ts1227;893008 wrote:Baylor basically said they would drop it if OU stayed put, so A&M will be pissed (regardless of if they have a reason).
There's no way that Baylor would be able to win their suit against Texas A&M if OU and OK St both left and they didn't sue them as well. Besides, forcing TAMU to stay won't even matter if those other two schools leave. If OU and OK St head west, Baylor will either have to sue all three schools or drop their suit against TAMU. They will drop their suit.
OneBuckeye;893027 wrote:They have bigger fish in mind. OU's academics apparently don't align with the BIG10. (But I didn't think Nebraska's did either)
Nebraska is the lowest ranked school in the B1G academically, but they have been climbing in recent years and they weren't too far behind the rest of the schools. They were also a member of the AAU when invited to join, however, they were also recently the first school ever kicked out of the AAU. People try and downplay the academic side of expansion, and probably because it doesn't matter to most conferences, but the B1G is the second highest rated D-1 conference academically behind the Ivy League, and they would like to keep it that way.
se-alum;893035 wrote:Texas and Notre Dame would be great, but I don't see it happening. I can't imagine the B1G would let Texas have their own network without distributing equally among the teams, and I can't see Texas wanting to share.
I believe Texas has a clause in their contract that allows them out of the Longhorn Network if they join a conference. ESPN would then likely make the Longhorn Network into just a regional ESPN. If Texas could join a conference with equal revenue sharing and still earn more than they are now, I think they would join. Besides, not being allowed to carry HS football games and only having one carrier currently, it's very possible that the LHN isn't going to be as viable as originally estimated, and therefore, it's likely that they aren't going to make as much money as promised.