Would you all friggin stop it. On this and twenty similar threads, where everything is argued as if if it's not black it's necessarily totally white.
The State of Connecticut and ESPN are not going to war. Both of them have way, way too much to lose than whether UConn is or isn't in the right athetic conference. But the fact that they're not going to war doesn't mean that the Governor or Attorney General (George Jepson, not Dick Blumenthal) need to sit down with ESPN and have a talk about how not to damage the ongoing relationship between the two partners. Despite Waylon's moral and absolute clarity on things he can't know for sure, we don't know how close to what Flipper said the other day ESPN did ESPN actually did.. I tend to think ESPN isn't that stupid, but, unlike Waylon, I'd be the first to admit I don't know for sure. But the fact that Flipper said ESPN did this puts ESPN in a position whereby they need to do right by their partner. If Mizzou is not moving, and the SEC has an odd number, if it goes for an ACC team I expect ESPN to speak more clearly to the ACC about what ESPN needs to happen if the ACC wants to be a good partner to ESPN.
And a note to Flipper -- if you retracted your statement because the ACC ordered you to, fine. But if you did it because your lawyers told you to, you need better lawyers. Statements against interest are belived by judges and juries much, much, much more than their retractions. Very few people imply they've broken antitrust laws and aided and abedded others in violating contractual duties of good faith and fair dealing. When they do, those statements tend to be given a lot of worth. Retractions that translate into your best impression of an Emily Letalla "never mind" -- not so much.