Posts Tagged ‘realignment’

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BYU should flee the Big East-MWC love triangle

November 21, 2012

By Danny Holmgren

So you really thought that the conference re-alignment situation from 2011 had settled, did you? Not so fast there, my friend! After a relatively quiet 2012 season, conference shuffle-wise, the realignment talks are back in full swing this week.

Though nothing really happened immediately after it, the root cause of the 2012 version can be traced back to the BCS finally agreeing to a playoff. Under this playoff, the top 4 teams in the BCS rankings will be paired in a four team playoff with the winners squaring off in the National Championship Game. Under this re-structuring the Big East will no longer be defined as a “power conference” and will not have the automatic qualifying status it held under the previous 14 year reign of the BCS. How more Big East teams didn’t start abandoning ship before now is beyond me, but they’ve finally caught on and are on the move. With Rutgers officially announcing today that they are joining the Big 10 Conference, four of the Big East’s stronger football programs have now left he conference since last season. The Big East has scrambled to replace them, but frankly, adding San Diego State, SMU, and Memphis is hardly beefing up your resume. The Big East is hurting.

Meanwhile, BYU has just gone about it’s merry way in football independence. 2012 marked one of the toughest schedules that BYU has ever had and 2013 is even tougher. Nearly all games have been played on ESPN, who reports that ratings have been solid on the BYU broadcasts. That should bring hope to sweeten the $4M /year deal that BYU currently has with the worldwide leader.

Then the realignment fireworks started flying this weekend. Rutgers leaving the Big East and Maryland leaving the ACC normally wouldn’t have any impact on BYU, but in the case of the conferences fighting for survival, BYU suddenly has had itself voluntarily or involuntarily thrown back into the conference conundrum. Reports surfaced Monday afternoon that the Mountain West Conference has been in talks with BYU, SDSU, and Boise State to rejoin the conference, which would all but kill any hopes the Big East had of becoming a “power” conference again. After most BYU fans finished projectile vomiting over the idea of rejoining the dreaded MWC that they abandoned in 2011, they were left to wonder why the MWC would want them back and why BYU would ever even consider answering the call. Just last week BYU had scheduled a home-and-home with UNLV, many assumed as a sort of a slap in the face to MWC commissioner Craig Thompson. Does it make any sense to join any conference, much less rejoin the one that aggravated you to the point of secession?

That really depends on what the purpose of the BYU football program is and what the the conference can offer. To Coach Doman, the purpose of BYU football is to run pitch-option to the short side of the field on 3rd-and-long situations while wondering what might have been with Saint Heaps. To Coach Mendenhall, the purpose of the program is to be a missionary tool for the LDS Church, showing how young men can develop into men of character and integrity, while demonstrating a strong work ethic and commitment to team. To Athletic Director Tom Holmoe, BYU wants to be on the map as one of the elite football teams in the nation, a team that continuously recruits top talent, wins big games, is recognized and respected on a national level, and maybe even win a championship. In any of those situations, I can’t see how playing in the MWC is helpful in any way. Coach Mendenhall said it best when asked about the possibility after Monday night’s practice. “It’s about the same access we had before, the way I see it. We’ll still have to be undefeated, I think, to be considered.”

Re-joining the MWC does nothing for BYU in terms of TV contracts, TV revenue, scheduling, respect and recognition, competitiveness, or overall exposure to the program.What else is there? Beats me. I tend to think that the rumor of these discussions taking place are just that: rumor. If not, I hope that BYU will treat the MWC like the ex-girlfriend that you broke up with promising to stay friends, but really have no intention of ever speaking with again. Don’t take her calls, BYU. Don’t respond to her texts. If you see her walking across campus towards you, turn and walk the other way. You broke up with her for a reason.

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Week 2 Preview – BYU @ Texas

September 8, 2011

It’s week 2 of college football! This weekend’s matchup will pit the Cougars against the Texas Longhorns. The Cougars are 2-0 against Texas, from a two game deal that was played in 1987 and 1988.

What we know about Texas

Texas, not unlike Ole Miss, was down last year. They only managed a record of 5-7, despite starting out 3-0. It was also strange to note which games the Longhorns did win – as they beat up on cupcakes like Rice and FAU, and even took down then #5 Nebraska, but failed to beat the likes of Kansas State and UCLA. Texas will never be down for long though, and they are hoping to be back on track this year. They started out the year with a more impressive win over Rice than they had last year. While the score was similar, Texas’ offense managed to roll up about 200 yards more than last year, while the Texas D held rice to one less touchdown. Still, the Texas QB, Garrett Gilbert, didn’t look very sharp, only going 13/23 passing.

What we know about BYU

BYU of course, opened the season with a win against Ole Miss. It was a come-from-behind win; in fact, the greatest come from behind win since Bronco Mendenhall became the head coach in 2005. BYU’s defense was dominant throughout the game, and especially in the fourth quarter, as the Ole Miss offense grew tired, the BYU defense was still sharp and had the ability to make the plays necessary to win the game. Not only did the defense score a touchdown, but they held the Ole Miss offense to a pair of field goals. The Cougar offense was shaky. Many plays were broken or hurried because of bad snaps, and Heaps threw many passes that were not on target, including a pick-6 that was a half a second away from being a BYU touchdown. Hopefully having the first game done with will have worked out some of the quirks for the new offense – they should look much better this Saturday.

Keys to the game

Domanation. The offense appeared to lack energy, and much of that had to do with the tempo of the play calling. BYU averaged more than 30 seconds between plays against Ole Miss. Brandon Doman admitted that he needs to step it up – and he does. Look for the Cougars to have quicker play calling, which should translate to keeping Heaps in rhythm, and keeping the defense more on its heels.

Jake Heaps. Texas is a better team than Ole Miss, and while the Texas offense may be somewhat of a question mark, the defense is not. Heaps will have to make more accurate throws than he did last week, and he may have less time to do it. Hoffman and Apo will need to do better at getting open – wherever they happen to be on the field.

The Rush Attack. JJ DiLuigi and Bryan Kariya made up most of the yards last week, because Josh Quezada had a migraine. I do hope the “Juice” is back this week, because he is a dynamic runner that could really break out some big plays. Having three guys capable of carrying the ball each play also helps keep each of them more fresh for later in the game.

Special Teams. Last week, Jacobsen and Hague averaged 26 yards per kick return, and Falslev returned one punt for 27 yards. It’s amazing to watch, and I will be excited to see if these guys can pull off some more big plays against Texas. A concern on special teams is the short to mid range kicking game. Justin Sorensen has the ability to boot the ball 60+ yards accurately, but he is very inconsistent in the short range. Last week he missed a 31 yarder. Honestly, if the game were on the line and we were in range for a short kick, I’d rather have Heaps in there throwing the ball to win the game. If Sorensen can’t improve quickly, BYU will have to look elsewhere for their short range field goals.

Bronco D. This is the area I am not worried about at all. The defense has been truly amazing since Bronco fired Jaime Hill after the Utah State game last year. Even the top rushing teams in the country struggle to reach 100 yards rushing against this defense. BYU will shut down the Texas run game and force the Longhorns to beat them through the air. There will be plenty of pressure on Garrett Gilbert though, and how he deals with that pressure will make or break the game for Texas.

Prediction

This game is a toss-up. I did choose it as one of two BYU losses on my season preview, but I do feel that it could go either way. I think it will be a close game, with a big play being the deciding factor. I think Texas will be surprised at how difficult this game is for them, but I think Texas will win the game 23-17.

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BYU: A fanbase divided

August 15, 2011

In what seems a very short time, the BYU fans that had been united in the move to independence have been divided by a potential opportunity to join the Big 12 Conference. I conducted a poll of my twitter followers over the weekend, and here you can see the results:

While the poll represents the minds of just 72 individuals, it at least is a fair sampling of the division which has formed among the BYU faithful. There were 25 votes to remain independent, and 29 votes to join the Big 12, should the offer come in the wake of a Texas A&M departure. An additional 18 votes would like to see BYU in a stable BCS conference, sooner or later. The 25 votes to remain independent represent just under 35% of those polled, which means a full 65% of fans are looking for a move to a BCS conference..

On the surface, these numbers are not necessarily divisive, but a quick perusal of my twitter timeline can reveal a bitterness regarding the potential decision to join or not join the Big 12; a decision which BYU administrators may soon face. A simple exchange of differing opinions can quickly escalated into accusations of faithlessness, idiocy, and at least one post mentioned a riot. Emotions are running high on both sides, and it is easy to let a disagreement get out of hand and to let the remarks become hurtful. The following is an attempt to give a fair and unemotional look at the pros and cons of both sides.

BYU to the Big 12

Those on the Big 12 side cite the obvious benefits: inclusion in the BCS, a better home for BYU’s non-football sports, the Big 12 bowl contracts, and the ability to play for a conference championship. The picture is a nice one: the league that had been prepared to include BYU in 1996, but was made to include Baylor, may finally be able to make good with their original plan. BYU would have the ability to play teams like Texas and Oklahoma in football, as well as Kansas and Kansas State in basketball. There is also the thought that since Texas has its own network and ESPN deal, that BYU would be able to retain their TV deal and broadcast rights if they join the Big 12.

The downsides to joining the Big 12? Apparent conference instability, as two schools (Nebraska and Colorado) have departed the conference, and another (Texas A&M) is reportedly seeking to leave as well. Big 12ers will point out that adding BYU may create the stability the conference needs, and if it doesn’t, BYU can always fall back on Independence. Many pro-independence fans feel that breaking the commitment with the WCC would not be fair, as Tom Holmoe made it clear that the WCC was “not a stepping stone” to a greater conference. Big 12ers have expressed two sentiments regarding this, 1) that moving to the Big 12 is worth breaking the WCC deal, or 2) that the WCC will not care because they will recognize that BYU simply cannot pass up this opportunity.

BYU the Independent

The pro-Independence crowd cites the total control which BYU currently enjoys over its own program, as well as exposure for the church. That exposure comes through playing a nation-wide schedule, the unprecedented number of games to be broadcast on ESPN networks, as well as the guarantee of the ESPN deal and retaining broadcast rights for BYUtv (which is not necessarily guaranteed in the Big 12, whose TV deal is with FOX).

The downsides to independence? The Big 12ers point to the WAC heavy schedule and bottom-tier bowl contracts which BYU has been able to obtain, as well as the lack of BCS access (as BYU has no claim on a BCS bowl game, only the national championship, should then end the season ranked #1 or 2 in the BCS). Indy fans will also point out that the WAC-heavy schedule ends after 2012, and the bowl contracts will also improve, as the beginning of independence required a “take what you can get” mentality.

In the end, joining the Big 12 and remaining Independent each have great benefits. Whether one will outweigh the other, we will likely never know, because in choosing one, we may not ever know where the other may have taken us. Both sides have valid arguments for why theirs is the right choice to make. Both sides include risk.

If a decision is made by the BYU administration regarding a move to the Big 12, I hope that the fans will be able to once again be united and support that decision, accepting that the decision will be made by those that have more knowledge than we do. One thing all fans can already agree on? BYU is in a much better place than a year ago.

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Conference Realignment: Who’s next?

August 3, 2011

There is a lot of talk out there about conference realignment. New rumors are passed around every day about which school is unhappy and might flee to greener pastures. The rumor-mill is a popular place though – we’re all listening closely- because we’re all dying to know…Who’s next?

It’s helpful to look at conference realignment/expansion in terms of a chess match. In chess, your strategy should be created based on the imbalances of the particular game you’re playing. For example, you could have a material imbalance (you’re ahead or behind in points), or a space imbalance (you or your opponent controls more of the board). The imbalances dictate your strategy, and allow you to see how the game should be played out.

As we look at the college football landscape, we can see the effect that imbalances have had already.

The greatest imbalance of late has been that the SEC is the undisputed king of college football. Five straight national championships belong to SEC teams. Obviously, other conferences have tried to produce contenders in that time, but they have come up short. There is an imbalance. So the weak will grab for power.

The top conferences last year, according to Mark Schlabach, were (BCS in bold):

  1. SEC
  2. Big 10
  3. Big 12
  4. Pac 10
  5. ACC
  6. Big East
  7. MWC
  8. WAC

The Shifting Imbalances

Since the article was published shortly before the majority of realignment began, it’s a helpful starting point.

When Nebraska shifted to the Big 10, what happened? You take a strong team from the (yes, assumed) third best conference, and add it to the second best. There is now a greater gap, or imbalance between them.

The biggest player in conference expansion has been the Pac 10/12. Why? Do you remember all of those USC championships a few years ago? Yeah, it’s been awhile. And no self-respecting BCS conference is going to settle for being 4th best. So Larry Scott sees the imbalance and finds a potential weakness in his opponent. If he managed to take six top teams from the Big 12, what a coup that would be! It certainly would have vaulted the Pac [16] to the top of the conference heap. The combined strength of the Pac 10 and the Big 12? The plan was genius. At the very least you have devoured one of the conferences that was ahead of you.

But it didn’t work out. Dan Beebe convinces Texas, and thereby the rest of the Big 12, to stay, sit, and wait. In the end, the Pac 10 does take Colorado from them, and acquires Utah from the MWC. While not the move Larry Scott wanted, he has added talent to his conference, and a championship game, while the Big 12 has lost two teams and their own championship game. The Pac 12 has leap-frogged the Big 12.

Now, the MWC has had this little brother syndrome for as long as anyone can remember. They are the conference that is just not quite good enough to play with the big boys and have a full share. But they’re always so close, especially when you consider the football talent of the Big East. So when the Pac 12 took Utah, creating imbalance, Craig Thompson took Boise St. from the WAC. The divide between the MWC and WAC had never been wider, and Boise was a good enough replacement for Utah. Balance restored.

Then BYU went independent. And TCU went to the Big East. These moves widened the divide between BCS and non-BCS, by removing top-MWC talent and giving some of it to the Big East. Thompson again grabs for as much strength as he can, and adds Nevada, Fresno, and later, Hawaii from the WAC. Not quite balance restored, but the MWC just took out it’s next closest competitor for good, and they’re still the “just outside the BCS” conference.

Here’s a look at a possible conference ranking based on the recent moves:

  1. SEC
  2. Big 10
  3. Pac 12
  4. Big 12
  5. ACC
  6. Big East
  7. MWC
  8. C-USA

Who isn’t moving?

Conferences and teams that do not perceive imbalances or who feel that the imbalances are in their favor will not choose to move. Here are the main ones:

The SEC and Big 10 Why? They’re at the top. Once someone proves otherwise, on the field, then further expansion for these conferences will look reasonable.

The ACC Why? They just don’t seem to have that drive to want to be at the top. With all of the changes around them, they seem to have been satisfied with the status quo, and so far, no one has come looking for their members.

BYU Why? The obvious answer is, because they just did. The not-so-obvious answer is that they simply are better off as an independent than they could be in a conference. BCS access and difficulty scheduling seem to be the biggest downsides. If any BCS teams choose to go independent in the near future (maybe Texas?), it seems likely that instead of the Notre Dame exception, the BCS will simply create a blanket “independents” rule, which would benefit BYU. The scheduling difficulties have been eased somewhat by the partnership with ESPN. I could see BYU accepting a conference invitation in the future, if said conference would allow BYU to retain their TV deal. It’s not likely, but given the current landscape, it can’t be completely ruled out.

What Moves are Ahead

The Pac 12 did not meet their goals last year. Larry Scott’s vision was for the Pac [whatever] to become the premier conference in college football. They didn’t. To them, there is still an imbalance that they are going to fight to correct. The Pac 12 will expand again. It’s likely that they will approach some of the same Big 12 schools; whoever they do add will have to be high in talent. Simply having 16 teams does not make you the best.

The Big 12 should make a move. If they continue this “sit and wait for it all to blow over” strategy, they will cease to be a conference. The college football world perceives the Big 12 to be weak and on the verge of collapse, with rumors of Texas’ possible independence and Texas A&M wanting a spot in the SEC, etc. If the Big 12 does not make a move to strengthen themselves, they will either get picked over by other conferences, or will fall apart from within.

You can argue all day long about the “other sports” having to be good enough to compete in a new conference, but football rules college sports. Boise State is the hottest commodity out there. The last remaining non-AQ powerhouse (that is to say, they own more BCS wins than most BCS teams have). A BCS conference will take Boise State before conference realignment is done. It would make the most sense to add Boise in a Pac-16 deal, because it lies so close to the conference footprint, but the Big East (come on, if TCU is East…) may take them as well.

While a conference championship game adds a dangerous, extra hurdle for that undefeated team to go through before they reach the national championship game, it does seem to be the going standard now. Conferences with a championship game are generally perceived as strong, and those without are perceived as weak. And honestly, who enjoys naming a champion based on tie-breaks? It’s great for the fans and the voters reward those teams that face tough conference championships before bowl season. The (actual or perceived) imbalance here is the power of that game and 12 teams behind it. The pressure is on for conferences like the Big 12, Big East, and the MWC to get up to 12 members and add a championship game. And if (when) the Pac 12 expands to 16, all hell will break loose.

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MWC Expansion Expedited

August 19, 2010

As if the summer hadn’t yet seen enough expansion excitement, with Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, and Boise State already changing the college landscape, the frenzy was renewed again today amid developing rumors that BYU will soon announce at least its football independence.

The Salt Lake Tribune confirmed via a source in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) that BYU was seeking membership in that conference for its non-football sports. Reports also indicated that BYU is withholding its decision until it hears from the NCAA regarding Notre Dame-like special access to the BCS, as well as permission from leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which has the ultimate decision making power regarding BYU.

Seemingly in response to the Cougars’ impending bolt from the MWC, league commissioner Craig Thompson invited the Nevada Wolfpack and the Fresno St. Bulldogs to join. Both teams accepted by late this evening, but when Mr. Thompson took questions at the press conference, the majority were regarding the future of BYU, a subject that Mr. Thompson was reluctant to discuss, recommending that those questions be directed to BYU. Again and again he stressed that the actions of today had nothing to do with the rumors surrounding BYU, and that the invitation of Nevada and Fresno St. had been a long time coming. Surely this was in a contingency plan somewhere, but to imagine that August 18th was circled on the MWC calendar as the day this would all go down? Not likely.

So here we are. The MWC has lost Utah, and added Boise St, Fresno St, and Nevada. BYU may go independent. The WAC is down to 6 teams; only one of which had a winning record last year. All we know for sure is that whether BYU ultimately decides to stay or go, more dominoes will be falling in the next few days, and we’ll all be waiting anxiously to hear the word from Provo and from around the country as the expansion frenzy is renewed.

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