I don't think it's over by then, but what we are doing is taking an unprecedented risk.I do not disagree many of the wounds UConn sustained were self inflicted particularly in coaching hires and investments in the football program.
Unlike some I do not purely blame the AAC for UConn’s struggle. That said, the new media contract, the geographic separation and marginalization of UConn’s interests made recovering in the AAC much more difficult.
Moreover the time and money needed to repair football just wasn’t there. By 2024 the B12/AAC will see movement and if UConn is not competitive by then it’s really over.
The best predictor of football success is money and UConn wasn’t spending it on football and didn’t have easy funding to spend more on football.
Arguing whether bad coaches or a bad conference created a bad UConn is a chicken or the egg argument. How we got here doesn’t matter. What does matter is digging our way out in the AAC was becoming insurmountable.
Like I said I’m really disappointed in this decision but it is the most likely course to some success...it’s just a sad day.
Future generations can figure it out whether it was successful or not.