Money, jobs, etc, is what will keep local economies afloat and high schools going. I don't think the northeast has to worry about that. Washington, DC is growing very rapidly. NYC is not going to disappear. One of the three "mega-cities" in North America. Same with Boston. The Rust Belt may have lost manufacturing jobs but definitely still has agriculture and mining.Perhaps. In the era of big time college football you're already seeing a fair number of parents willing to relocate to another state in order to have their son attend a HS with a strong football pedigree. That will make organic growth difficult unless there's a strong concerted effort across the entire state.
You may very well be right about Texas not joining. I personally cannot see Texas ever leaving for anywhere. They probably have the clout to go independent if they wanted. That state of Texas has too much going for itself at the moment. We have to flaunt our history and opportunities to recruits.This is true, which is why I stated that I think one of the schools for 15&16 will need fertile grounds. I doubt Texas will ever come unless they decide that being top dog in the Big 12 isn't worth it for them anymore.
We won't know the answer for NC until the ACC GOR expires. Problem with UNC is they are packaged with Duke.I don't think NC will ever happen. VA might be in play in another decade or so, which is probably the realistic time frame for additional schools to be added, not 2016/17.
The B1G is expanding to save itself from being dominated by other areas that are growing rapidly. The east coast is clearly step 1. Have to get as much of the east coast as possible. If the B1G can keep itself nationally relevant and have schools in desirable areas, it'll be fine. Connecticut and New England ARE desirable.True - but its likely that the bulk of those recruits will either be part of the Big Ten recruiting footprint already or recruits open to other Big Ten schools to begin with (i.e. a hypothetical 3-star Florida recruit interested in UConn will probably be considering Rutgers, Penn State, Maryland, etc.). If new schools end up competing over the same recruits as other Big Ten schools you end up diluting the pool of talent and ultimately end up making existing teams weaker for the sake of the new schools.
That would be very nice but it's going to be a long wait. Personally, I'd try to pry Missouri from the SEC. But I actually think Kansas would be alright, too. That section of the country does have a future.This is less of a concern if a school like UConn is coupled with Virginia since Virginia churns out 40-50 D-1 prospects annually.

