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Yup, they’ll be lucky if they can hang on to ‘second tier’ money with the likes of Minnesota and Wisconsin.Can’t wait for Iowa fans to chime in to say they should be getting the same amounts as Washington, Oregon, USC, etc.
This is fantastic news. The best possible outcome for the ISUs of the world. It was already impossible for most of the SEC and Big 10 to compete for conference championships. Now they'll get less money AND have lesser brands? That's an insurmountable structural disadvantage. Welcome to small market baseball, you sell outs! hahahahaha
Possible uneven revenue sharing in the B1G. That's not a successful model. Gonna be lots of 2nd class schools.
Yeah whenever I see people talk about how much longer until the big ten trims the fat of northwestern and Purdue? Or will the SEC kick out Vanderbilt.It’s only a matter of time before OSU and Michigan and maybe a couple others in the Big 10 and SEC go to a hybrid conference affiliation/independent and make all that sweet money that ND made this last year.
Expansion is mostly done. Contraction is what is coming next.
Yeah, hat’s what I think happens too. Because you also don’t need to worry about having the votes to kick out a memberYeah whenever I see people talk about how much longer until the big ten trims the fat of northwestern and Purdue? Or will the SEC kick out Vanderbilt.
I think it is more likely that the top schools leave and form their own conference. No one wants to be the “bad guy” that kicks out a school. However, you can be the guy that leaves for greener pastures and spin it off letting the bottom feeders keep the name. Similar to the pac 12 in name only but no substance.
The B12 was a microcosm of college football over the past 20 years or so. The B10 and SEC have been ruthless in getting the biggest and best cut for themselves to the detriment of the sport. Similarly, Texas, A&M, Nebraska and Oklahoma were ruthless in getting the biggest and best cut for themselves at the detriment of the conference.I will die on the hill that the years leading up the SEC signing up with ESPN the Big 12 was the best conference in America. Texas and OU had won championships in the last 5-7 years. OSU and TT were on the rise. Nebraska was still respectable and only 5ish years removed from a championship game appearance.
Had that conference stayed together with no other realignment, I have zero doubt we would still be considered one of the best if not the best in the country.
Does anyone really think this wasn't the inevitable result? There's nothing special about the bottom half of the B10 (or SEC), they just got to ride the realignment coattails of a few programs for the past 15 years due to geographical luck and historical ties.
The Blue Bloods will inevitably come for their slice when they can't find any more outside their conference.
Unequal sharing is inevitable for the Big Ten and SEC and will eventually lead to them splitting up into the high rollers and the not-so high rollers and we'll end up with conferences of 10-12 teams again. That's my 20 year prediction.

That's really it. If Texas, Nebraska, Aggy, and Oklahoma had taken that same mentality there's no reason the Big 12 couldn't have the same power.
Yeah, it really just depends on the next deal that the Big 10 gets. Will enough more money get added to prevent teams from taking a pay cut to satisfy Ohio State's appetite? Even if it came to them making less, I don't see a scenario where the drop would be significant enough to drop them below the Big 12 or ACC, though. I assume Ohio State wouldn't go full Texas and blow things up that badly.But...this says nothing about some Big10 schools making less than schools in the Big12 or ACC right? This just implies schools like Ohio State would make more than some of the other conference schools. Would Iowa or Northwestern or Purdue leave because they aren't getting equal revenue? Doubt it...they would still likely be getting paid more than schools in other leagues (non-SEC).
Possible uneven revenue sharing in the B1G. That's not a successful model. Gonna be lots of 2nd class schools.
Why don't the other 34 teams in the B1G "just say no"? It's not like Michigan and tOSU can outvote them.
Cuz OSU and Mich can threaten to go to the SEC or make an agreement with the big boys in the SEC to get a super league... game theory then comes into play for a Purdue. Do you want a smaller slice of a large pie or risk a tiny pie/no pie at all?Why don't the other 34 teams in the B1G "just say no"? It's not like Michigan and tOSU can outvote them.