Its been a while since I posted, but there are a couple things to consider when discussing trading Pitt, Ville, and Cuse for Maryland, Uconn, Rutgers. Conference realignment was not done at the same instant, so we really should consider the timeline of events when considering how the dominos fell. Rutgers was likely not an option for the ACC. The ACC would probably like to have both Rutgers and Maryland, but the B1G had more to offer them and they took it. Rutgers and Maryland were likely in talks for years with the B1G, and likely had principle agreements in place before the ACC could have made the move for Rutgers.
Also, I see a lot of posts saying Pitt belongs in the B12. Although not an atlantic coastal school, no one in Pittsburgh would consider Pitt to be a midwestern/plains school, especially not a B12 southern midwestern/plains school. The only selling point to Pitt fans for Pitt in the B1G, was to be in a conference with Penn State. Aside from that, the B1G was nothing Pitt fans were interested in. Pittsburgh is located in the eastern time zone and pro sports teams from Pittsburgh compete mostly with other eastern foes. I understand the culture in Pittsburgh is not that of NYC, Boston, DC, Philly, Atlanta, and Miami. But aside from BC, GT, and Miami, how many ACC schools have that big city culture. Pitt was better aligned with the Big East than the ACC, but with the Big East now imploded, I see the ACC as a better landing spot than the B12.
As for Uconn to the B1G or ACC, I am actually suprised that nothing has been anounced yet. Both the B1G and ACC have said that 16 is better than 14, but neither have made a move to expand. The B1G has more options for expansion if you include existing P5 conference teams than the ACC, but if we assume no one will leave a P5 conference for another, then the remaining candidates are Uconn, Cincy, BYU, UCF, USF, maybe Houston, maybe Tulane. Spare me the Boise St, Fresno St, Buffalo, Memphis, Temple argument, becuase they are not on the same level as the first group. I just don't see the other teams as being on the same level as Uconn and if the end game is 16 teams, then why risk losing Uconn to the other conference. The only explaination is that the B1G can not find another quality school to partner with Uconn, or that the ACC is waiting on ND.
Also, I see a lot of posts saying Pitt belongs in the B12. Although not an atlantic coastal school, no one in Pittsburgh would consider Pitt to be a midwestern/plains school, especially not a B12 southern midwestern/plains school. The only selling point to Pitt fans for Pitt in the B1G, was to be in a conference with Penn State. Aside from that, the B1G was nothing Pitt fans were interested in. Pittsburgh is located in the eastern time zone and pro sports teams from Pittsburgh compete mostly with other eastern foes. I understand the culture in Pittsburgh is not that of NYC, Boston, DC, Philly, Atlanta, and Miami. But aside from BC, GT, and Miami, how many ACC schools have that big city culture. Pitt was better aligned with the Big East than the ACC, but with the Big East now imploded, I see the ACC as a better landing spot than the B12.
As for Uconn to the B1G or ACC, I am actually suprised that nothing has been anounced yet. Both the B1G and ACC have said that 16 is better than 14, but neither have made a move to expand. The B1G has more options for expansion if you include existing P5 conference teams than the ACC, but if we assume no one will leave a P5 conference for another, then the remaining candidates are Uconn, Cincy, BYU, UCF, USF, maybe Houston, maybe Tulane. Spare me the Boise St, Fresno St, Buffalo, Memphis, Temple argument, becuase they are not on the same level as the first group. I just don't see the other teams as being on the same level as Uconn and if the end game is 16 teams, then why risk losing Uconn to the other conference. The only explaination is that the B1G can not find another quality school to partner with Uconn, or that the ACC is waiting on ND.
