Dave, I don't think anyone disagrees with the substance of your missive. It's more the tone. But yes, Syracuse and Pitt outrank us badly in the college football pantheon. They are fallen royalty, we are new neighbors who own a chain of Dunkin Donuts shops. We are not royalty. But there is no reason for the ACC to hold at 14. Not likely. And they have made a partial investment in sewing up the east coast market. They have spent too much to let it get away. Notre Dame and Uconn or Rutgers would seal the deal. If no ND, then UC and RU are in play. Not definite, not a sure thing, but in play.Those aren't competing theories. The ACC likely did take Pitt and Syracuse because they were worried that the Big 10 would take them. That seems completely plausible to me. But they also could have chosen to take UConn then if they wanted to and they didn't, which isn't just plausible theory, it's what actually happened. Not taking UConn was a conscious decision they made on Saturday. Is something going to happen to change their mind? Maybe, but I'm not really sure what that would be considering our football program isn't very good and doesn't draw a lot eyes. It's true that they may have calculated that they could get UConn anytime they wanted later if nothing better came along, but that puts us in the same position as a lot of mildy attractive women who in the end never go home with the guy they really wanted to because he found a better option. The idea that Calhoun has to go beg those jerkoffs to take us into their conference makes me sick to my stomach.
My whole point in starting this thread is that the ACC taking Pitt and Syracuse as the first dominoes to fall in this farce is almost the worst possible outcome for UConn and the consensus on the board seems to be that it will be really cool when we join the ACC and boy does it suck to be one of the teams on the outside looking in. WE are one of those teams on the outside looking in! This situation really, really blows.