Originally Posted by
Teo9969
Assuming this happens, there would be 7 spots left for the Big 4 to get to 16 teams. PAC has 4, B1G has 2, ACC has 1 (2 in football, but I assume ND would commit to either ACC or B1G moving forward.
Of the 57 spots taken up, California and North Carolina occupy 4 slots a piece, and Indiana and Florida occupy 3 slots a piece.
States with none are Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia, Wyoming. None of those states have storied football programs, but UConn and Kansas have storied basketball programs.
So my guess is Kansas to B1G is basically a lock, leaving 6 more spots. ACC has plenty of choices and if ND locks in with them instead of B1G, then UConn is probably the obvious choice - but if ND goes with B1G, they could get all "package deal" minded.
For the PAC they probably think from a 4 pod structure: 4 pod structure (CA, Pacific NW, Southwest, Mountain). Wyoming and Boise St. are the only remotely interesting football programs to add to the mountain. I imagine they create a southwest division probably based around 2 Texas schools getting picked up (TCU+TTU most likely). I think they'd be more inclined to add UNM and OSU than Wyoming and Boise. OSU or UNM could get edged out by a 3rd Texas school.
I think if OSU can't argue for getting into the PAC, they should very seriously consider pitching to other SEC area schools trying to build a consortium to pitch relegation for the SEC. Make the relegation conference probably 8 schools, and the SEC teams committing one-game per year vs the relegation teams. 4 up/4 down every 2 years.
I'm 99.5% sure that will never happen, but hey, you gotta look through every possible option if you're OSU.
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