Realignment Megathread (All The Moves)

HFCS

Well-Known Member
Aug 13, 2010
75,257
65,456
113
LA LA Land
Q: What did Californians use for light before candles?
A: Electricity.

It was actually pretty miraculous so far that LA hasn't had blackouts on a 10 day 100 degree heat wave. I mean you can compare it to states where people freeze to death or poison their water.

I can only speak directly to LA but I've read entire state has avoided. My dogs are gonna go nuts when it's cooler, cloudy and maybe even rainy on Saturday.

Those UCLA home game Rose Bowl pics aren't that different than when Pasadena is the normal sunny and 70 though.
 

tzjung

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Mar 2, 2007
2,258
1,478
113
45
Ankeny, IA
"Arizona is pacific time zone March-November."
I live in AZ and is never "Pacific" time. It is always Mountain Standard Time.
Who needs a lesson in time zones?

I can't believe I have to spell this out to you...I thought only Hawks were this dense. SURPRISE!! MST = PDT... They are the same EXACT time. The rest of the mountain TZ will NOT align with AZ until they 'fall back' from MDT to MST.

Arizona's clock time today matches the rest of the Pacific TZ right now in PDT. In November, the clock time in AZ will not change and then it will match the rest of the Mountain TZ which will be back in MST.

If you look at the rest of the country, thier clock times for each TZ is always 1 hr apart going East to West, and they remain that way because they all 'Spring ahead' and 'Fall back' together. This means that relative to the actual clock time in the rest of the US, AZ changes which TZ it aligns with.
 

CascadeClone

Well-Known Member
Oct 24, 2009
10,836
13,896
113
I can't believe I have to spell this out to you...I thought only Hawks were this dense. SURPRISE!! MST = PDT... They are the same EXACT time. The rest of the mountain TZ will NOT align with AZ until they 'fall back' from MDT to MST.

Arizona's clock time today matches the rest of the Pacific TZ right now in PDT. In November, the clock time in AZ will not change and then it will match the rest of the Mountain TZ which will be back in MST.

If you look at the rest of the country, thier clock times for each TZ is always 1 hr apart going East to West, and they remain that way because they all 'Spring ahead' and 'Fall back' together. This means that relative to the actual clock time in the rest of the US, AZ changes which TZ it aligns with.

I get it now.

The Big12 will have FIVE time zones! Suck it SEC!
 

IceCyIce

Well-Known Member
Aug 17, 2009
2,630
1,642
113
Grimes
I can't believe I have to spell this out to you...I thought only Hawks were this dense. SURPRISE!! MST = PDT... They are the same EXACT time. The rest of the mountain TZ will NOT align with AZ until they 'fall back' from MDT to MST.

Arizona's clock time today matches the rest of the Pacific TZ right now in PDT. In November, the clock time in AZ will not change and then it will match the rest of the Mountain TZ which will be back in MST.

If you look at the rest of the country, thier clock times for each TZ is always 1 hr apart going East to West, and they remain that way because they all 'Spring ahead' and 'Fall back' together. This means that relative to the actual clock time in the rest of the US, AZ changes which TZ it aligns with.
OMG all this AZ TZ BS including MST - PDT is giving me PTSD
 

qwerty

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Apr 3, 2020
7,633
11,536
113
60
Muscatine, IA
Pasadena is going to have more vacation big ten fans for every home game than UCLA fans. Their own fans might outnumber a few like Rutgers, Maryland or Purdue but not most. At least for a few years.
Why would B1G fans vacation to LA beaches when they can just go to THE Coralville Reservoir . . . . .:jimlad:
 
  • Haha
Reactions: cyfanatic and HFCS

BryceC

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Mar 23, 2006
26,442
19,590
113
I keep pointing out the real “checkmate” move in all of this was actually when they got Penn State to join up. Nebraska was a bad add but it didn’t matter. Rutgers/Maryland helped BTN at the time but are probably dead weight now and it doesn’t matter. USC is the first real homerun since PSU.

The first domino for SEC was a small one in Arkansas splitting up SWC but A&M/Texas combo is probably what that PSU add was for big ten. It’s checkmate.

I would argue that their adds since PSU, while helping the bottom line, have hurt the actual quality of the conference and that includes USC and UCLA.

They've added teams with no geographic ties, and no fans outside of NU who has basically been a disaster since firing Pelini. And I'm sorry this includes USC. USC is going to play one game their fans care about a year against UCLA for the foreseeable future. That isn't going to help their fan support I'm sorry. Rutgers, Maryland, UCLA, NU, are all drags on the quality of the football conference. The SEC might not keep pace quality wise, but other than Mizzou they have added teams that absolutely matter that have huge, passionate fanbases.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: jcyclonee and HFCS

aeroclone

Well-Known Member
Oct 30, 2006
10,356
7,168
113
I would argue that their adds since PSU, while helping the bottom line, have hurt the actual quality of the conference and that includes USC and UCLA.

They've added teams with no geographic ties, and no fans outside of NU who has basically been a disaster since firing Pelini. And I'm sorry this includes USC. USC is going to play one game their fans care about a year against UCLA for the foreseeable future. That isn't going to help their fan support I'm sorry. Rutgers, Maryland, UCLA, NU, are all drags on the quality of the football conference. The SEC might not keep pace quality wise, but other than Mizzou they have added teams that absolutely matter that have huge, passionate fanbases.

Agreed with all of this. I think the quality of the SEC additions are going to allow them to eventually pass up the B1G financially as well. Obviously they are already far beyond the B1G as far as the quality of the product on the field.
 

WhoISthis

Well-Known Member
Oct 6, 2010
5,620
3,569
113



I’m able to read this using reader view in my Twitter app FYI.


He’s correct on one thing- the PAC has little say in their future.

If the networks don’t want it around, it is gone. Imo that’s what’s happening, as networks can make more off PAC schools if they’re liquidated to other conferences. That’s likely to be decided concurrently on networks side, but if it helps these PAC surrogates to think they were honor killed by BIG, so be it
 

exCyDing

Well-Known Member
Nov 29, 2017
5,548
9,986
113
Agreed with all of this. I think the quality of the SEC additions are going to allow them to eventually pass up the B1G financially as well. Obviously they are already far beyond the B1G as far as the quality of the product on the field.
The SEC will pass the B10 probably in the next 5-10 years. A big part of that is the SEC really has 1 school that doesn't have a large, passionate fanbase: Vandy. The B10 has five that are about on that level (at least for football, the only thing that matters): IL, IN, Northwestern, MD and Rutgers. These five will drag down the rest of the conference.
 

isucy86

Well-Known Member
Apr 13, 2006
9,113
7,721
113
Dubuque
PSU to the Big 10 is still probably the most important single conference add by anyone in the past 50 years.
The USC/UCLA adds by the Big10 might top that because it makes the BIG10 the first coast-to-coast conference.

PSU was big because it expanded the Big10 beyond Midwest. Opened the door for the Maryland & Rutger adds

I don't recall much of PSU to Big10. Would be curious if ACC considered PSU at the time. I believe FSU went to ACC around then.
 

FriendlySpartan

Well-Known Member
Jul 26, 2021
9,492
9,973
113
38
I would argue that their adds since PSU, while helping the bottom line, have hurt the actual quality of the conference and that includes USC and UCLA.

They've added teams with no geographic ties, and no fans outside of NU who has basically been a disaster since firing Pelini. And I'm sorry this includes USC. USC is going to play one game their fans care about a year against UCLA for the foreseeable future. That isn't going to help their fan support I'm sorry. Rutgers, Maryland, UCLA, NU, are all drags on the quality of the football conference. The SEC might not keep pace quality wise, but other than Mizzou they have added teams that absolutely matter that have huge, passionate fanbases.
USC will get continued fan support if they keep winning. Honestly don’t care about UCLA but USC I expect to be a major player in the next couple years.
 
  • Like
Reactions: scyclonekid and Jer

MountainManHawk

Active Member
Sep 10, 2015
230
190
43
45
The USC/UCLA adds by the Big10 might top that because it makes the BIG10 the first coast-to-coast conference.

PSU was big because it expanded the Big10 beyond Midwest. Opened the door for the Maryland & Rutger adds

I don't recall much of PSU to Big10. Would be curious if ACC considered PSU at the time. I believe FSU went to ACC around then.
If you have an Athletic subscription, they have done lots of articles on this recently that goes into a lot of detail. The interesting thing is there were some concerns that Penn State wasn’t that happy in the BigTen and would maybe at some point leave to join the ACC. There have been several quotes from Delaney and others that a significant part of the rationale for adding Rutgers and Maryland was so that Penn State was no longer out an island and would no longer think of leaving. It’s weird to think about it knowing what we know now, but it wasn’t that long ago that all of the P5 conferences were close to equal in revenue. And then the TV money exploded and the conferences with good ratings became exponentially stronger. But that’s really been a recent change.

Here is one of the articles. There are several more related articles linked at the end.

“Usually, you expand to bring in a premier program athletically,” said Silverman, who ran BTN from its launch in 2007 through 2018. “Nebraska was more of a brand play than a population cable-homes play.
“Rutgers and Maryland, I think the three or four objectives there were to spread the Big Ten into a new area that would help with recruiting and help with being a dominant college conference in a very populous part of the country. It was to get BTN subscribers, and it was to shore up the Eastern flank because it had followed the ACC adding Pitt and Syracuse. There was a little concern of Penn State being out there on its own and giving Penn State some home partners in its general area.”
 
  • Dislike
Reactions: 2speedy1

AlaCyclone

Well-Known Member
Jun 14, 2007
5,552
6,747
113
PSU to the Big 10 is still probably the most important single conference add by anyone in the past 50 years.
Florida State to the ACC was a MAJOR grab too. It catapulted the ACC from sending their Conference Champion to the Citrus Bowl to an automatic qualifier in the early Bowl Coalition.
 
  • Like
Reactions: WhoISthis

AlaCyclone

Well-Known Member
Jun 14, 2007
5,552
6,747
113
That's not true. After living in LA for almost a year I saw someone wearing a UCLA shirt for the first time yesterday. There were dozens of people at their game last week, too many to have just gotten lost and randomly wound up at the Rose Bowl. At least a few had to have been there intentionally.
I can beat that! I've seen not one but two Cal Bear fans in Des Moines in the past two days. I gave them both a good "Go Bears!" One of them gave me a hearty "Go Bears!" right back at me, but the other just kind of grunted. So, using this empirical evidence, adding Cal to the Iowa State Big Xii footprint would be better than adding UCLA to the Iowa B1G footprint! Amiright?
 

isucy86

Well-Known Member
Apr 13, 2006
9,113
7,721
113
Dubuque
Florida State to the ACC was a MAJOR grab too. It catapulted the ACC from sending their Conference Champion to the Citrus Bowl to an automatic qualifier in the early Bowl Coalition.
I was just reading about FSU's jump to ACC and read an article from 1990? analyzing the FSU addition. It characterized FSU as historically a "basketball school". Bobby sure did change that.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AlaCyclone

AuH2O

Well-Known Member
Sep 7, 2013
12,954
20,858
113
USC is as blue-bloody as any of the blue-bloods when they're winning.
They are fine. But in 2019 they went 7-2 in the PAC and were behind ISU in attendance at about 58k. The last year before the Rams came back they went 8-5 and drew 69k.

It’s a Rams town again. They will be good with Riley, but the idea they will come close to the Carroll days in terms of excitement is wishful thinking. At the time those were considered one of the best college teams in decades, and there were no NFL teams in town.

Now they’ve got two NFL teams to compete with. The fact that they’ll draw if they win makes them like a bunch of other teams.
 

Gonzo

Well-Known Member
Mar 10, 2009
26,608
30,833
113
Behind you
They are fine. But in 2019 they went 7-2 in the PAC and were behind ISU in attendance at about 58k. The last year before the Rams came back they went 8-5 and drew 69k.

It’s a Rams town again. They will be good with Riley, but the idea they will come close to the Carroll days in terms of excitement is wishful thinking. At the time those were considered one of the best college teams in decades, and there were no NFL teams in town.

Now they’ve got two NFL teams to compete with. The fact that they’ll draw if they win makes them like a bunch of other teams.
Yeah I get that but I'm more talking national media and national perception vs. in-stadium attendance numbers. SC is one of the most historically rich programs in the country. If they're a top-5 program, they're going to be in the national spotlight and a focal point of conversation by national media, especially if they have annual matchups against ND, Michigan, tOSU, PSU, etc. I'd think that matters more than if they have 12k fewer fans in the stadium.
 

Help Support Us

Become a patron