Jacobs4Heisman wrote:Me scared.
Yeah. When '87 and O&B and RocketFootball are all being coy, that's just unsettling.
I'm just going to state some hunches and intiutition here. Hopefully, '87 or someone will come out of their shell a bit more.
First, if the Big East's football teams are beckoning, I think it's obvious any member of the MAC would have to jump at that opportunity and hope they can make the numbers work.
Also, it makes sense to me that the Big East's football teams may go after one new member or four new members at some point. The scheduling sweet spots are 9 and 12.
It seems to me their strongest candidates would be Central Florida, Memphis and East Carolina -- maybe in that order -- and I guess when we get down to that fourth spot, maybe that's the point at which a MAC program could come under consideration.
One also might be able to make the case for two MAC members and two of those three Conference USA programs.
I'm not going to dwell on which potential members of the MAC, but Temple (all sports) comes to mind, Toledo comes to mind, and one could make a case for Miami, Ohio or (stretching) Northern Illinois, I suppose.
Is this the scenario you guys are all alluding to?
Now, on Conference USA for a moment:
I continue to believe that Marshall's decision to join was a style choice, that
in financial terms they do not truly come out ahead (more revenue but more travel) and that, for them, the choice came down to picking a set of friends they wanted to hang out with.
As of today, here is the simple way to think of the choice. It's:
Memphis
Marshall
East Carolina
Central Florida
Southern Mississippi
Alabama-Birmingham
Versus your favorite six MAC teams.
In my view, Miami, Ohio and Toledo (and, pushing it to six, personally speaking: Northern Illinois, Western Michigan and Buffalo) are more important to me as league mates.
I respect those Conference USA programs -- Memphis has a killer hoops program and most of the rest are role models in terms of where we want to go in football. But they are also a long freakin' way away.
And let's keep in mind, one or several of those programs needs to disappear for there to be an opening.
Take one of those out -- Central Florida or Memphis -- and do we want to be in that bunch? If Bowling Green could be in that division, sans Central Florida or Memphis, would we want to?
I say no. No way, in fact.
I sense a vague frustration among fans at many MAC schools at how big the conference has gotten and with certain laggard members.
For instance, I personally hate it whenever we have to play Eastern Michigan in anything. It brings me down. I don't respect Eastern Michigan. I think it's silly to think Eastern Michigan is ever going to be a program most of the rest of us look up to. I believe admitting them to the MAC was a mistake 31 years ago, and it remains a mistake today.
One thought I've had is addition by subtraction. What if the ADs and/or presidents at Miami, Ohio, Bowling Green and Toledo could sit in a room and figure out which other five programs they want to be associated with? Go into a room, redesign the MAC -- and work out a nine school all-sports league that would stand the test of time, much as the MAC has for the past 60 years.
Part of me wonders if it would be presumputious to put Bowling Green in that room. History says we belong in that room, with that group, but does the present? Yikes, that's a scary thing to think about.
I also wonder how you really figure out the other five.
And I wonder if the MAC really is too big? Is that really the problem? Are the strong programs in this league giving up too much by associating themselves with some of the others?
Is there any way to save this collection of universities that have historically hung together and get it to a point where members won't want to jump just for the sake of jumping?
I do agree with '87 and O&B this far: You start peeling off some of the MAC's best programs and we will be in a world of hurt if left behind.