TylerDurden wrote:
It's about splitting money. The big guys want it all for themselves, they always have. In the hypothetical situation of a split with the big guys doing their own thing, they absolutely don't need the G5, MVC or anyone else to negotiate very lucrative television contracts for an end-of-season basketball tournament.
I'm certainly not saying it would be a better tournament than the David v Goliath matchups we see now - I think that's the big appeal of the first weekend, and rating have shown as much - but that doesn't mean they care, even if they should, because financial considerations trump everything else.
All of that said, I think we agree that there are very real political/legal implications for a split and/or changes to the NCAA tournament structure that exclude anyone, so it's hard to create a timeline for any of these hypotheticals.
I too would like to believe BC is right but you're correct. It's not only about the money from the contracts, think about enrollment and prestige. We state presidents are concerned about enrollment possibilities when discussing expansion. If they can separate themselves from us, it only helps their brand and prestige on student recruitment. Not only are we left out, I think that mindset will keep even the non-football BE schools out. Take Nebraska, the Huskers are no longer the premier basketball program in their state. A separation in classifications with Creighton would change that with the stroke of that pen. The good news is there will be enough good programs left out that we should be something more relevant than D-2 is now.
They don't need us in the least. David vs Goliath simply becomes Northwestern vs Kentucky.
Help me understand these legal issues. There is nothing now that prevents schools from creating and joining new conferences. Why couldn't the current P5 schools simply create new conferences and then those conferences decide they are not going to be NCAA schools, rather a different organization that is created? For this example, the American Collegiate Athletic Conference. Why wouldn't a school or even conference be free to join the ACAA just as one can now move to the NAIA?