MoValley John wrote:TylerDurden wrote:
Nebraska left for television revenue and academic association. Don't be misguided by bar stool chatter.
Tyler, you are wrong, in fact the reasons you cited are exactly that, bar stool chatter. Nebraska was actually in favor of the money distribution in the Big 12, they were a winner in the money distribution. The fact of the matter is that Nebraska argued for equal distribution of money only as a distraction and to polarize themselves with the "have nots" against Texas.
Nebraska did not leave for academic association, they were close to the last school in Big 12 academically, they are clearly the bottom feeders in the B1G.
Nebraska was essentially forced out of the Big 12. Colorado left, that was okay, but the rumors were very credible that Texas and Oklahoma were bolting for the Pac. Mizzou all but announced that they were leaving for the Big 10, if any of these dominoes fell, Nebraska was doomed. Dan Beebe tried to force Nebraska's hand into staying in the Big 12 by forcing them to sign away their third tier rights for the next decade. At that point, Nebraska countered by saying that they would sign away their third tier rights if Texas would do the same. Beebe and Texas refused. At this point, Nebraska was between a rock and a hard place, they had no guarantee that Texas and Oklahoma would stay, noise from Missouri was getting very loud. Nebraska had no bargaining power in the Big 12 and if Texas, Oklahoma and Mizzou bolted, Nebraska was screwed, they did what they had to do.
So we agree, it was about the television revenue. It was about the money. It's always about the money. When people say it's not about the money, it's about the money. The entire Big 12 instability was about money. Nebraska saw an opportunity to get a better bottom line and took it. Frankly its so clear that I'm surprised this is even a point of debate.
Also, I'm not sure by what standard you guys are talking about Nebraska's academics. Are you talking US News rankings? Until last year they were a member of the Association of American Universities. They were members for more than 100 years. Those are the best research schools in the country. It doesn't get better than that. The Big Ten schools are all members. Only Iowa State, Kansas, Missouri, Texas and Texas A&M were members in the Big 12. Nebraska doesn't get into the Big 10 without it. University presidents care about this.
A school doesn't leave a league because its offices are in a certain city. It doesn't leave a league because the league championship game is in a certain city. It leaves for financial opportunities (primarily) and whatever the school president wants to do with academics/marketing the university. Sometimes those things go hand-in-hand and sometimes they don't and the money rules.