Originally posted by UofMemphis
View Post
Ultimately the AAC, and Big East before it, are reactionary. They are almost never proactive. And so while I would LOVE for WSU to join the AAC right now ... it would not surprise me at all for the AAC to hold off for a few years, wait until UConn and Cinci bolt, and then realize their basketball conference has fallen out of the top ten and try to overcompensate by chasing WSU, VCU, and other regularly successful teams. And at that point the AAC might not be an improvement.
Personally, I'd add three to five basketball-only schools and create a 14 or 16 team basketball conference, with WSU, VCU, Dayton, and maybe Saint Louis, George Washington, Davidson, etc. Maximize the value of basketball revenue, ride it to a strong TV contract and maximized NCAA shares, while simultaneously weakening the MVC, A10, and Big East (who will inevitably poach Dayton/SLU if the AAC doesn't first), all of the AAC's theoretical rivals at this point. Ride that strength to a gradual strengthening of the football side. But that kind of thinking would drive AAC fans crazy.
Don't get me wrong, I would do whatever I could to get WSU in the AAC right now. But the difference between that thread and every other thread I've seen on WSU joining the AAC over the last three years is hilariously large. We haven't changed at all, other than continuing to do what we've been doing -- the difference is that now AAC fans on there legitimately don't think they can poach teams from the A10. Proactively move from a position of strength, don't react by moving from a position of weakness. Unfortunately some people can't look logically at the future until they're in a position of weakness.
Comment