Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the Big Ten Conference was limited to adding just 2 more schools, which two would be at the top of the Big Ten Conference's wish list ?
In my opinion, the schools that the Big Ten Conference wants more than any other are Notre Dame and the University of Texas.
Texas moved to SEC
Notre Dame and Stanford make most sense
Yes, that is the plan for 2024.
Amusing article from the Bleacher report from over 13 years ago (February 16, 2010):
https://bleacherreport.com/articles/346597-texas-and-the-big-ten-great-for-the-big-ten-10-but-horrible-for-texas
The Bleacher report misreported at least twice that the University of Texas was headed for the Big Ten Conference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the Big Ten Conference was limited to adding just 2 more schools, which two would be at the top of the Big Ten Conference's wish list ?
In my opinion, the schools that the Big Ten Conference wants more than any other are Notre Dame and the University of Texas.
Texas moved to SEC
Notre Dame and Stanford make most sense
Anonymous wrote:If the Big Ten Conference was limited to adding just 2 more schools, which two would be at the top of the Big Ten Conference's wish list ?
In my opinion, the schools that the Big Ten Conference wants more than any other are Notre Dame and the University of Texas.
Anonymous wrote:This is an important development if true:
https://spartanswire.usatoday.com/2023/08/07/rumor-big-ten-will-most-likely-move-to-10-game-conference-schedule-following-recent-expansion/
An indication that the Big Ten Conference is going to add at least 2 more teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Cal is not, “loaded in endowment.” That’s the biggest weakness of the U-C schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some noise about Stanford & UCal-Berkeley having talks with the ACC and the Big 12. Probably true, but could be a ploy to motivate the Big Ten Conference to make an offer or both.
Stanford & Cal do not fit in with Big 12 culture and travelling to ACC opponents would be exhausting & expensive.
Wishful thinking on Cal and Stanford's part. They are not a cultural or academic fit with either conference.
The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.