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DistrictCyclone
Guest
No offense, but a couple of questions:
1. Why would UK or Vandy want to leave the SEC, a stable and lucrative home, for the unsettled situation in the Big 12?
2. If UK is interested in in a league that values BB, why wouldn't they turn to the ACC first? Clearly, they want to keep expanding too. And no matter how good the B12 is in BB, it will NEVER match the fan intensity of the ACC. With the exception of KU, nobody in the B12 values BB WAAAY above football.
3. What exactly IS the "profile" of an SEC team? How does it compare to the "profile" of a B12 team? Seems like there are lots of variations between both conferences.
4. How many schools can the B12 offer an invite to before it just starts to look desperate (reinforcing the whole "unstable" message)? "Never hurts to ask" doesn't really hold true when you're talking about expanding a conference.
Trust me...as a fan of a team that has done a lot of "courting" lately. :smile:
1. For the reasons I laid out in my original post. Read it.
2. If the ACC extends an invite, I'm sure they'd consider it. How's that germane to this conversation? Being a basketball school and a football school are not mutually exclusive; you don't have to value football more than basketball to have a good basketball program (in fact, with football being the cash cow for most athletic departments, the way to be a good basketball school is to be a good football school. Like Mark Emmert says: if you like basketball (or volleyball or women's golf or water polo), buy football tickets). But I don't think anyone in their right mind would say that the SEC edges out the Big 12 (or anyone) in terms of overall basketball quality. C-USA might even be better.
3. The typical SEC school is a large public university in the deep south with a rabid football fanbase that doesn't much care for basketball. The similarities end at being a large public university with Kentucky. I don't think the Big 12 has as much homogeneity as the SEC, which might be more welcoming to a school like Kentucky that (a lot like MU) has a split-personality, having both southern and northern traits. The Big 10 might even be the best fit for them, but they're standing pat. And if Louisville/Cincy/WVU came along for the ride, Kentucky would surely feel right at home.
4. The Big 12 hardly looks desperate, especially compared to the whacko contingency plans being assebmled by the Big East. We held pat after dropping down to 10, and every move since then has been to maintain that number. We're not expanding for expansion's sake, and we're not casting a large net with the schools we're considering. The only "reputation" issues we seem to have are with Missery, and they apprear to be using them more as a convenient excuse to get out of dodge than as real gripes. And even if "looking desperate" is the downside, I think that's a pretty good risk to reward ratio.