Charleston Pony wrote:For all the complaining about how these 6 additions will water down the AAC, yes, today that is true and there is no denying we are losing 3 of our strongest conference mates in Cincy, UCF & Houston but SMU has only itself to blame. You have to be blind to see how little interest there has been in SMU athletics and it's hard for me to imagine that some of you don't appreciate how important that is. Yes, SMU sits in a major media market but not many in that market care about SMU. Adding UNT increases the viability of the DFW market for the AAC, like it or not. As for Rice in Houston...not so much but as Aresco has commented, it at least gives our teams an opportunity to become more visible in a hotbed for recruiting.
Bash Aresco all you want but given SMU and the AAC's current circumstances, going for programs situated in large markets at least provides potential and that's about all we can ask for right now. Memphis has to be more disappointed than SMU and I'd put USF high on that list as well, but instead of complaining it's time for SMU to just continue improving in hopes of being "promoted" at some point down the road, but who knows? All of the schools mentioned (except Rice) have significantly higher enrollments than SMU and have potential to outperform us going forward.
As for mentions of App State and Coastal Carolina, while they are currently more attractive football programs than Charlotte and FAU, Boone NC and Myrtle Beach SC are also smaller cities and not easy to get to. Selfishly, I like Charlotte as an up and coming program that has only existed for 8 years. UCF by comparison has been playing at the D-I FBS level for 25 years and look at what they have accomplished. FAU adds another school in FL, again a fertile recruiting ground and I doubt anyone has forgotten the arse whooping they put on our guys in the Boca Raton Bowl game.
While this is not a "done deal" yet, I fully expect the decision makers to follow through on this expansion as a "forward thinking" plan to keep the AAC as the strongest G5 conference. It will be interesting to see if CUSA survives as the SunBelt might come and try to pick off the strongest remaining members.
Agree with Charleston. Many of us are sitting here wondering what these directional schools bring to the table, but let’s be honest--SMU doesn’t offer much more (if any more) than they when it comes to fan support. With the exception of Rice, the student enrollment of each invitee substantially exceeds ours. For example, NTU has 42,000 students, UTSA has 37,000 and each of Charlotte and UAF have around 30,000. So we really aren’t in a position to criticize the expansion in this respect.
The move is a bit more of a headscratcher when it comes to television. With the exception of UTSA, which is the only game in town, none of the invitees will draw large television audiences, but we’re not exactly knocking it out of the park in that category, either. It seems to me that Aresco’s plan is to defend media markets and intrusion by other conferences, most notably the MWC into Texas, so that the AAC can maintain its status as the tallest midget in the Group of 5 (which may become the Gang of 4 if CUSA can’t hang on). He will accomplish both with this expansion, but only by assuring that there are no teams left to poach. In effect, he’s chosen markets and their potential over real viewership and team competitiveness.
He’s also left open the possibility of expanding the AAC to 16 with the addition of CSU and AFA, if he can coerce or bribe them to join. Alternatively, he may planning for the loss of Memphis and SMU if they find greener pastures. This latter possibility is the only plausible explanation I see for Hart’s consent to NTU membership, other than ineptitude (which cannot absolutely be ruled out).
I understand this move from a macro business angle. But I don’t like it as a fan of SMU. The media-driven realignment game is all about making the top 64 and this reorganization does nothing at all to help us make that group. I hope that someone at SMU is playing 3D chess.