- Joined
- Feb 18, 2014
- Messages
- 134
- Reaction Score
- 18
B.C. blocked UConns invitation to the ACC and that is why UConn isn't in that conference today. Louisville just happened to be having a good season at that moment and the ACC was desperate to improve football so made an abrupt choice to throw out previously alleged expansion candidate considerations and add UL instead.
Going forward for UConn getting placement into a P5 conference is a difficult proposal. No one is just going to grow because its all about money, and if any league adds anyone they will have to disburse some of their bowl and ncaa and playoff money to the new member. Also there is obviously some "political maneuvering" going on between conferences and UConn doesn't necessarily fit into any of that.
The ACC isn't likely to expand unless for some reason Notre Dame joins as a member. Then its a matter really of who the domers want that will come (not sure who that would be, certainly no Big Ten schools would move backward). If the ACC loses teams they'll have to add someone and UConn would have to be a consideration.
For the Big Ten it might make sense to look at UConn and maybe Syracuse if they think there is a benefit there as far as the BTN in the NYC region. If Rutgers and UMD get them decent penetration there at a lower subscriber rate though, then there wouldn't be much of a need to move in that direction and the Big Ten likely has designs on more southeastern targets from all news reports so far.
Going forward for UConn getting placement into a P5 conference is a difficult proposal. No one is just going to grow because its all about money, and if any league adds anyone they will have to disburse some of their bowl and ncaa and playoff money to the new member. Also there is obviously some "political maneuvering" going on between conferences and UConn doesn't necessarily fit into any of that.
The ACC isn't likely to expand unless for some reason Notre Dame joins as a member. Then its a matter really of who the domers want that will come (not sure who that would be, certainly no Big Ten schools would move backward). If the ACC loses teams they'll have to add someone and UConn would have to be a consideration.
For the Big Ten it might make sense to look at UConn and maybe Syracuse if they think there is a benefit there as far as the BTN in the NYC region. If Rutgers and UMD get them decent penetration there at a lower subscriber rate though, then there wouldn't be much of a need to move in that direction and the Big Ten likely has designs on more southeastern targets from all news reports so far.