GophersInIowa
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Nice! This is a fun post. Would these be the most realistic protected/pod games in that case? I don't know much about the histories involving the Big 8 and their traditional rivalries.
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Agreed.My perception was that Missouri was more of a rivalry game for Kansas than Kansas St.
Also Missouri and Illinois has had a boarder clash basketball game in St Louis, so that may have made more sense.
Not sure why Northwestern is not pictured.
Yeah, that seems most likely unless there was some mythical ceiling level of 16 teams in a conference.Agreed.
If the Big 8 and Big 10 were going to merge in 1985, then they would've merged ... you know, all Eight of them together with all Ten of them.
the OP clearly says "State Schools" - so I assume that is why Northwestern is not included.
I suspect the goal was to come up with a 16-team midwestern conference.
Meh! Glad things worked the way they have so far. Wouldn't have minded ISU and Missouri though.
I missed the "state" part, but that's still just silly because he arbitrarily lopped off state school Colorado.the OP clearly says "State Schools" - so I assume that is why Northwestern is not included.
I suspect the goal was to come up with a 16-team midwestern conference.
Colorado was left out too. Would make more sense to kick out K-State and keep Colorado.the OP clearly says "State Schools" - so I assume that is why Northwestern is not included.
I suspect the goal was to come up with a 16-team midwestern conference.
It’s pretty odd people assume 16 is the default model.Yeah, that seems most likely unless there was some mythical ceiling level of 16 teams in a conference.
If it was just to keep an even number of state schools, I suppose Colorado would somewhat make sense to leave out just for being the only team outside the Central/Eastern Time Zones.I missed the "state" part, but that's still just silly because he arbitrarily lopped off state school Colorado.
16 wasn't anything back in 1985. The SEC hadn't even expanded to 12 yet at that time, when they became the first conference to have two divisions and play a championship game.
The WAC expanded to a 16 team conference in 1996. And the eight biggest schools promptly left to form the Mountain West.
I don't think mega-conferences were a glint in anyone's eye back in 1985. The thing that largely supports/creates them now, TV money, wasn't there yet.
It will likely happen sometime in the next decade or two.It’s pretty odd people assume 16 is the default model.
If 16 because more money made, then why not 20? 24? 32?
The Big East could easily still be a Power conference in football today, if Penn State had joined it in 1991 instead of Temple.It’d be more perfect if the Big8 and Big10 were the same independent conferences that they were in 1985.