Couple other unsolicited thoughts:
- Colorado never mattered. Not a single iota. It really is funny how much attention and hyperbole was centered on them a couple months ago. They haven't done jack s__t in PAC football (or basketball, for that matter), save for one season. I laughed my ass off when the Oregon coach this year at PAC media days made fun of how "bad" it was that they were leaving, given how awful they are. Only reason they were anything to anyone couple months ago is Deon. That school had literally sold its soul in the hopes that Prime will do something to shock them back to the glory days. Of course, as anyone can see, literally as soon as he has success he'll be gone and they'll be back to square one. Hey, at least they'll have their so cherished games against Kansas, K-State, Oklahoma State, and Iowa State from the Big 8 days, amiright?
- Even after everything that happened, after all of it ... the PAC conference was going to stick together. The 9 teams, I mean. It was a done deal. Not a great deal, by any means, but good enough. And then .... Washington and Oregon spit in everyone's faces and turned their backs on 108 years of history, prostituting themselves out for a small fractional share to the Big Ten. They deserve a curse upon them both. I hope they don't win a single Big Ten title in any sport that matters for the next 20 years. IE, Nebraska. Same type of "adds".
- Of course the Big Ten took them .... at that fire sale price. As was always correct from the beginning: the Big Ten knew that those two were not worth full shares. Of course they weren't. They could've been added at the same time as USC/UCLA, but they weren't. Because they weren't worth it. Never were, still aren't. It's the same exact thing as adding Maryland and Rutgers, from a value point of view. I hope their vesting period is that long too, or longer. As long as we could get it.
- This all gets at the major issue: there's a huge fundamental reason why West Coast college football is so relatively worthless to TV. That is, casual fans. The people who make up the bulk of TV ratings for any major ratings game. These people are already asleep or are off enjoying their evenings by the time that West Coast prime time games get going. And there were already so many other great games in the Central and Eastern timezones to watch. So, they don't tune in, and it's just the hardcore alumni/fans who watch. Not bad ratings, but not great ratings. That's why what we're seeing here happened, ultimately.
- It's all for TV, and that ultimately is driven by casual fans. People who actually care, and particularly people who care enough to actually go to games, get screwed over. What a world