No confederate states in the Big Ten, please.
Virginia voted for Obama twice now. Indiana would be more likely to secede at this point. Time to get over it.
No confederate states in the Big Ten, please.
FWIW, they can't "accept" the invite because they haven't been extended one yet. What will happen is, the B1G schools will meet and decide to extend an invitation to Maryland (or not) based on their application for membership.
UVa makes sense for TV, but not if Maryland is the other team. They both bring DC. All UVa adds is Richmond/Hampton Roads. Not enough to justify it. GT would make more sense than Rutgers as it adds Atlanta. I don't buy the Rutgers adds NYC line. PSU is probably already more popular in NYC than Rutgers.
If I had to guess, I don't think they stop at 14; I think they'll look at 16 (speculate on the other two, I'd guess two of the UVA/UNC/Georgia Tech combo). Once you get to 16, you have some options. I could see 4 pods of 4 (Minnesota/Iowa/Wisconsin/Nebraska). Then schedule alternates versus other pods. Going straight division plus one game against the others, you'd see some teams once a decade. Pods could give you some options.
Will be interesting to see what they do.
Now that the adoption papers are all but finalized, the Big Ten is the proud father of two more bouncing baby programs. Say hello to the runts of the family: Maryland and Rutgers. The Terapins arrived Monday, the Scarlet Knights are expecting to join Tuesday.
Surprising? Sure. But anybody who thinks this is a total stunner needs a refresher course in geography. And TV rights economics. And recruiting.
You actually could see this coming. If nothing else, you could see why the Big Ten might order something a la carte off the expansion dinner menu.
Eight months ago I wrote that Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany would never allow his conference to be geographically outflanked by the ACC. "I could see him sending in a Big Ten Special Forces unit to extract Rutgers from the ACC's possible grasp and Maryland from the ACC altogether. Rutgers hasn't made much of a secret of its fondness for the Big Ten. And who knows -- maybe Maryland is ready for a change too. ... That would give the Big Ten 14 members and a strong presence in Pennsylvania, the mid-Atlantic states and the New York/New Jersey areas."
And then just for fun, I added: "But if 16 is the number that counts, why stop there?"
Anyway, if I could look at a map and see the Big Ten's vulnerability, so could Delany. He knows his league's strengths. More importantly, he knows his league's weaknesses.
Would this have happened had the Pac-12 not backed out of its "collaboration" with the Big Ten earlier this year? Remember? The two conferences were going to form a super-alliance of sorts, which would have featured increased Big Ten versus Pac-12 scheduling in all sports, including football.
In short, it was a way to avoid actual expansion, conference realignment and, as Delany put it at the time, "collateral damage." It was also a way to add "value" to both leagues (translation: $).
But even in December 2011, when the soon-to-be-doomed partnership was announced, Delany said: "It doesn't mean you can't expand one day."
The collapse of the collaboration and the ACC's aggressive expansion plan made this an easier decision than you think. The Big Ten couldn't afford to watch Penn State become an island in a sea of ACC schools (Syracuse to the north, Pittsburgh to the west, Boston College to the east (and maybe UConn too). That's simply too much valuable TV and recruiting real estate.
So Delany secured Rutgers and Maryland to give his conference that East Coast/mid-Atlantic market presence. In return, Rutgers gets instant league stability and Maryland receives a football upgrade.
Now the question becomes: Is the Big Ten done adopting?
I don't think expansion was ever Delany's first choice. That's why the Pac-12 alliance had so much appeal to him and the Big Ten presidents.
But when it fell apart, and the ACC formed its own alliance with Notre Dame, and geography began to work against the Big Ten, Delany decided he couldn't sit on his hands. In essence, it had become a zero-sum game.
Rutgers and Maryland are members of the prestigious Association of American Universities -- almost always a prerequisite for Big Ten admittance. And just for fun, I'll throw out two other programs that are AAU members: Kansas and North Carolina. So is Georgia Tech.
I'm just saying.
There are all sorts of possible trickle-down effects of today's announcement:
• The Big Ten could stop at 14 teams or go all-in and expand to 16.
• The ACC could hit the expansion gas pedal.
• The Big East could suffer another cluster migraine.
• Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, who is a registered expansionist, could start kicking the tires on two to four programs.
Whatever happens, this isn't the end of realignment and expansion. These days, you're either in or you're out.
The Big Ten is in.
Who's next?
If the Big Ten expands all the way to 16 teams, will they still keep the protected crossover game? You would play 7 games against the teams from your own division, so if there are 9 conference games, that would leave only two games against the teams from the other division. If one of them is against a protected rival, that leaves only one game. You would play the other teams in the other division only once every seven years. Once one of those teams played a game at your home stadium, you wouldn't see them at home again for 14 years.
It seems to me at that size, the protected crossover game doesn't make sense, but it might still be kept just to allow Michigan and OSU to play every year and still be in different divisions.
I think they'd do 4 divisions of 4 and rotate the divisional crossover/matchups like the NFL does.
Leaders: Maryland, Rutgers, Penn State, Ohio State
Legends: Michigan, Michigan State, Purdue, Indiana
Lords: Illinois, Northwestern, X, X
Lieutenants: Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska
For example.
The Big Ten went from adding only elite teams like Penn State and Nebraska to adding for the sake of adding. BOOOOOO!!!!
Nice job Delaney trying to sweep the Barker fiasco under the rug.
Maybe because we sit on the western edge of the conference, but I would rather see Kansas instead of Rutgers.
Will this mean one extra conference game in Football?
I'd rather see South Dakota St. than either of these schools.... notice that I didn't say NDSU.
and this is why you are not in charge of running a major conference or negotiating tv contracts. hey commish, let's go recruit a school from a state with less than a million people and little, if any, recruiting territories. nothing but a silly and purposely snarky comment on your part trying to bait someone into getting into it with you on the stupid south dakota, north dakota crap. but thanks for playing.
This.
For those saying they're excited for having Maryland in hoops - well, if that's the case, why not just add Kansas? This is clearly about the BTN and money - Baltimore/Washington DC TV market. And now we just won't really have a conference anymore - it's more like a loose confederation of teams. Dumb - we could've stayed at 12 forever. Now, we're likely to have the same affinity with teams in the other division as MAC schools. We'll see them maybe a couple times per decade.
FWIW, they can't "accept" the invite because they haven't been extended one yet. What will happen is, the B1G schools will meet and decide to extend an invitation to Maryland (or not) based on their application for membership.