The only sources anywhere suggesting that basketball catholic schools are considering separating from the conference is unfounded internet message board rumor and speculation. It's not happening. College football is the primary market force in the intercollegiate sports world nationally. But in our neighborhood, the northeast corridor from Washington to Boston, the television markets are by far the biggest and most desireable in teh country - and this is the battle ground and college football and college basketball are both very important.
There's a reason why ESPN fills up the weeknights in the winter with 10-12 Big East college basketball games and not SEC games. ACC round ball programs not named Duke or UNC don't see a lot of air time either, although their planning on broadcasting more now, that they've got Duke, UNC, and now Syracuse to draw from teh northeast market - except none of them are actually local to the markets...... The big east still has UConn, St. John's, Villanova, now Temple, Georgetown....to draw television audiences on winter weeknights.
The big east basketball schools, through their direct ties with division 1-A football, have direct access to the money that division 1-A football brings. They are not willingly giving up access to that revenue, and in the northeast, after the creation of the YES network led the way....... the northeast, for a sports broadcasting company - college basketball is the way to fill up the winter weeknight primetime broadcasting slots......not college football....and that's what's most valueable to those kinds of broadcasting arragnements.....basketballl....now over college football.....because college basketball primetime fills up all those winter nights when there is no baseball.
College football belongs on fall saturdays, and the baseball carrying networks know it.
College football though, in 20 years has created a divide in athletic programs aroudn money that is enormous, and basketball can't close that gap alone.
Very interesting dynamic, very interesting times.