http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/blog/dennis-dodd/21393175/remaining-big-east-schools-could-be-worth-40-million-per-yearA 13-team conference consisting of the remaining Big East football-playing schools would be worth approximately $40 million per year, multiple industry sources told CBSSports.com.
That would net the 13 members approximately $3 million each annually. However, with the news only hours old that Big East private basketball schools are breaking away, nothing is certain. If the league officially dissolves, it could be that “everybody heads for the hills,” according to one highly-placed source....
...The value of a new contract -- up or down -- hinges on the number of all-sports members, specifically Boise State. Whether the school stays with the diminished league or goes back to the Mountain West -- its home from 2010-12 -- is still to be determined....
http://voices.idahostatesman.com/2012/12/13/bmurphy/with_big_east_verge_collapse_what_will_boise_state_do#storylink=cpy...So what are the Broncos' options?
• Remain in the Big East: The television contract could still generate more money than the Mountain West deal and give the Broncos greater exposure across the country. The league could still swipe a few teams from the Mountain West. The Big East has BCS AQ status in 2013 — unlike the Mountain West – so the Broncos are likely to play at least one season in the Big East.
Even if the basketball schools leave, the Big East could still have a league that sponsors football.
• Return to the Mountain West: The league is willing to take Boise State and San Diego State back. It would give the conference 12 members, allowing it to stage a conference championship game and renegotiate its television contract with CBS. The Mountain West could grow even more, taking UTEP and Tulsa from Conference USA in an attempt to weaken that league. (Or it could attempt to grab Houston and SMU from the Big East.) The Broncos would also have to bring its non-football programs back into the Mountain West from the Big West.
• Go independent: BYU signed a television contract with ESPN and has been able to schedule enough attractive games to make independence work. Idaho and New Mexico State are moving to independence next season. The Broncos have always had a good relationship with ESPN and should be able to sign a decent TV deal. Scheduling and bowl agreements could be problems, and coach Chris Petersen has always valued winning conference championship.
Dodd's story makes it clear that there is a television market for Boise State football.
The Broncos would have no problem getting games with BYU (already scheduled), Idaho and New Mexico State. But coming up with nine more games could get ugly.
• Join the Big 12 (or Pac-12): If Kustra isn't burning up the phones to both conferences then he is not doing his job. If only it were that easy, however. The Broncos are way down the list of teams the Big 12 would consider and the Pac-12 has given no indication that it wants to expand again. The Broncos' lack of a TV market, its overall athletic program and its academic ranking and reputation are all impediments to a move to either league. The Broncos' main (only?) selling point is a stellar football program that draws ratings and has a (limited) national following.
Boise, as always, is the lynchpin in how things develop.
Of the above, the last two options aren't really options.
Because I think Boise will perceive they can make just as much $ from association with their MWC brethren and they can with what's left of the Big East, I'm with those who think Boise and SDSU return to MWC.
Do Houston and SMU get invited to the MWC? I think so. For the MWC, adding top 10 markets like those is only logical. For Houston and SMU, being in a league with Boise and thus, what is perceived to most likely to be the strongest Go5 league, is only logical.
I
don't see the same rationale for MWC adding UTEP and Tulsa.
Does BYU get tempted to join the MWC with Boise returning? I remain unconvinced. I think the forces that drove them to decide on independence haven't changed, and that they're loathe to put themselves in a division below Utah.
So... I'm on the 14-school MWC bandwagon.
Back on this side of the country, UConn, Cincy, Temple, and Memphis would love to keep their basketball with the Catholics, and one would think that the Catholics would perceive value in keeping those 4 regardless of UConn and Cincy's flirtaciousness with the ACC. Here's why I think that... what I'm reading in these quotes from Catholic school officials tells me that this move by the Catholics at this point in time is largely a matter of not wanting to be in a political posture where they are at the mercy of the current and newbie BE football schools. Having these four big-time basketball schools is not going to put them into any political jeopardy, and moreover, they can throw UConn and Cincy (the two voting schools) a bone in exchange for supporting whatever contingencies the Catholics want--most importantly perhaps, the Big East name and trademark.
So, put me down for a new Big East basketball conference that includes the Hardwood Seven, the Football Refugee Four, plus some number of other basketball-only schools.
The Football Refugee Four (UConn, Cincy, Temple, and Memphis), then, remain with the Big East Wannabees (Tulane, UCF, USF, ECU and Navy) in a football-only league that adds Army (to pair with football-only Navy) and six others to the mix to get to 16... not 16 for the sake of 16 but rather to get to 10 for all other sports so that the conference has some viability beyond football.
Naturally, the established CUSA schools fit that... UTEP, Rice, Tulsa, Southern Miss, UAB, and yes, Marshall.
For football...
North Division: UConn, Army, Navy, Temple, Cincinnati, Marshall, Memphis, ECU
South Division: UAB, USF, UCF, Southern Miss, Tulane, Rice, Tulsa, UTEP
So, for basketball and other sports...
West Division: UTEP, Rice, Tulsa, Tulane, Southern Miss
East Division: UAB, USF, UCF, ECU, Marshall