- Joined
- Apr 7, 2012
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I don't disagree with most of what you wrote but there is one point that I do have an issue with.
If ND was the critical piece to stabilize the ACC as you say - then wouldn't the ACC been better off just holding off for a year and sitting tight? I don't buy that the deal was a year coming and the ACC added Pitt and Syracuse with ND in mind. If you ask any ND fan you see that they don't value those matchups at all - their primary interest is access to the south and easy scheduling. The old 12 member delivered on that better than the current 14-member configuration.
The additions of Syracuse and Pitt happened right around when the Big 12 was imploding with the potential creation of the Pac-16 and the Big Ten expanded to 12 with Nebraska...and seemingly open to additional expansion in the near future.
The general consensus was heading towards the idea that the era of super conferences was nigh and that a "stable" conference size was some number higher than 12. Based on that info, the ACC decided to strike first by identifying schools that they felt would be acceptable additions to the conference to try to reach that number first so that they can stabilize.
Ironically enough, it was those additions (and the collapse of the Big East) that triggered a new round of expansions for both the SEC and Big Ten and 2 years later...here we are, arguing the same points over and over on a message board despite the lack of any real realignment news in over a year
Just a slight technical point. The ACC accepted SU and Pitt on September 19th, 2011 but the SEC accepted Texas A&M on September 9th, 2011 with the caveat that it was contingent upon no legal action from the other Big 12 schools. So who truly struck first going beyond 12, the ACC or the SEC? Seems to me it was the SEC and that the ACC was reacting to that since there was the slight possibility #14 could be an ACC school (VT, FSU, or Clemson).
So no, I don't think it would have been wise for the ACC to wait another year for ND to see how things went. I also don't think it wise for the ACC to wait on ND for expanding to 16 since that might result in some weird sort of hybrid with Navy for football only and Georgetown for all other sports. If the $$$ is there they should simply invite UConn as #16 and not wait for ND. But the $$$ (and UConn) needs to be there for that invitation to happen.
Cheers,
Neil