Originally posted by Dragon:
WV would be a nice fit, I think. We had a decades long rivalry with Penn State and Ohio State is in our back yard. so to speak. That, and pretty much every WVU fan would love to see the Mountaineers get an annual shot at Rich Rodriguez up there at Michigan.
However, I think that WVU would end up in an expanded ACC. Former Big East members Miami, BC and Virginia Tech went to the ACC so it seems logical for WVU to head that direction as well.
ND would be an obvious choice but as has been said, they're unlikely to commit their football program to a conference commitment when they have such a sweetheart deal as an Indy.
Speculation that Mizzou or Nebraska would leave the Big 12 is just crazy, IMO. Why would they do that?
There are "emerging" programs like Cincinnati that might be a logical fit into the Big 10, but the problem is that they haven't put together a long string of winning seasons and top 25 finishes to prove they can compete in a powerful conference.
Pitt was another program mentioned in the article I read a while back. Pitt HAS won National Championships and DOES have a tradition and IS geographically suitable to play in the Big 10.
Rutgers? NYC audience? Bah. IMO, the Big Ten is all about the Midwest. But college football anymore is all about the $$$$, so who knows?
I think WV is a much better fit for the ACC than the Big Ten. The Big Ten needs to fill out and expand their TV network which WV doesn't do a whole lot of. Sure facing Rich Rod is fine and dandy, but once he is gone then that has lost all meaning.
ND actually would make more on the Big Ten Network than their NBC deal, by $1-2M. They however have then lost their independence and that contributes to their allure. Plus they no longer have the guaranteed TV slot to themselves every Saturday.
Mizzou and Nebraska get no respect from the Big-12 South, being in the North. They are also unhappy with revenue sharing. The Big-12 does not equally share revenue and the schools who bring in the most money are unhappy they don't earn more and the ones who make less money are unhappy they are getting shorted. Nebraska is a Big-12 school fit all the way, but money-wise they have a lot of interest to join the Big Ten.
Cincinatti already gets the Big Ten network so adding them as a school doesn't really do anything. Without Brian Kelly they will probably fade back into obscurity for football.