
ebwithsomefeedback
May 23, 2010 Jul 02, 2010 3 4
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Post-pocalypse, or Is It Postpone-ocalypse?
Dan Beebe wooed Texas (with Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and Texas Tech close behind) with promises of more unequal revenue sharing and Longhorn TV rights to boot. It was a gutsy move that almost definitely saved the Big 12 from being cannibalized by its neighbors. In the process the Big 12 significantly upgraded its basketball facet by shedding Nebraska (albeit with some history) and Colorado like basketball was at the heart of expansion.
Considering last week most people (including yours truly) had already written a Big 12 obituary, I couldn’t have dreamed of a more appealing resolution from the eyes of basketball (no offense to the dearly departed, but the conference just got exponentially more difficult, and everyone will play twice a year).
But for some reason, I don’t feel completely satisfied with the result…more after the jump.
With the seventh overall pick in the 2010 SB Nation NBA Mock Draft, the Detroit Pistons have selected Cole Aldrich, Center, Kansas Jayhawks.
Payne explains: The guy has the talent, size, character and determination to be a solid role player for many years to come. While he won't individually turn this team around, he could very well be the sizeable defensive stopper this team needs.
DeMarcus Cousins is the prize, and if he falls to us, a playoff berth will be ours to lose. But Cole Aldrich is a lock to run the blue collar bad-assery our team has needed since Ben left in '05. Don't expect highlight reels, all star nominations or turn-around performances out of Aldrich, expect hard-nosed defense, hard work and a game-in-game-out commitment to the things this team truly needs. Defense, rebounding, and shot-blocking
When you are a major sports conference for that long, you will create a lot of great moments. It’s just natural. And the Big Eight had its share. There was the Game of the Century, the classic football game between Oklahoma and Nebraska in 1971. There was the NCAA basketball championship game in Kansas City — the home of the Big Eight for all those years — between Oklahoma and Kansas. There was the fourth down game between Colorado and Missouri — classic in its own way. Oklahoma football won 47 games in a row. Jim Ryun and his Kansas teammates set world records in track. It’s always hard to say where things were INVENTED, but the NBA’s Triangle Offense was more or less perfected at Kansas State when Tex Winter coached there, and the football option play was more or less perfected at Nebraska and Oklahoma, and big time basketball recruiting was taken to a new level when Kansas recruited Wilt Chamberlain. And so on.
But, sadly, great moments are not why college conferences are put together. Rivalries are not why conferences are put together. Innovation, history, passion, tradition, cohesion, education — none of these are why conferences are put together. Oh, sure, it is nice to have all those things. Everybody wants those things. But in the end, conferences are like most other things. They are about maximizing revenue. It’s expensive to run an athletic department. It’s expensive to run a college. And the pressure to win sends the costs skyward. There’s an intense pressure to keep up, and to keep up you always need money, more money, even more money. For years, that meant teaming up with those schools who could excite the fan base and help draw the biggest crowds to football games (and, to a lesser extent, basketball games). Then, television came along and changed the formula.
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