ArmyVet wrote:Jet915 wrote:ACC just adds Stanford, Cal and SMU......this is just getting ridiculous. Definitely a P2 going forward.
I agreed with almost everything that UNC Chancellor said in his public statement about why this did not make any sense for the AAC. And then someone switched their vote and now the Atlantic Coast Conference includes teams on the Pacific Coast.
adoraz wrote:I agree that the Big East should add Gonzaga, but I also think this round of realignment has went really well for us. Not only did we keep all teams, but the ACC and Big 12 would now be far less attractive to MSG given their western expansion. Schools such as SMU, Cal, Stanford, Utah, Colorado, and Arizona St would all draw terribly at MSG. Arizona is the only one that might do fine just based on their brand.
Even if a poached ACC one day adds UConn, they'd also add schools like USF and a bunch of football schools in middle America. As long as the Big East retains all of our members (outside of UConn), then there shouldn't be a risk that we'd lose MSG for the BET.
Violet Ram wrote:I'm always a bit surprised that Gonzaga is considered a "no-brainer" for BE expansion. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but Gonzaga has 2 tournament appearances without Mark Few at the helm. What Mark Few has built is amazing, but what happens when he leaves Gonzaga (he's in his 60's and entering his 25th season with the Zags). Perhaps he's built Gonzaga into a program that can sustain success even after his departure, but I have my doubts.
Is it worth renting the last few years of Few to add a program that is on the other side of the Country that's in a small market and has limited success outside of one coach?
Violet Ram wrote:I'm always a bit surprised that Gonzaga is considered a "no-brainer" for BE expansion. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but Gonzaga has 2 tournament appearances without Mark Few at the helm. What Mark Few has built is amazing, but what happens when he leaves Gonzaga (he's in his 60's and entering his 25th season with the Zags). Perhaps he's built Gonzaga into a program that can sustain success even after his departure, but I have my doubts.
Is it worth renting the last few years of Few to add a program that is on the other side of the Country that's in a small market and has limited success outside of one coach?
The essence of Washington State and Oregon State's concerns, if the league's 12 schools formally meet, is that the current members could vote to dissolve or evenly distribute the remaining assets. Washington State and Oregon State consider themselves the only board members and are seeking to survey their options moving forward. They pointed to the conference's bylaws, which state that any notice of withdrawal from the league means a school "automatically cease(s) to be a member of the Pac-12 Board of Directors and shall cease to have the right to vote on any matter."
The meeting was scheduled, according to the legal filings, after Washington State president Kirk Schulz, the chair of the Pac-12 board of directors, declined to call a board meeting after a telephone conversation with Kliavkoff on or around Aug. 29. Schulz feared that Kliavkoff "would allow the withdrawing universities' former Board representatives to vote on a number of matters, even though they no longer have the right to vote on any matter," according to the legal documents.
admin wrote:Things are about to get wild regarding who actually has power in the PAC12. Ten departing schools want to dissolve the league and their assets, but WSU and OSU believe they alone have rights to the future voting power of the league now.The essence of Washington State and Oregon State's concerns, if the league's 12 schools formally meet, is that the current members could vote to dissolve or evenly distribute the remaining assets. Washington State and Oregon State consider themselves the only board members and are seeking to survey their options moving forward. They pointed to the conference's bylaws, which state that any notice of withdrawal from the league means a school "automatically cease(s) to be a member of the Pac-12 Board of Directors and shall cease to have the right to vote on any matter."
The meeting was scheduled, according to the legal filings, after Washington State president Kirk Schulz, the chair of the Pac-12 board of directors, declined to call a board meeting after a telephone conversation with Kliavkoff on or around Aug. 29. Schulz feared that Kliavkoff "would allow the withdrawing universities' former Board representatives to vote on a number of matters, even though they no longer have the right to vote on any matter," according to the legal documents.
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/sto ... int-pac-12
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