Sunday, April 21, 2013

Resolution of Big East Break-Up into "New" Big East and American Athletic Conference

I'm a little behind on this one. But after months of unfolding developments, the break-up of what has been known for nearly 35 years as the Big East Conference has been worked out. For starters, it should be noted that some of the top Big East basketball schools, including this year's men's national champion Louisiville, and Syracuse and Pitt, are in the process of moving to the Atlantic Coast Conference. Also, Rutgers is going to the Big 10.

As shown in the following diagram, the remaining Big East schools (and some set to join) will be splitting into two conferences. Shown in blue are what had been widely referred to as the "Catholic 7" (some of the Big East's longest-term members, whose athletic programs are focused on basketball), plus like-minded schools Creighton, Xavier, and Butler, who will be coming on board (Butler is private, like the other schools, but not Catholic-affiliated). This group will retain the name Big East.


The other schools, shown in red, consist of "leftover" schools from the current Big East, plus newly joining schools (mostly from Conference USA). Tulsa is a very recent addition. These schools will be known as the American Athletic Conference (AAC). My preferred name for this new conference would have been the "Big Triangle," as one would get from tracing the shape from Connecticut to Texas to Florida, to encompass all the schools. 

Schools in the new AAC play football in the NCAA's top classification (known as the Football Bowl Subdivision and formerly Division I-A) and have enjoyed various degrees of success on the gridiron. None of them would be considered among college football's elite, however.

I see the new Big East as being very stable, as it essentially is a new incarnation of a league that has been around since 1979, with a similar culture as the original.

In contrast, I would be very surprised if the American Athletic looked the same in five years as it does today. In general, circuits with large geographic distances between members have tended to be volatile. UConn and Cincinnati have been known to covet membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Further, though it may not currently seem likely, the two Texas schools, Southern Methodist (Dallas) and the University of Houston, conceivably could find themselves in the Big 12 (which currently has 10 institutions). U-of-H is building a new football stadium, which can only help the Cougars' prospects for joining the Big 12.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

New Big 10 Divisional Set-Up for 2014

The Big 10 conference will go to a purely geographical divisional set-up for football, East and West, in 2014, according to this article. Previously, the conference had focused on schools' historical winning percentages to create two divisions that equalized competitive balance as much as possible.