Wait...how many on each side? |
Of course, people like Jim Delaney don't quickly admit to such mistakes. My favorite part of all this was that they came up with the division names and then, accordingly to Delaney, didn't think much about it after that. He also said things about how he wasn't sure everyone didn't like the names -- just people "who hit the send button." Errr, okay.
Anyway, it was voted on and the realignment will happen, beginning with 2014, so you're stuck with Legends and Leaders for one more season. Then Purdue moves to the West and deprives me of regularly seeing the Boilermakers in New Brunswick, NJ against Rutgers.
Brian Bennett of the EsPN Big Ten Blog has a column about the winners and losers, and includes this gem towards the end that melts a little bit of my cold, dark heart (bold emphasis, mine):
Winner: The SEC
The Big Ten joins the Pac-12 and Big 12 as major conferences playing nine conference games... The SEC remains at eight games. Playing more conference games is great for fans and TV, but it also means more losses throughout the league and makes it harder for teams to go unbeaten -- the Big Ten champ will have to run a gantlet of 10 conference games, including the title game. The SEC will continue to benefit from the perception that its teams beat one another up during league play while also playing fewer conference games. That could have big ramifications on the selection process for the upcoming College Football Playoff.
Heh. Get 'em, Brian.
U Maryland is about 80 minutes from me. I guess I'll be seeing the Boilers there about once every 4 years. Oh well...
ReplyDeletePerhaps they made the lousy division names on purpose--so
ReplyDelete1) people would say, hey, expansion would shake these up, and thus be more receptive to it
2) people would be entirely too grateful that they got this obvious bit right
New Coke vs. Coca Cola Classic.
ReplyDeleteEnough said.
COD -- once every 8, right? Since they're alternate locations and meet every 4...
ReplyDeleteTheoretically, it should be once every six years, once the nine-game schedule takes effect: six in-division games plus IU leaves two games among six teams. Evenly rotated, that'd be a home-and-home every six years.
ReplyDeleteBut ... given that there will be "a lot of competition between teams at the top of either division", Purdue will be playing UM and OSU less often; those games have to go somewhere. It wouldn't surprise me if Purdue ended up playing Maryland twice in four years and Ohio twice in ten.