May 19, 2010
Big Ten plans sure to be discussed at Big East talks
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MORGANTOWN - Cleaning out a crowded notebook and a cluttered mind as conference Armageddon simmers (still) on the back burner:

  • One of the places it will be talked about, of course, is at the Big East's annual meetings that begin this weekend in Ponte Vedra, Fla., just outside Jacksonville. A few years back, when word of the ACC's impending raid of the league filtered out, that quiet little seaside resort town was sullied by media types from all over the East Coast in anticipation of the hammer falling that week.
  • There won't be nearly the rush on Ponte Vedra this time around because, well, nothing is likely to happen given that the Big East - like the Big 12 and just about everyone else - is a spectator for the time being.

    Not that the issue of the Big Ten's eventual expansion and the Big East's reaction won't come up.

    "It's not on the formal agenda, but the athletic directors and [the Big East officers], we're always talking about membership issues,'' associate commissioner John Paquette said Wednesday. "Obviously it's in the forefront right now, but we're always talking about it and I'm sure it will be discussed.''

    Here's the way those Big East meetings work, at least from my one excursion there during that ACC flap in 2003. The ADs schedule a couple of meetings a day and play golf in between. The football coaches show up for a couple of days and do the same, as do the men's and women's basketball coaches.

    It's all fairly informal, but things can become contentious during those meetings depending upon the subject matter.

    But expansion talk is sure to creep into whatever subject matter is being discussed next week. For the most part this year it's routine - finances, tournament formats, NCAA legislation and the like. Wouldn't you love to be a fly on the wall, though, when somebody from Rutgers or Pitt or Syracuse or Notre Dame starts talking in the long term when everyone else in the room knows full well that their futures in the league could be short term?

  • It would probably not be wise to read too much into Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany's "sunbelt'' comments this week.
  • He talked about demographics and population shifts and looking 20 years into the future and sounded almost as if his league would prefer to skip over the Midwest and the Northeast when it gets around to inviting new members. But who in the Sunbelt - the region, not the conference - makes any sort of sense?

    No one is leaving the SEC for the Big Ten because it's pretty much a lateral move financially. If there were a few million extra bucks to be gained in the switch they would be eaten up in travel costs [not in the revenue sports necessarily, but in the myriad others], not to mention the hit taken by losing long-time natural rivalries. Picking anyone from the ACC makes absolutely no geographical sense and again drives up costs for everyone and destroys rivalries. And plucking a non-BCS school, well, what does that add to the Big Ten?

    No, if you're looking to the Sunbelt for expansion targets, probably the only schools that add significant value to the Big Ten would be in Texas and Oklahoma. But that would probably mean trying to lure Texas and Texas A&M and/or Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Neither is going anywhere without the other school in its state.

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    Big Ten plans sure to be discussed at Big East talks

    MORGANTOWN - Cleaning out a crowded notebook and a cluttered mind as conference Armageddon simmers (still) on the back burner:

  • One of the places it will be talked about, of course, is at the Big East's annual meetings that begin this weekend in Ponte Vedra, Fla., just outside Jacksonville. A few years back, when word of the ACC's impending raid of the league filtered out, that quiet little seaside resort town was sullied by media types from all over the East Coast in anticipation of the hammer falling that week.
  • There won't be nearly the rush on Ponte Vedra this time around because, well, nothing is likely to happen given that the Big East - like the Big 12 and just about everyone else - is a spectator for the time being.

    Not that the issue of the Big Ten's eventual expansion and the Big East's reaction won't come up.

    "It's not on the formal agenda, but the athletic directors and [the Big East officers], we're always talking about membership issues,'' associate commissioner John Paquette said Wednesday. "Obviously it's in the forefront right now, but we're always talking about it and I'm sure it will be discussed.''

    Here's the way those Big East meetings work, at least from my one excursion there during that ACC flap in 2003. The ADs schedule a couple of meetings a day and play golf in between. The football coaches show up for a couple of days and do the same, as do the men's and women's basketball coaches.

    It's all fairly informal, but things can become contentious during those meetings depending upon the subject matter.

    But expansion talk is sure to creep into whatever subject matter is being discussed next week. For the most part this year it's routine - finances, tournament formats, NCAA legislation and the like. Wouldn't you love to be a fly on the wall, though, when somebody from Rutgers or Pitt or Syracuse or Notre Dame starts talking in the long term when everyone else in the room knows full well that their futures in the league could be short term?

  • It would probably not be wise to read too much into Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany's "sunbelt'' comments this week.
  • He talked about demographics and population shifts and looking 20 years into the future and sounded almost as if his league would prefer to skip over the Midwest and the Northeast when it gets around to inviting new members. But who in the Sunbelt - the region, not the conference - makes any sort of sense?

    No one is leaving the SEC for the Big Ten because it's pretty much a lateral move financially. If there were a few million extra bucks to be gained in the switch they would be eaten up in travel costs [not in the revenue sports necessarily, but in the myriad others], not to mention the hit taken by losing long-time natural rivalries. Picking anyone from the ACC makes absolutely no geographical sense and again drives up costs for everyone and destroys rivalries. And plucking a non-BCS school, well, what does that add to the Big Ten?

    No, if you're looking to the Sunbelt for expansion targets, probably the only schools that add significant value to the Big Ten would be in Texas and Oklahoma. But that would probably mean trying to lure Texas and Texas A&M and/or Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Neither is going anywhere without the other school in its state.

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