Penn State was never huge in Maryland...just the opposite. For years the Turtles considered the Nittany Lions their biggest rivals (even though Penn State didn't return the favor). Half of College Park consisted of kids from "Ballmer" and another big chunk was from Annapolis. Penn State fans are few and far between in Maryland. South Jersey, yes, big Penn State following. Notre Dame, though, no real following in either area.
If Syracuse is the only regional team that New York state as a whole cares about, please explain why (i) Rutgers football games are clearly the biggest local draw in the NY TV market, and (ii) UConn, and not Syracuse, is the team that has (and had when both were in the Big East) 100% of their football games not on national TV picked up by SNY, the NYC based sports league?
Without ND as a football member, no single conference owns Metro NY football at the moment, but the Big Ten is far closer to it than the ACC. Frankly, if the ACC adds UConn it remains split forever, and if the Ten adds UCOonn NYC becomes a Big Ten City with the ACC of secondary interest. And if we were talking about hoops, since the Big East disintegration the market is hopelessly split, and conferences are looking for "shares," not "ownership."
Maryland fans will say this. Yes. But Maryland and West Virginia are two fan bases with enormous inferiority complexes. Give them about 5 years, and you'll hear that they feel treated as an outlier in the Big Ten too. It wont take long at all. I don't expect the Big Ten to cater to their whining any more than the ACC did.The ACC schools always treated Maryland like an outlier. The Terps weren't southern enough. Their opinion simply didn't matter and eventually that disdain came back to bite the conference.
No offense but are you talking about the same Maryland that is located in the United States of America? If that's the one, I haven't a clue how you draw your conclusions. PSU has a very strong following throughout the entire DMV, built on being the premier football brand in the Northeast/Mid Atlantic since the 1960's. Maryland Representation for PSU is still very strong. If I was estimating sphere of influence in the Northeast/Mid Atlantic I'd go with the following:
MA- I'd imagine is carved up by BC, BU, Harvard, (locals), ND and UCONN.
CT- Primarily UCONN with small followings for Yale.
NY- (Upstate) Cuse, with pockets of support for ND, PSU, Army and locals like Buffalo and Cornell. (NYC and surroundings)Pretty well divided up with pockets of support for ND, RU, UCONN, Cuse, PSU, UM, St Johns and smaller locals. No one team or even small group of teams can lay claim to NYC. You need a large group of schools to gain any critical mass in the city.
NJ- (Northern NJ) RU, ND, PSU (Southern NJ) PSU, ND, RU.
PA- (Eastern PA) PSU, with pockets of ND Support in NEPA as well as Philly. Support for the members of The Big 5 exists in the city as well. (Central/South/and NW PA) PSU, (SWPA) PSU with followings for Pitt, ND, and WVU.
MD- UMD, Navy, PSU, ND, local/national interests.
DC- Fairly even levels of support for UMD, VPI, UVA, and PSU. ND, Gtown and other Catholics carry some sway as well as smaller local and national interests.
VA- VPI and UVA, with solid representation for PSU, as well as smaller local/national interests.
This map http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/10/03/upshot/ncaa-football-map.html#7,40.003,-78.034 and my experience in College Park says Penn State's support ends at the Mason-Dixon Line. Where are these pockets of Penn State support in MD?No offense but are you talking about the same Maryland that is located in the United States of America? If that's the one, I haven't a clue how you draw your conclusions. PSU has a very strong following throughout the entire DMV, built on being the premier football brand in the Northeast/Mid Atlantic since the 1960's. Maryland Representation for PSU is still very strong. If I was estimating sphere of influence in the Northeast/Mid Atlantic I'd go with the following:
MA- I'd imagine is carved up by BC, BU, Harvard, (locals), ND and UCONN.
CT- Primarily UCONN with small followings for Yale.
NY- (Upstate) Cuse, with pockets of support for ND, PSU, Army and locals like Buffalo and Cornell. (NYC and surroundings)Pretty well divided up with pockets of support for ND, RU, UCONN, Cuse, PSU, UM, St Johns and smaller locals. No one team or even small group of teams can lay claim to NYC. You need a large group of schools to gain any critical mass in the city.
NJ- (Northern NJ) RU, ND, PSU (Southern NJ) PSU, ND, RU.
PA- (Eastern PA) PSU, with pockets of ND Support in NEPA as well as Philly. Support for the members of The Big 5 exists in the city as well. (Central/South/and NW PA) PSU, (SWPA) PSU with followings for Pitt, ND, and WVU.
MD- UMD, Navy, PSU, ND, local/national interests.
DC- Fairly even levels of support for UMD, VPI, UVA, and PSU. ND, Gtown and other Catholics carry some sway as well as smaller local and national interests.
VA- VPI and UVA, with solid representation for PSU, as well as smaller local/national interests.
Maryland fans will say this. Yes. But Maryland and West Virginia are two fan bases with enormous inferiority complexes. Give them about 5 years, and you'll hear that they feel treated as an outlier in the Big Ten too. It wont take long at all. I don't expect the Big Ten to cater to their whining any more than the ACC did.
What Wallace Loh did had nothing to do with their feeling under appreciated. He had only 2 years of experience with the ACC at the time, and he was oblivious of the needs of his Maryland athletic programs other than how much they cost compared to what they brought in revenue.
The ACC felt betrayed at the time because they were, but the ACC has moved on and doesn't notice Maryland is gone at all in any way.
Loh...a Big Ten guy...basically kidnapped Maryland by circumventing the discussion of boosters, alumni, and even his board....
but..most of us FSU fans threw a party....who wants to watch a team that is 2-22 against your team and the last game was
63-0 ?
This map http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/10/03/upshot/ncaa-football-map.html#7,40.003,-78.034 and my experience in College Park says Penn State's support ends at the Mason-Dixon Line. Where are these pockets of Penn State support in MD?
I'm talking significant support. I have no doubt that if Penn State has any Maryland players on its roster there is likely Penn State support in Maryland.There are random pockets of Big Ten country in the Baltimore region. I know of a MSU bar, a PSU bar, and two Michigan bars within 2-3 miles of the Inner Harbor. It's weird. Can certainly confirm PSU interest in this region, too.
You think Maryland leaving hurt the ACC. No one in the ACC does. We're better off, and we can live without Maryland's 18 Women's NCAA Lacrosse Championships. Congratulations on them. It's tough, but we'll live.I initially thought you were really playing up the whole pompous UVA role for sport, but you aren't playing. You're being emotional and irrational and letting your disdain get in the way of making a well-reasoned statement.
First of all, Maryland left the ACC with more conference titles and national titles than any school not named UNC, so save the inferior crap for Wake fans. The Big Ten has done just fine in welcoming Maryland because Delany knows what he's doing. While he's in his office tower in Chicago changing college athletics, ACC officials are having a monster truck rally at their office park in Greensboro.
The ACC notices the gigantic chunk missing from its once contiguous eastern seaboard. The ACC notices the 7 million households it lost. The ACC notices that the #2 basketball team in the country plays in the Big Ten and not in its conference. John Swofford notices every time he wipes the Bojangles grease off his fingers, picks up the remote to search for the ACCN, and discovers that his rabbit ears won't pick up his local MY TV affiliate. No matter how many times you type it, losing Maryland was not a good thing for the ACC.
The bottom line is this: The Big Ten is just a better conference to be affiliated with. The decision was a no brainer. Staying in the ACC would have been a poor choice. The school posted record revenues in 2015, including $35 million from the B1G. The best ACC payout was $21.5 million. Fans are fine. Since joining the B1G, Maryland has won more conference championships than everyone except Michigan. Maryland broke ground last year on a $155 million football facility. Most importantly, Maryland is awaiting a projected $45 million payout from the Big Ten in 2021.
Maryland is doing just fine sitting at the grown up table in the Big Ten. Fans are content while watching one of the Terps' top-5 basketball teams, not thinking about Virginia and the dysfunctional ACC.
Apparently they are good enough to roll right through the Big Ten. They aren't having trouble with that so far. They're in second place. We'll have to see after that. Maybe your team will knock them off next game.You know what us Big Ten guys say... Buy Loh sell high.
Or, we just might see if that basketball team is really that good.
That proves Iowa State deserves a Big Ten invite. With AAU, they're a shoe in.There's a random bar with an Iowa State flag right near Fenway. Boston loves those Cyclones!
Wow, the ACC water bearers and BC felaters are suddenly showing up across the Boneyard like Syrian refugees. Close the border Fishy, close the borders.
You must be from PSU, eh? Only a PSU alum would be delusional enough to think SWPA is a PSU hotbed. Pitt owns the Pittsburgh metro, WVU owns the border counties, which are closer to Morgantown than Pittsburgh.
This map http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/10/03/upshot/ncaa-football-map.html#7,40.003,-78.034 and my experience in College Park says Penn State's support ends at the Mason-Dixon Line. Where are these pockets of Penn State support in MD?
What is happening here?
You think Maryland leaving hurt the ACC. No one in the ACC does. We're better off, and we can live without Maryland's 18 Women's NCAA Lacrosse Championships. Congratulations on them. It's tough, but we'll live.
Good luck at the Big Boy table. At least let coaches finish the season. Really poor form there. Good luck with Mike London. We wish you well.
I initially thought you were really playing up the whole pompous UVA role for sport, but you aren't playing. You're being emotional and irrational and letting your disdain get in the way of making a well-reasoned statement.
You must be from PSU, eh? Only a PSU alum would be delusional enough to think SWPA is a PSU hotbed. Pitt owns the Pittsburgh metro, WVU owns the border counties, which are closer to Morgantown than Pittsburgh.
i've been onto stimp for his obvious agenda since he first arrived...i'll just leave it at that...For someone who claims to be happy that Maryland left the ACC, I have never seen someone as butthurt, obsessive, irrational, passive-aggressive, and disturbingly creepy as btstimpy, and getting more so with each successive post. I don't think there was ever an intention of making a well-reasoned statement. So much for "moving on."
Getting back to the original post, it appears from the GT AD's statement that there could be more "betrayals" on or before the expiration of the GOR.