October 8, 2012
From turmoil to terrific
Big 12 lands on its feet and then some after key defections
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Heisman Trophy front-runner Geno Smith and West Virginia have injected a shot of excitement into the Big 12.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- In the span of a year, the Big 12 has gone from turmoil to terrific on television once again.

A conference whose football future was uncertain with the defections of Nebraska, Colorado, Texas A&M and Missouri over the past two years has landed squarely on its feet.

The Big 12 has two teams in the top 10 and is the only conference to have eight schools with one or fewer losses. (The Southeastern Conference has seven).

No. 5 West Virginia and No. 6 Kansas State are the early front-runners in the Big 12 standings, with No. 13 Oklahoma and No. 15 Texas trying to keep pace while settling the Red River rivalry Saturday in Dallas.

"I think the league is stronger now than it has been in a long time,'' Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy said Monday.

It might have been hard to imagine this a year ago, considering the Big 12 could've gone bust.

"We've gone from possibly not having a league, to having an unstable league, to having a league that wasn't getting along, to having as stable a league as anyone with great football teams in it, great sports programs across the country,'' Texas coach Mack Brown said. "We're right at the top of conferences right now. This league has got more parity at the top than ever before.''

In September 2011, Texas A&M's announcement that it was leaving the Big 12 to seek SEC membership sparked a new round of positioning. Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech were considering a potential move to the Pac-12 until that league announced it would not expand.

Shortly after that, embattled Big 12 commissioner Dan Beebe was dumped and the nine remaining member schools committed to healing.

"Nobody knew what was going to happen,'' Texas Tech coach Tommy Tuberville said. "You kept hearing Pac-12, everybody being independent, form our own league. The uncertainty was just unbelievable. And just the last year has enabled us to be solidified as a conference.''

A year ago Wednesday, TCU pulled an about-face and decided to make the Big 12 - not the Big East - its new home. The Big 12 then mulled over whether West Virginia or Louisville was the proper candidate for expansion before settling on the Mountaineers. In early November, Missouri made it clear it was moving to the SEC.

In May, Bob Bowlsby was named Big 12 commissioner. And last month, the conference announced a new 13-year deal with ESPN and Fox Sports.

"I feel better now than I've ever felt about this conference,'' Tuberville said.

When things got settled after two restless summers, the redrawn Big 12 was essentially the same - high-scoring offenses, questionable defenses and Heisman hype. Four Big 12 offenses are among the top seven passing teams in the FBS. Five are in the top nine in third-down efficiency.

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