payout than the rest of the member schools ?
https://duckswire.usatoday.com/lists/oregon-needs-the-big-ten-but-the-big-ten-might-need-oregon-just-as-badly/
Lol at an Oregon blogger arguing that the Big10 needs Oregon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the University of Oregon reaching out to the Big Ten Conference with an offer to accept a lower payout than the rest of the member schools ?
https://duckswire.usatoday.com/lists/oregon-needs-the-big-ten-but-the-big-ten-might-need-oregon-just-as-badly/
That's a door that I don't think most members want opened. If Oregon is taking less to not be left out, what happens if Ohio Stat starts wondering why Rutgers is getting an equal share? Most members are riding on the coat tails of a few teams and everyone is well aware of the situation. If you introduce unequal payments, then the schools generating the revenue are going to feel free to demand more of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
I guess it will suck to be a UCLA lacrosse player. I guess the beach volley ball team will go independent or will it just get cut?
UCLA beach volleyball team will continue just as the Notre Dame ice hockey team plays in the Big Ten Conference.
https://uclabruins.com/sports/womens-beach-volleyball/schedule/2023
Who knew that Georgia State has a women's beach volleyball team ?
Also, Oregon, Stanford, & Cal may join the Big Ten Conference.
Big10 doesn't have beach volleyball. The only local conference is the Pac 12 and they don't have much reason to help UCLA and USC out
Anonymous wrote:Is the University of Oregon reaching out to the Big Ten Conference with an offer to accept a lower payout than the rest of the member schools ?
https://duckswire.usatoday.com/lists/oregon-needs-the-big-ten-but-the-big-ten-might-need-oregon-just-as-badly/
Anonymous wrote:Is the University of Oregon reaching out to the Big Ten Conference with an offer to accept a lower payout than the rest of the member schools ?
https://duckswire.usatoday.com/lists/oregon-needs-the-big-ten-but-the-big-ten-might-need-oregon-just-as-badly/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
I guess it will suck to be a UCLA lacrosse player. I guess the beach volley ball team will go independent or will it just get cut?
UCLA beach volleyball team will continue just as the Notre Dame ice hockey team plays in the Big Ten Conference.
https://uclabruins.com/sports/womens-beach-volleyball/schedule/2023
Who knew that Georgia State has a women's beach volleyball team ?
Also, Oregon, Stanford, & Cal may join the Big Ten Conference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
I guess it will suck to be a UCLA lacrosse player. I guess the beach volley ball team will go independent or will it just get cut?
Anonymous wrote:
(OP again)
I love this post, but I am concerned about starting a war with the SEC. What could the Big Ten Conference do to compensate the SEC for Texas & U Florida ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.
But the travel is crazy for many sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2036 when the GOR is up the big 12 and ACC will reorganize with teams shifting.
The Big Ten is only interested in Florida, Texas and Notre Dame at this point. The money per school is reduced with any other schools. Oregon, Washington or Arizona May be considered just to help geographically and maybe not lose too much money per school.
Colorado, Stanford, Cal, Arizona, Washington State, Oregon State, Arizona State, Iowa State, San Diego St, Byu, Utah, Kansas, Nevada, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, West Virginia, Connecticut, Texas Tech, Virginia, North Carolina, NC state, Virginia
Tech, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami, Pitt,
Will form a 28 team coast to coast conference.
It will be nice with an east and west divisions
The Dukes of the world will join the Big East.
The Big Ten and SEC will pull away money-wise. The Big Ten with huge alumni bases has adopted an NFL model rolling teams through major markets with huge big ten alumni populations….a genius strategy.
Interesting thought. Probably accurate, but the Big Ten will offer U Oregon & U Washington to solidify west coast markets & to ease travel burden for USC & UCLA while preserving rivalries among those west coast schools.
Would be very difficult to pull U Florida from the SEC. Equally difficult to pull Texas into a conference without arch-rival U Oklahoma.
Notre Dame is the available & most coveted target school.
If Big Ten offers U Washington & U Oregon, then adds Notre Dame, which would be the fourth additional school invited to join the Big Ten ? (Would the Big Ten Conference entice Notre Dame to join by allowing ND to name one of its rivals as the fourth school ?)
Could Texas be persuaded ?
Could U Florida get mad at SEC for admitting FSU and/or U Miami and leave for the Big Ten Conference ?
Florida and Texas could be persuaded.. the big ten already pays more money than the SEC and has greater academic rep. Both those schools fit culturally.