Posted on Wed, Aug. 06, 2003
Where will TCU land?
ACC expansion spins off in Fort Worth
By Wendell Barnhouse
Star-Telegram Staff Writer
Football 2003 starts Thursday at TCU when players report for the first day of preseason practice.
The Frogs are primed to defend their Conference USA title and reach double figures in victories for consecutive seasons for the first time since 1932-33.
That's the on-field story. Off the field, the next four to five months figure to be an ongoing drama of rumors, reports and run-arounds involving conference realignments and where TCU might wind up. For the school, its athletic department and its administrators, these are the Days Of Living On The Edge.
"This is a profound time for college football," said William Koehler, TCU provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. "The conference alignment issue is on the table, and that alone determines if you'll have a chance to play for a national championship. ... There are any number of variables out there that nobody is able to predict right now."
TCU is poised to take a quantum leap forward in national stature by moving to a conference affiliated with the Bowl Championship Series. Or, it could throw it in reverse and retreat to a conference even further removed from the BCS.
"There are a lot of variables that we don't have answers for," Mountain West Conference commissioner Craig Thompson said. "And without knowing those answers, in particular what form the next BCS contract will take, knowing what's going to happen is nearly impossible."
TCU could move up if:
• The Big East Conference decides to expand to 10 or 12 teams and looks as far west as Fort Worth. That would put TCU in a conference that is currently a BCS member.
• It receives an invitation to join the Mountain West. Of the conferences currently in flux, the MWC figures to be the one controlling its own destiny. And if the Big East dissolves, an expanded MWC could find itself as the sixth BCS conference.
• C-USA turns aggressor and adds two schools from the Big East (Pittsburgh? West Virginia?). That could move C-USA into the BCS neighborhood. The problem is convincing schools currently in a BCS league -- even one that's threatened -- to leave for a non-BCS conference.
TCU could regress if:
• Louisville and Cincinnati leave C-USA. TCU would be one of eight remaining football schools in a league just a notch above the Sun Belt Conference. Finding replacements for Louisville and Cincinnati could be difficult. Marshall and Central Florida of the Mid-American Conference could be attractive, but they wouldn't solve C-USA's troubling geographic spread and probably wouldn't make a difference in BCS membership.
• It has no choice but to accept an invitation from the Western Athletic Conference. The WAC wants to add two schools in the Central Time Zone in order to form two six-team divisions.
"We want to go in a direction where we can maintain a national presence in football and men's and women's basketball while continuing our excellence in all other sports," TCU's Koehler said. "As far as football, we have goals of being in the top 25 year in, year out.
"The problem with certain conferences is that your alignment with those leagues can hurt your national status. That would give us pause in considering which way to go."
The Atlantic Coast Conference's summertime raid on the Big East has made the Big East the first domino in the realignment scenario. Miami and Virginia Tech move from the Big East to the ACC in 2004. By 2005, the Big East must add at least two schools with Division I-A football.
The Big East's apparent targets are Louisville and Cincinnati. Big East presidents plan to meet later this month to decide the direction of a conference that could see its football schools go one way and its basketball schools another. It could be two to three months before the Big East formally issues invitations.
Koehler recently talked with C-USA commissioner Britton Banowsky and asked that the league become more proactive.
"I guess the reality and perception is that we're sitting and waiting to see what the Big East does," Koehler said. "I think we need to look at the issues that might be encouraging schools to consider leaving C-USA. Maybe there are rules changes in C-USA that could keep teams from leaving."
Instead of waiting for the Big East to invite a few C-USA schools, C-USA could be the aggressor and try to entice a couple of Big East schools to defect. But C-USA presidents haven't made a decision regarding expansion.
WAC commissioner Karl Benson has made it clear that he would like to add either TCU, Houston or Tulane to his conference.
The eight-team MWC will hold meetings in September to discuss expansion issues. If the MWC decides to add one, two or four teams, that likely would impact the WAC's current membership.
If the MWC expands, it likely would target WAC members Fresno State and Hawaii, and possibly Nevada and Boise State, too. Losing any of those schools would weaken the WAC and make joining it less attractive.
To that end, Benson recently asked the 10 WAC schools to sign five-year commitments to not leave the conference.
"We've certainly thought about [C-USA going away]," Koehler said. "But we've not had any conversations [with other conferences]. We're going to look at anything, but what we look at often changes from day to day. We'd like to be in a position where we can play some of the top teams.
"These [conference realignments] get so complex. You get the courts, the government, the state legislature, boosters and alums involved, you've got a number of variables over which you have no control."
TCU would love a seat at the BCS table, but this game of musical chairs is crowded. BYU, Louisville, Colorado State and Marshall -- just to name a few -- can all claim their football programs are good enough to play with the Big Boys.
For now, TCU is keeping its options open ... even if it's not clear what those options might be.
Putting it in gear
The Horned Frogs football team gets down to business this week. A few upcoming key dates: