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Didnt doubt Mizzou losing money only RU not getting there's!

Rutgers is making out because it's leaving the BE. But it's not getting a full share from the B1G.

I can't understand how any of this is confusing for anyone at all since my original post said that IF Missouri gets a Rutgers type deal, it would lose a huge amount of money.

Pretty simple stuff. Sheesh.
 
Perception!!Not that they need it or care! Now please I asked for time for digestion!!

The only thing where conference affiliation MIGHT help is in attracting undergraduates... but then again so does having a climbing wall in your gym.
 
I don't know if Jurich out worked Manuel or not. I do know that Jurich called everyone he knew in the ACC that week. Cincinnati was apparently trying hard too. If Manuel is interested in the ACC, he might want to spend some time courting our southern schools like FSU, Clemson, and GT a bit by trying to schedule football games. I know UVA and UConn have a home and home coming up in a few years, and we've played before. But I don't know how much history UConn has with the southern ACC schools. Just a thought.

I too have concerns about Louisville academically as I would West Virginia if it were them, but I view them as in about the same place as FSU was when FSU joined. FSU has made improvement since they joined.

I don't have any idea whether the Big Ten is looking at UConn. I do know that they typically require AAU status.

Is it possible that Manuel's actions in regard to getting invited to the ACC last year were percieved as inactions because the ACC's not his focus (as directed by Susn Herbst)? Is it possible that, after numerous snubs by the ACC, UConn's goal became the Big Ten and viewed an ACC invite as a consolation prize even before the last go-around? Is it possible that plans for AAU admission was put into place immediately upon Herbst's arrival and the efforts of that labor have just recently began baring fruit?

Related: Did anyone see the Outside The Lines on Sunday? UConn is intimately involved in researching the effects of Heat stroke on athletes. UConn was front and center in the ESPN report, one that that is brought up each and every August as high schools and colleges begin summer two-a-days.
 
Conference affiliation has nothing to do with academic rep. Absolutely no one holds the SEC against Vanderbilt. This is why BC's claims about the ACC's academic prowess are absolutely ludicrous. The only difference that academics makes is that schools with lower standards will have an advantage on the playing fields, but as for reputation, it doesn't make a bit of difference what conference you're in.

So now you are saying the conference affiliation has nothing to do with academic reputation. Then how do you explain the AAU requirement for the B1G? Or WVU not being considered for the ACC for academic reasons? Or the stance of Cal not wanting to be in a conference with Cal St? Or the ivy league? Or the perception of weak academics and low standards of the SEC (Vandy being the exception)?

You work in academics, so I know that you understand that academics and conference affiliation are related. Perception is important and conference affiliation impacts perception. Another example of conference affiliation impacting academics is the schools in the B1G share academic resources and belong to the CIC. This conference affiliation most definitely has an impact on the academic reputation of the schools.
 
So now you are saying the conference affiliation has nothing to do with academic reputation. Then how do you explain the AAU requirement for the B1G? Or WVU not being considered for the ACC for academic reasons? Or the stance of Cal not wanting to be in a conference with Cal St? Or the ivy league? Or the perception of weak academics and low standards of the SEC (Vandy being the exception)?

You work in academics, so I know that you understand that academics and conference affiliation are related. Perception is important and conference affiliation impacts perception. Example: Schools in the B1G share academic resources and belong to the CIC. This conference affiliation most definitely has an impact on the academic reputation of the schools.

Schools don't want to compete on the playing field with other schools that admit anyone. Even Nick Saban complained about that when he was at LSU!!!
 
Rutgers is making out because it's leaving the BE. But it's not getting a full share from the B1G.

I can't understand how any of this is confusing for anyone at all since my original post said that IF Missouri gets a Rutgers type deal, it would lose a huge amount of money.

Pretty simple stuff. Sheesh.
Your right ..why would UPitt go thru all that deception to confuse the simple issue?Im not liking the answer Im getting..sorry upstater!
 
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UConn has had home and homes against Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, UNC, NC State, Duke, Virginia, Maryland. It has played AT Miami and Virginia Tech in one offs. The only schools it has not played are Clemson and Florida State. The fact is, we don't know anything about what happened behind the scenes. We do know three things that were reported in the media:

1. FSU's Chairman of the Board was furious that UNC and Tobacco Road allowed tier 3 basketball rights to stay with the schools while selling off tier 3 football rights to Raycom (an assumption that was probably erroneous), and he blasted Tobacco Road publicly for it.

2. BC's new AD blocked UConn in committee and again UNC and Duke's Presidents were incredulous.

3. FSU threatened to leave and quickly showed the ACC whose boss as the majority of the conference followed FSU's lead.

4. The UNC President made that weird statement in the media that the addition of Louisville had absolutely nothing to do with academics.

When you add it all up, FSU was angry at Tobacco Road before Maryland announced plans to leave, and the Louisville candidacy was the perfect leverage to show Tobacco Road who is boss. It helped that BC and Miami don't want UConn.

Last I read, FSU is still a tad upset that the Raycom deal prevents the ACC from developing a more lucrative network.

FSU's chairman Andy Haggard was reacting to erroneous information. He has since been straightened out, and he's in good shape. FSU's on board. One of their gripes is the division makeup. They want a North South split. They are at the southern end of the geography, and they complain that while they are not able to play Georgia Tech that often (closest school to them in Atlanta), they have to fly up to Boston and now Syracuse all the time. They don't like this. But the ACC likes the balance of the current Divisions. If we could ever get to 16, we could fix this. I don't like the 14 team setup either.

They see UConn as another northern school a long way from them that they have no history with and their fans can't easily travel to games there. That's what they already think of Boston College. FSU fans would rather have someone like USF that they are able to drive to or SEC schools. I don't know if the school wants that, but the fans do. This is part of the reason I don't get BC's attitude toward UConn because the two are close by each other and fans can drive to the games. You've explained it, but I think it's petty.
 
FSU's chairman Andy Haggard was reacting to erroneous information. He has since been straightened out, and he's in good shape. FSU's on board. One of their gripes is the division makeup. They want a North South split. They are at the southern end of the geography, and they complain that while they are not able to play Georgia Tech that often (closest school to them in Atlanta), they have to fly up to Boston and now Syracuse all the time. They don't like this. But the ACC likes the balance of the current Divisions. If we could ever get to 16, we could fix this. I don't like the 14 team setup either.

They see UConn as another northern school a long way from them that they have no history with and their fans can't easily travel to games there. That's what they already think of Boston College. FSU fans would rather have someone like USF that they are able to drive to or SEC schools. I don't know if the school wants that, but the fans do. This is part of the reason I don't get BC's attitude toward UConn because the two are close by each other and fans can drive to the games. You've explained it, but I think it's petty.
If UConn ever joined the ACC, I could envision divisions comprised of the old Big East vs. the old ACC.
 
Your right ..why would UPitt go thru all that deception to confuse the simple issue?Im not liking the answer Im getting..sorry upstater!


I agreed with upstarter that it would cost Mizzou money to leave the SEC, but I question if it would cost $130 million. Do you think it would cost Mizzou $130 million to leave the SEC and join the B1G? I explained a few scenarios, and cited precedent where they have been done recently by other conferences, that would cost far less for Mizzou to join the B1G. If the B1G is going to be serious about trying to poach a team from the SEC, the B1G would need to work with the SEC team to cut down on the cost. One really good way is to shorten the entrance time frame, as this would cost the B1G very little and save the SEC team $30-$60 million. Also, the B1G could offer a better share of the conference payouts, if the team is desired enough and would boost the conference earnings.
 
I agreed with upstarter that it would cost Mizzou money to leave the SEC, but I question if it would cost $130 million. Do you think it would cost Mizzou $130 million to leave the SEC and join the B1G? I explained a few scenarios, and cited precedent where they have been done recently by other conferences, that would cost far less for Mizzou to join the B1G. If the B1G is going to be serious about trying to poach a team from the SEC, the B1G would need to work with the SEC team to cut down on the cost. One really good way is to shorten the entrance time frame, as this would cost the B1G very little and save the SEC team $30-$60 million. Also, the B1G could offer a better share of the conference payouts, if the team is desired enough and would boost the conference earnings.

I wrote that IF Mizzou got the Rutgers deal, it would cost them $130 million.
 
I wrote that IF Mizzou got the Rutgers deal, it would cost them $130 million.

And I explained what IF they got a better deal, as many of the realignment teams did. Rutgers got a great deal considering the state of the Big East and gained access to the richest conference for future earnings. In the end, Rutgers may benefit the most due to B1G affiliation but Rutgers was forced to wait over two years and will not receive full benefits upon entrance for another 5 years. WVU had a larger exit fee, but did not have to wait and will likely gain back the exit fee costs through faster earnings in the Big 12. Pitt, Cuse, and Ville will be receiving full benefits the first year. If precedent has been set by other conferences to shorten the enterence time and pay full (or closer to full) benefits the first year, then why is it so crazy to assume the B1G would not do this for an SEC team?
 
And I explained what IF they got a better deal, as many of the realignment teams did. Rutgers got a great deal considering the state of the Big East and gained access to the richest conference for future earnings. In the end, Rutgers may benefit the most due to B1G affiliation but Rutgers was forced to wait over two years and will not receive full benefits upon entrance for another 5 years. WVU had a larger exit fee, but did not have to wait and will likely gain back the exit fee costs through faster earnings in the Big 12. Pitt, Cuse, and Ville will be receiving full benefits the first year. If precedent has been set by other conferences to shorten the enterence time and pay full (or closer to full) benefits the first year, then why is it so crazy to assume the B1G would not do this for an SEC team?

The $130 million figure comes from Missouri getting a Rutgers deal. The Rutgers deal was actually better than the Nebraska and Penn State deal (PSU and Nebraska had to "buy-in," actually pay the B1G and then wait to be vested). This is how the B1G has done things. In the future, if they do things differently, they may have to explain to the last 4 adds why they were treated differently than Missouri. Be that as it may, Missouri's deal in any case would set them back a huge amount of money--anyway you cut it.

By the way, Pitt and Cuse had to buy-into the ACC as well.
 
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So true; but, some guy named John Pemberton in the late 1800’s created a concoction that was supposed to cure disease, headaches, and even impotence out of drug stores and push carts in Atlanta. Roughly, 130 years later, Coca-Cola is a Fortune 100 company with 146,000 employees globally and revenues of $48 billion. Sometimes, smoke and mirrors work. As it did for Louisville this time.
Well cocaine as the principal active ingredient might have helped just a bit as well.
 
Probably helped Cornell though ;)

Probably helped all but Harvard, Princeton and Yale. But that wasn't the point of the Ivy League. It was formed by the so called "ancient eight" to de-emphasize athletics.
Ivy football was the best in the land for decades. Yale and Princeton had Heisman winners and Cornell probably should have. Columbia even played in the Rose Bowl. In the fifties, the Ivy presidents got together and agreed on a set of principles to govern their participation in collegiate sports. I'd say it worked out pretty well for them. What do you think?

(BTW, it is one league/conference where you can pretty much guarantee there won't be any CR! Nobody gets in and nobody gets out.)
 
It will never happen; but, the only school that I could ever see being added to the Ivy is John Hopkins, an AAU, private university, located in the Northeast, with a massive endowment ($2.6 Billion, #26, ahead of Brown), serious academic cred (US News #13 ahead Brown & Cornell with arguably the best hospital in the country, and limited interest in major college athletics. Heck, the one sport that Hopkins takes seriously is lacrosse, which Cornell, Princeton and several others are no slouches at either. Other candidates such as U Chicago, Emory, Washington U (St Louis), Case Western are all outside of the Northeast. The rest are DIII in athletics such as MIT, Rochester, NYU, and the Little Ivies, such as Williams, Amherst and Trinity. The one odd ball in the group is Georgetown, which is a serious academic school; but, is also very serious about its basketball team.
 
It will never happen; but, the only school that I could ever see being added to the Ivy is John Hopkins, an AAU, private university, located in the Northeast, with a massive endowment ($2.6 Billion, #26, ahead of Brown), serious academic cred (US News #13 ahead Brown & Cornell with arguably the best hospital in the country, and limited interest in major college athletics. Heck, the one sport that Hopkins takes seriously is lacrosse, which Cornell, Princeton and several others are no slouches at either. Other candidates such as U Chicago, Emory, Washington U (St Louis), Case Western are all outside of the Northeast. The rest are DIII in athletics such as MIT, Rochester, NYU, and the Little Ivies, such as Williams, Amherst and Trinity. The one odd ball in the group is Georgetown, which is a serious academic school; but, is also very serious about its basketball team.

Johns Hopkins, like Chicago, is graduate oriented, and limited in breadth. Great school, but unlike the other Ivies.
 
Is it possible that Manuel's actions in regard to getting invited to the ACC last year were percieved as inactions because the ACC's not his focus (as directed by Susn Herbst)? Is it possible that, after numerous snubs by the ACC, UConn's goal became the Big Ten and viewed an ACC invite as a consolation prize even before the last go-around? Is it possible that plans for AAU admission was put into place immediately upon Herbst's arrival and the efforts of that labor have just recently began baring fruit?

Related: Did anyone see the Outside The Lines on Sunday? UConn is intimately involved in researching the effects of Heat stroke on athletes. UConn was front and center in the ESPN report, one that that is brought up each and every August as high schools and colleges begin summer two-a-days.
Are you kidding me? UConn was begging for an ACC invite. Manuel fumbled the ball and Jurich recovered. Thus Louisville in, UConn out. Manuel has stated he is done with realignment. All the fluff shows on ESPN mean nothing. This are no plans, no meetings. Herbst and Calhoun are going to Israel in October to see if UConn can join a conference there. Let me be the first to start that rumor.
 
Is it possible that Manuel's actions in regard to getting invited to the ACC last year were percieved as inactions because the ACC's not his focus (as directed by Susn Herbst)? Is it possible that, after numerous snubs by the ACC, UConn's goal became the Big Ten and viewed an ACC invite as a consolation prize even before the last go-around? Is it possible that plans for AAU admission was put into place immediately upon Herbst's arrival and the efforts of that labor have just recently began baring fruit?

Related: Did anyone see the Outside The Lines on Sunday? UConn is intimately involved in researching the effects of Heat stroke on athletes. UConn was front and center in the ESPN report, one that that is brought up each and every August as high schools and colleges begin summer two-a-days.
Uconn is associated with Kory Stringer foundation- NFL player who died from heat stroke during camp with Vikings. His wife was the keynote speaker at my daughters graduation 2 years ago.
 
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Uconn is associated with Kory Stringer foundation- NFL player who died from heat stroke during camp with Vikings. His wife was the keynote speaker at my daughters graduation 2 years ago.

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap1000000228344/article/korey-stringer-institute-and-gatorade

In April 2010, the University of Connecticut (UConn) announced the formation of the Korey Stringer Institute (KSI), funded by the NFL in partnership with UConn and Gatorade.

Kelci, who serves as the Institute's Chief Executive Officer, chose UConn because its Department of Kinesiology is a national leader in the study of heat and hydration issues related to athletes and the physically active. UConn Kinesiology Professor Douglas J. Casa, Ph.D., ATC, the Institute's lead researcher, is one of the country's preeminent experts in the field.
 
Are you kidding me? UConn was begging for an ACC invite. Manuel fumbled the ball and Jurich recovered. Thus Louisville in, UConn out. Manuel has stated he is done with realignment. All the fluff shows on ESPN mean nothing. This are no plans, no meetings. Herbst and Calhoun are going to Israel in October to see if UConn can join a conference there. Let me be the first to start that rumor.
Post like this re-enforce the fact that The Boneyard does not and should not have a Thumbs Down or Unlike button. I would register a second name just to Unlike this post twice.
 
Probably helped Cornell though ;)


That's my alma mater buddy so tread lightly. We're used to being called one of the lowest leaves of the Ivy but I'll be damned if we're looked down upon by any B1G school...
 
That's my alma mater buddy so tread lightly. We're used to being called one of the lowest leaves of the Ivy but I'll be damned if we're looked down upon by any B1G school...

More like there is Princeton, Harvard and Yale and then everyone else in the Ivy League. All good in certain areas and better than most every other school, but not in the elite 3 category. But we are talking merely about how they as a group chose to compete in intercollegiate sports, especially football. From 1900 until 1954 (when the Ivy League was formed), Ivy Teams shared or won 33 national championships, with Yale (8), Harvard (7), Princeton (7) and Cornell (5) leading the way. These schools all had big time football reputations before Knute Rockne ever asked his team to "win one for the Gipper".
 
More like there is Princeton, Harvard and Yale and then everyone else in the Ivy League. All good in certain areas and better than most every other school, but not in the elite 3 category. But we are talking merely about how they as a group chose to compete in intercollegiate sports, especially football. From 1900 until 1954 (when the Ivy League was formed), Ivy Teams shared or won 33 national championships, with Yale (8), Harvard (7), Princeton (7) and Cornell (5) leading the way. These schools all had big time football reputations before Knute Rockne ever asked his team to "win one for the Gipper".



Like a lot of older guys, I like to wax nostalgic.

Grantland Rice had the best nostalgic view of old time football.....And I always think of it when I think of the past of Ivy football.

I remember the stand at Thermopylae
The Greek Guard made one day;
I remember the legions that Caesar used
To shatter the Gallic sway;

And I remember across the years
Two banners that crowned the crest,
When Yale was king of the conquered East,
And Michigan ruled the West.

At night in my humble den I dream
Of the glories that used to be
Of Hannibal taking the Alpine Trail,
Of Drake on the open sea;

And then I wander the ancient ways
To dream a dream I love the best,
When Yale was king of the conquered East,
And Michigan ruled the West.
 
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Like a lot of older guys, I like to wax nostalgic.

Grantland Rice had the best nostalgic view of old time football.....And I always think of it when I think of the past of Ivy football.

I remember the stand at Thermopylae
The Greek Guard made one day;
I remember the legions that Caesar used
To shatter the Gallic sway;

And I remember across the years
Two banners that crowned the crest,
When Yale was king of the conquered East,
And Michigan ruled the West.

At night in my humble den I dream
Of the glories that used to be
Of Hannibal taking the Alpine Trail,
Of Drake on the open sea;

And then I wander the ancient ways
To dream a dream I love the best,
When Yale was king of the conquered East,
And Michigan ruled the West.

This gives a glimpse of the brilliance of Grantland Rice, sports writing's answer to H.L. Mencken. Was this taken from the ND site or the Michigan site?
 
I agreed with upstarter that it would cost Mizzou money to leave the SEC, but I question if it would cost $130 million. Do you think it would cost Mizzou $130 million to leave the SEC and join the B1G? I explained a few scenarios, and cited precedent where they have been done recently by other conferences, that would cost far less for Mizzou to join the B1G. If the B1G is going to be serious about trying to poach a team from the SEC, the B1G would need to work with the SEC team to cut down on the cost. One really good way is to shorten the entrance time frame, as this would cost the B1G very little and save the SEC team $30-$60 million. Also, the B1G could offer a better share of the conference payouts, if the team is desired enough and would boost the conference earnings.
Why in God's name would Missouri ever leave the SEC? I can only see one scenario whwere that would happen. That would be if they were getting the crap beat out of them in all sports year after year and decided to find an easier conference.
 
Why in God's name would Missouri ever leave the SEC? I can only see one scenario whwere that would happen. That would be if they were getting the crap beat out of them in all sports year after year and decided to find an easier conference.
Unlikely to leave SEC, but in addition to getting the sh t getting kicked out of them on the SEC football field a move to the B1G is not out of the question as more importantly there's also the CIC money that the B1G cache brings with it.
 
This gives a glimpse of the brilliance of Grantland Rice, sports writing's answer to H.L. Mencken. Was this taken from the ND site or the Michigan site?


Neither...I am old enough to have encountered Grantland Rice's sports poetry and I could easily google the lines....He may be a little florid for this day and time...but his images of the Four Horsemen outlined against a gray sky, his Casey at the Bat, were very familiar to my dad...and thus to me.

I am the product of a Alabama southern belle and a Michigan grad....my dad and I watched football for many years. It was the common language in which we could communicate without argument. I am not a Big Ten fan, but to this day I cheer against Ohio State in his memory and raise a glass to the old man. I miss him.
 
Neither...I am old enough to have encountered Grantland Rice's sports poetry and I could easily google the lines....He may be a little florid for this day and time...but his images of the Four Horsemen outlined against a gray sky, his Casey at the Bat, were very familiar to my dad...and thus to me.

I am the product of a Alabama southern belle and a Michigan grad....my dad and I watched football for many years. It was the common language in which we could communicate without argument. I am not a Big Ten fan, but to this day I cheer against Ohio State in his memory and raise a glass to the old man. I miss him.
Don't ask me why, but I've always hated Ohio State. Penn State as well.
 
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