but this isn’t happening in a vacuumBasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Fri Jul 23, 2021 9:12 amHow big of a role does the KC market really play in something like this? Big 10 already has Chicago and Indy (and others).NewtonHawk11 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 23, 2021 9:05 amFOH with that. The KC market is a good one. It's a big college sports town as well as a sports town in general. KU is the program in KC.hartjack8 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 23, 2021 9:01 am Texas annually puts nearly 100,000 fans in the seats for home football games, a top 10 program in terms of attendance. Oklahoma is mid-80,000s, a top 15 attendance program. After that, no Big 12 school has averaged 60,000 fans per home game from 2017-19. Iowa State, West Virginia, Texas Tech and Oklahoma State all have been in the mid-to-high 50,000s; Kansas State, Baylor and TCU are the next tier; and Kansas is its own mud flat of apathy.
The only other blueblood revenue program in the conference is Kansas men’s basketball, and that comes with two problems attached: it is a compliance tire fire at the moment, deep into a major NCAA infractions case; as we learned very clearly a decade ago, basketball really doesn’t matter. Football matters, and Kansas is the worst Power 5 football program in the country—and has its own compliance issues.
I would watch ND very closely and hope they do not go to B10
SEC Texas and OU
Big 10 ND and ISU
ACC WVA and UCF
PAC 12 Baylor TCU TTECH and OSU
Mountain West KU KSTATE
Being the worst Power 5 football program can lead to some hard no's
Get your pessimistic self outta here. It's exciting for KU. Looking at getting to a conference with better footing than the Big 12 in less than a few years.
it’s not like KU is the only choice...the other conferences are going to be comparing the pros and cons of each potential add. in that scenario, basketball prominence and tv market absolutely matter