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The Big East formed in the late 1970s driven by Dave Gavitt from Providence and his vision for a basketball conference to dominate the Northeast metro TV market. Early collaboration was with Georgetown, St John’s, and Syracuse, all independents that would benefit from a conference affiliation and an NCAA automatic bid.
Two other dynamics at play at the time were the Eastern 8 basketball conference in the same regional footprint and Joe Paterno’s vision for a Penn State led Eastern football conference.
The Eastern 8 had only been around for a few years, starting in 1976, and had an automatic bid from its conference tournament. The Eastern 8 did not sponsor football.
The dynamic in the formation of the Big East was a competitive view vs the Eastern 8. There were also a range of views on Paterno’s vision for Eastern football, with concerns that his position was for Penn State to be an unequal leader in a conference.
An alternate history could have developed if the outlook was a collaborative merger of the Big East startup and the Eastern 8, with an inclusion of Eastern Football from the start.
To set the stage for 1978, the the NCAA has just established the 1-A and 1-AA split of Division 1, and Eastern football was dominated by Independent programs.
Let’s start with the teams invited to join the Big East, with the football level of each at the time in parentheses:
Villanova was the best basketball program in the Eastern 8 and had already been picked off in the Big East formation. Next came a decision on Pitt or Penn State - they both wanted into the Big East. The decision was to take Pitt, and Penn State was voted down needing one more vote, with (reportedly) Georgetown, St Johns, and Villanova voting against.
A Big East - Eastern 8 merger could have resulted in the basketball conference of Dave Gavitt’s vision and the football conference of Joe Paterno’s vision:
Big East Football
Big East Basketball
Penn State probably benefited from the snub and affiliating west to the Big Ten instead of east.
The biggest losers in missing this opportunity were Nova (dropping football, alumni revolt, then returning as 1-AA), Holy Cross (dropping to 1-AA and falling off the national exposure map), UConn (left out of football re-alignment), UMass (never finding a major football conference), and Duquesne and GW (diminished basketball programs).
The rest managed re-alignment to Power conferences, but are largely geographical misfits that would have better fit in an Eastern conference.
Two other dynamics at play at the time were the Eastern 8 basketball conference in the same regional footprint and Joe Paterno’s vision for a Penn State led Eastern football conference.
The Eastern 8 had only been around for a few years, starting in 1976, and had an automatic bid from its conference tournament. The Eastern 8 did not sponsor football.
The dynamic in the formation of the Big East was a competitive view vs the Eastern 8. There were also a range of views on Paterno’s vision for Eastern football, with concerns that his position was for Penn State to be an unequal leader in a conference.
An alternate history could have developed if the outlook was a collaborative merger of the Big East startup and the Eastern 8, with an inclusion of Eastern Football from the start.
To set the stage for 1978, the the NCAA has just established the 1-A and 1-AA split of Division 1, and Eastern football was dominated by Independent programs.
Let’s start with the teams invited to join the Big East, with the football level of each at the time in parentheses:
- Providence (NA), St John’s (3), Georgetown (3), Syracuse (1-A) were the original collaborators.
- Seton Hall (3), Connecticut (1-AA), BC (1-A) accepted invites as founding members.
- Nova (1-A) accepted but deferred a year to start because of its Eastern 8 affiliation.
- Holy Cross (1-A) and Rutgers (1-A) declined their invitation.
Villanova was the best basketball program in the Eastern 8 and had already been picked off in the Big East formation. Next came a decision on Pitt or Penn State - they both wanted into the Big East. The decision was to take Pitt, and Penn State was voted down needing one more vote, with (reportedly) Georgetown, St Johns, and Villanova voting against.
A Big East - Eastern 8 merger could have resulted in the basketball conference of Dave Gavitt’s vision and the football conference of Joe Paterno’s vision:
Big East Football
- 1-A programs Syracuse, BC, Pitt, Nova from the Big East
- 1-A Holy Cross from the original invitation, now including football
- 1-A Penn State, WV, and Rutgers from the Eastern 8.
- 1-AA UConn (Big East) and UMass (Eastern 8) moving up to 1-A.
Big East Basketball
- The 10 football members: Syracuse, BC, Pitt, Nova, Holy Cross, Rutgers, Penn State, WV, UConn, UMass
- The 6 non-football members: Providence, St John’s, Georgetown, Seton Hall, Duquesne, GW
Penn State probably benefited from the snub and affiliating west to the Big Ten instead of east.
The biggest losers in missing this opportunity were Nova (dropping football, alumni revolt, then returning as 1-AA), Holy Cross (dropping to 1-AA and falling off the national exposure map), UConn (left out of football re-alignment), UMass (never finding a major football conference), and Duquesne and GW (diminished basketball programs).
The rest managed re-alignment to Power conferences, but are largely geographical misfits that would have better fit in an Eastern conference.