I hope you are right. I don't care about being wrong or right, but the main reason UCONN has been on the outside looking in on almost every expansion so far has been our football program. Believe me - I want a new conference as much as anyone. But it would seem if UCONN REALLY wanted to be taken seriously, they'd already have ponied up the funds to expand the stadium. Problem is our average attendance is about 28,000 per game (for last season) up from 27,400 the year before.
In our heyday before the Pasqualoni fiasco, we were over 38,000, so it's not like we've even shown we can get beyond a 40,000 seat stadium. Having said that, I think it would be much easier to get a full house to face Texas, Oklahoma, etc etc vs. Tulane, ECU, UCF, etc...
Again, it's a misconception that football is all conference realignment is about. Yes, it is by far the biggest money maker for big time athletic programs, but CR is all about money, and cable TV boxes are where the new money is and will come from in the foreseeable future of collegiate athletics. It's in that arena that UCONN has little competition from the other several schools being touted for Big 12 or any other conference expansion. We have the largest available media market to tap into on the east coast among the schools that are being considered, with no really close seconds. Yes, BYU has a national following, but even so, their national fanbase is only shown as being maybe 100,000 larger than UCONN's overall, and these conferences are looking at local media markets, not overall appeal, because they need cable subscribers in the school's own local area of influence.
The Hartford - NH media market is 30th in the country, but more importantly, Fairfield Co. isn't included in that because it's part of the NYC metro media market, which adds over a million in population from Fairfield Co. Not only are these additional potential cable TV subscribers, they're some of the wealthiest people in the entire country. They spend money on things TV advertisers sell.
The ACC thought they were getting the metro Boston market with BS College. That turned into a miserable failure for them because Boston is a pro sports town, and college allegiance there is very fragmented since there are so many schools at different levels. They could use help in the northeastern markets. The Big 10 thought they were getting NYC when they took Rutgers (dispelling the notion that only football matters, since we have run circles around the Rutgers football program, even as bad as we've been for the past few seasons). They got NJ, but NYC not so much. Even South Jersey doesn't readily identify with Rutgers. The Big 12 has no presence in the metro NYC or metro Boston markets. UCONN can put them into both of those. We already have SNY on board in NYC, and they obviously have recognized the value of having UCONN sports.
Every conference now wants its own dedicated TV network, a channel with 24/7/365 conference sporting events. They have to fill that air time with content. A school like UCONN can provide content with decent ratings in sports that would otherwise be a total afterthought for most conference networks. We still spend the same amount on athletics as many of the P5 conference schools do, and in several instances we spend more than some of them do.
And, on top of all our other positives, we win NCAA championships at a rate most other schools can only dream of.
Our football program will improve again, and we will expand the football stadium if any of these leagues invite us to join. It's a no brainer when you can attract whatever alumni base some of the major schools in other conferences have in the metro NYC and metro Boston markets. That gives the local Hartford economy a shot in the arm every fall Saturday for a UCONN home game. We will sell out games at P&W on a regular basis with teams like Michigan, Florida State or Oklahoma coming to town.