Pavlovsdog
Member
With regards to the Big Ten being the most prestigious, I think Aaron would probably admit that the SEC is currently the best football conference in college football and its not even close. But with regards to revenues, academic standing, exposure, etc then the Big Ten is arguably the best (or most prestigious).
I'm a Nebraska fan (living in Cheyenne) and I was thrilled with the move. The Big 12 was a mistake from the start....I understand that economically the old Big 8 was probably doomed too, but at least that was a real partnership with at least one marquee game (OU vs NU, obviously) each year and was still going strong in the 90's, even with OU being down. Nebraska was winning national championships, Colorado was still a legit top 10 program and Kansas State was beginning its rise to national prominence. And with Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri all having basketball success it was a strong conference in the two major sports. If the Big 8 had made it clear from the start that they were expanding to 12 with the addition of the Texas schools and had made the Big 12 a conference of equals perhaps things would be different.
But from the start there were changes that hurt the northern schools and shifted the power and focus of the conference south. And Texas did a very good (or bad, depending on your perspective) job of leveraging its huge fan base and media markets to take control. What really surprised me was how the old Big 8 schools couldn't put up any real resistance.
At any rate, I'm so glad Nebraska managed to get out when it had the opportunity. Being able to follow the latest realignment drama from the security of the Big Ten was a nice change of pace after the previous year's excitement when it seemed NU could be left with nothing.
I'm a Nebraska fan (living in Cheyenne) and I was thrilled with the move. The Big 12 was a mistake from the start....I understand that economically the old Big 8 was probably doomed too, but at least that was a real partnership with at least one marquee game (OU vs NU, obviously) each year and was still going strong in the 90's, even with OU being down. Nebraska was winning national championships, Colorado was still a legit top 10 program and Kansas State was beginning its rise to national prominence. And with Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri all having basketball success it was a strong conference in the two major sports. If the Big 8 had made it clear from the start that they were expanding to 12 with the addition of the Texas schools and had made the Big 12 a conference of equals perhaps things would be different.
But from the start there were changes that hurt the northern schools and shifted the power and focus of the conference south. And Texas did a very good (or bad, depending on your perspective) job of leveraging its huge fan base and media markets to take control. What really surprised me was how the old Big 8 schools couldn't put up any real resistance.
At any rate, I'm so glad Nebraska managed to get out when it had the opportunity. Being able to follow the latest realignment drama from the security of the Big Ten was a nice change of pace after the previous year's excitement when it seemed NU could be left with nothing.