GampelCrazies wrote:If UConn does get invited (which I think will happen) I would have to think it opens the door for other Big East members to join somewhere down the road
Yormark has enjoyed a successful career, and he strikes me as being both creative and aggressive, which bodes well for the Big 12 in the current climate of big time college sports. He's clearly put a lot up on the wall for consideration since becoming the conference commissioner, including UCONN and Gonzaga as possible expansion candidates. However, his most recent comments make it very clear that the Big 12 is in a holding pattern with respect to further expansion at this point.
I think most of us believe that the next pivot point in all this involves actions/reactions coming out of the PAC 12. What will transpire with their media agreement? Is it true that Colorado might break a way regardless? What is the overall disposition of the so called "4 Corner" schools? Even all of that is a kind of "two trigger" proposition. One the one hand, those schools have to become so completely put off by the developments within the PAC 12 that they would be willing to leave. On the other hand, the media rights math would still have to work in order for them to be brought into the Big 12 - their inclusion would have to warrant a $31.6mm per school media rights distribution over the new 6-year term of the agreement. Otherwise, it won't work; the existing Big 12 members aren't going to accept dilution.
The issue of dilution with respect to media rights distributions is where UCONN comes in. You guys can't deliver full membership entry into that conference while allowing them to maintain that $31.6mm per school payout. If you get invited, it will be on the basis of some form of double secret probation deal. It may be basketball only plus your other sports except for football (no getting around that) for perhaps a little more money and a promise to consider bringing you in as a full member, subject to UCONN meeting certain performance thresholds in football.
All of this is rather fascinating to watch unfold. Most college football fans on the outside looking in at the UCONN situation, if they're looking at that at all, shake their heads at the idea of UCONN believing it can be relevant in the sport, especially in today's environment. Hard core UCONN fans appear to be blinded by the idea that UCONN is not too far off and that it can become relevant again, because it managed to get there briefly before. That occurred in a very different environment than what exists now.
I get that UCONN finds the money and the all sports nature of the Big 12 attractive. It just seems as though it has now become
a bridge too far UCONN. $30mm off the top to leave the Big East. An entry fee to get into the Big 12. Possibly a stepped up basis for the distributions it would receive for a period of time. All that happening within a 6-year media deal framework. And as part of a conference that will most likely be #3 in the pecking order, but only because the PAC 12 will become the walking dead and the ACC will remain the walking wounded due to its GOR structure. Very importantly, as has been mentioned by a number of AD's over the last few years, modern big time college football has become an arms race. More money may come into the coffers, but the spending will increase in an effort to maintain some level of parity.
Beyond all that, notwithstanding the strength of the Big 12 in college hoops, UCONN will have walked away from the MSG/BET and its natural northeastern playpen, which could very well damage its recruiting pipeline.
Nothing new here. Just another hot summer day, waiting for the next big thing to break in what has become an industry. So much for ivy covered walls, etc.