Looking To Join The Big Boys?---DMN today-Thoughts?

From today's front Page of Dallas Morning News and Rick Gosselin.
For the attorney's out there, if some teams out of a possible 120 D-1 schools, don't make it into a proposed Super Conference, do these schools have a strong case for a Class Action Lawsuit? Could they tie up the conferences in court for years?.....June Jones had a interesting point at the last lunch and said the non- BCS schools should just go make it a Spring Football League and not ever play the BCS schools and have their own TV contract and playoff system and F the BCS schools.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/column ... ft-out.ece
'If super conferences emerge, some schools won’t make the cut'
Rick Gosselin
[email protected]
Published: 16 September 2011 11:40 PM
UNIVERSITY PARK — The concept of a super conference may be appealing to perennial football powers Texas, Nebraska and Oklahoma. They will always have a seat at that table.
But the formation of such conferences isn’t necessarily in the best interests of college football in general.
The sport’s future likely includes four 16-team super conferences: the Pac-12, Big 10, SEC and a collection of leftover Big East and Atlantic Coast Conference teams.
There are 120 schools competing at the BCS level. Failure to land a spot in one of the super conferences could doom almost half the schools playing football in the NCAA’s top tier to a second-class existence.
By the time the super conferences finish choosing up sides, there will be 56 colleges left over. That could leave schools such as Baylor, Boise State, BYU, Cincinnati, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Louisville and SMU without a BCS home. And you wonder why Baylor is fighting the demise of the Big 12 with such vigor?
SMU isn’t going quietly, either. If the Big 12 is going to survive, the Mustangs want back in. If the Big 12 isn’t going to survive — Texas A&M, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State all seemingly have their bags packed — SMU still wants one of the 64 super conference spots.
“We felt now was a good time to step out publicly,†SMU athletic director Steve Orsini said. “We have a lot of positive things to sell. Obviously, the landscape is unstable right now. So let’s see if we can add value to make that landscape more stable. We think we have a great situation here to do that.â€..............
More on the above link---------
For the attorney's out there, if some teams out of a possible 120 D-1 schools, don't make it into a proposed Super Conference, do these schools have a strong case for a Class Action Lawsuit? Could they tie up the conferences in court for years?.....June Jones had a interesting point at the last lunch and said the non- BCS schools should just go make it a Spring Football League and not ever play the BCS schools and have their own TV contract and playoff system and F the BCS schools.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/column ... ft-out.ece
'If super conferences emerge, some schools won’t make the cut'
Rick Gosselin
[email protected]
Published: 16 September 2011 11:40 PM
UNIVERSITY PARK — The concept of a super conference may be appealing to perennial football powers Texas, Nebraska and Oklahoma. They will always have a seat at that table.
But the formation of such conferences isn’t necessarily in the best interests of college football in general.
The sport’s future likely includes four 16-team super conferences: the Pac-12, Big 10, SEC and a collection of leftover Big East and Atlantic Coast Conference teams.
There are 120 schools competing at the BCS level. Failure to land a spot in one of the super conferences could doom almost half the schools playing football in the NCAA’s top tier to a second-class existence.
By the time the super conferences finish choosing up sides, there will be 56 colleges left over. That could leave schools such as Baylor, Boise State, BYU, Cincinnati, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Louisville and SMU without a BCS home. And you wonder why Baylor is fighting the demise of the Big 12 with such vigor?
SMU isn’t going quietly, either. If the Big 12 is going to survive, the Mustangs want back in. If the Big 12 isn’t going to survive — Texas A&M, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State all seemingly have their bags packed — SMU still wants one of the 64 super conference spots.
“We felt now was a good time to step out publicly,†SMU athletic director Steve Orsini said. “We have a lot of positive things to sell. Obviously, the landscape is unstable right now. So let’s see if we can add value to make that landscape more stable. We think we have a great situation here to do that.â€..............
More on the above link---------