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What if we could put together a Big12North regional network with KU, KSU, and MU which would combined give us $3-$5 million per year? Would that be enough to satisfy everyone? I know I could live with that.
In order to hammer the point home that schools can't just pick up and leave the Big 12, Dodds said there might need to be bigger exit penalties for the Big 12 conference. But more importantly Dodds said an iron-clad contract needs to be written and agreed to by the remaining members.
"This handshake stuff probably won't work," Dodds said. "Probably need to get the lawyers involved in that one."
Ya think you can take college administrators at their word? No way. I don't know why we trusted everybody at their word after last summer.
I liked this article..
Stop superconferences, start a football playoff - College Football - Rivals.com
If you have a money problem, stop destroying conferences, tradition, and rivalries, and start going to a playoff. There's a quote somewhere in there about a playoff bringing in about a billion dollars a year. Even if you divided that among 100 schools, that's another 10 million a year for every school.
How about the Kansas City Chiefs?So who would SEC get for #14??? If you assume everybody from the Big 12 and ACC stands pat, their only option is West Virginia, and it sounds like they're not too excited about taking them.
A 13 team league is going to be a NIGHTMARE.
-Either one league with no divisions or unbalanced divisions
-Different number of league games for different schools
-Trying to figure out financial compensation for teams who end up losing home games because of different number of league games between different teams
Is there a slight chance A&M comes back to the Big 12 after all the reforms like T. Boone is hoping, does the SEC stay at 13 for a while with all the awkwardness tension that creates, or do they take West Virginia (delivering yet another blow the Big East)?
- the University of Texas will in good faith conduct discussions with the Big Ten conference and no other conference related to its post-2012 conference affiliation
- the Big Ten will not invite any other institution to join the conference without the prior approval of Texas
- before joining the Big Ten, Texas will have assurances that it can schedule four non-Big Ten conference football games per season
- the requirement that any final arrangement be designed to increased revenues among all Big Ten conference schools, with no discrepancies in distributions unrelated to television network distributions among conference institutions
- Texas will become a full CIC member
- Texas and the Big Ten will jointly approve any third party media arrangements related to Texas athletics moving forward
- the goal that Texas participates as a full member of the conference beginning in the fall of 2014
Texas' intentions with regard to the Big Ten will remain without official announcements until a specific group of universities, including the current Texas' Big XII schools, solidify their own conference affiliation status. Neither the Big Ten nor Texas wishes to be seen as the primary driving force in conference realignment.
The decision of Syracuse and Pittsburg to join the ACC came unexpectedly to the Big Ten. Certain leaders of the conference remained uncertain that a similar unexpected action could take place on the heels of the meeting of the Texas Board of Regents, particularly given the lack of uniform communications between Texas stakeholders and the conference. These individuals no longer have such uncertainties.
This post was edited on 9/22 3:09 AM by PURPLE Book Cat
Ya while I think there have been some conversations between Texas and the Big 10, I call this whole thing BS as this would almost be a binding contract. Their efforts to keep the Big 12 together suggest they rule the Big 12 and are going nowhere.The problem is, this whole thing isn't about money - it's about power. The BCS leagues refuse to let the mid majors get a spot at the big boy table - going to a playoff allows them a spot - keeping the BCS keeps them out. That is why the BCS won't die.
Back to the expansion topic, PBC over at the NW board posted this today:
Tonight, the University of Texas president Bill Powers co-authored a letter of intent with the Big Ten conference.
The key terms include:
- the University of Texas will in good faith conduct discussions with the Big Ten conference and no other conference related to its post-2012 conference affiliation
- the Big Ten will not invite any other institution to join the conference without the prior approval of Texas
- before joining the Big Ten, Texas will have assurances that it can schedule four non-Big Ten conference football games per season
- the requirement that any final arrangement be designed to increased revenues among all Big Ten conference schools, with no discrepancies in distributions unrelated to television network distributions among conference institutions
- Texas will become a full CIC member
- Texas and the Big Ten will jointly approve any third party media arrangements related to Texas athletics moving forward
- the goal that Texas participates as a full member of the conference beginning in the fall of 2014
Texas' intentions with regard to the Big Ten will remain without official announcements until a specific group of universities, including the current Texas' Big XII schools, solidify their own conference affiliation status. Neither the Big Ten nor Texas wishes to be seen as the primary driving force in conference realignment.
The decision of Syracuse and Pittsburg to join the ACC came unexpectedly to the Big Ten. Certain leaders of the conference remained uncertain that a similar unexpected action could take place on the heels of the meeting of the Texas Board of Regents, particularly given the lack of uniform communications between Texas stakeholders and the conference. These individuals no longer have such uncertainties.
This post was edited on 9/22 3:09 AM by PURPLE Book Cat
WildcatReport.com - Message Boards
This guy, while outlandish at times, has hit on some things that no one could hit on unless they had insider info. He was the first to break the UNL to the Big Ten story (while everyone else was still reporting Mizzou) & he leaked some info about ESPN last year that made ESPiN's lawyers contact rivals about removing the content from the message board.
Honestly, I hope he is dead wrong about this....I don't want Texas in the Big 10. Not now. Not ever. They are a cancer and would be sure to rip apart a tradition rich conference that already makes enough money to keep everyone happy.
The problem is, this whole thing isn't about money - it's about power. The BCS leagues refuse to let the mid majors get a spot at the big boy table - going to a playoff allows them a spot - keeping the BCS keeps them out. That is why the BCS won't die.
Back to the expansion topic, PBC over at the NW board posted this today:
Tonight, the University of Texas president Bill Powers co-authored a letter of intent with the Big Ten conference.
The key terms include:
- the University of Texas will in good faith conduct discussions with the Big Ten conference and no other conference related to its post-2012 conference affiliation
- the Big Ten will not invite any other institution to join the conference without the prior approval of Texas
- before joining the Big Ten, Texas will have assurances that it can schedule four non-Big Ten conference football games per season
- the requirement that any final arrangement be designed to increased revenues among all Big Ten conference schools, with no discrepancies in distributions unrelated to television network distributions among conference institutions
- Texas will become a full CIC member
- Texas and the Big Ten will jointly approve any third party media arrangements related to Texas athletics moving forward
- the goal that Texas participates as a full member of the conference beginning in the fall of 2014
Texas' intentions with regard to the Big Ten will remain without official announcements until a specific group of universities, including the current Texas' Big XII schools, solidify their own conference affiliation status. Neither the Big Ten nor Texas wishes to be seen as the primary driving force in conference realignment.
The decision of Syracuse and Pittsburg to join the ACC came unexpectedly to the Big Ten. Certain leaders of the conference remained uncertain that a similar unexpected action could take place on the heels of the meeting of the Texas Board of Regents, particularly given the lack of uniform communications between Texas stakeholders and the conference. These individuals no longer have such uncertainties.
This post was edited on 9/22 3:09 AM by PURPLE Book Cat
WildcatReport.com - Message Boards
This guy, while outlandish at times, has hit on some things that no one could hit on unless they had insider info. He was the first to break the UNL to the Big Ten story (while everyone else was still reporting Mizzou) & he leaked some info about ESPN last year that made ESPiN's lawyers contact rivals about removing the content from the message board.
Honestly, I hope he is dead wrong about this....I don't want Texas in the Big 10. Not now. Not ever. They are a cancer and would be sure to rip apart a tradition rich conference that already makes enough money to keep everyone happy.
Wouldn't this entire contract, if it actually existed, be the exact definition of tortious interference? I can't see anyway in Hell any conference, especially the Big Ten, would agree to anything like this IN PRINT.
I'm calling bigtime BS on this.
Ya this would be "insider" information, no way the Big 10 would let this leak, that would destroy the Big 10, so hopefully its true :twitcy:Worth visiting the link and reading all the comments, and you will find many consistent with your conclusion.
Also probably don't want to wait long as it says Rivals has deleted his posts in the past.
True, or as you also say false "insider" information, intended for public consumption.Ya this would be "insider" information, no way the Big 10 would let this leak, that would destroy the Big 10, so hopefully its true :twitcy:
True.
That, or false "insider" information, intended for public consumption.
Either way hard to believe they would want it out there.