As someone who's been to Provo, I guarantee there are no beer sales in the stadium. I've heard people complain about the atmosphere in Waco. Waco will look like New Orleans on Mardi Gras in comparison.

As someone who's been to Provo, I guarantee there are no beer sales in the stadium. I've heard people complain about the atmosphere in Waco. Waco will look like New Orleans on Mardi Gras in comparison.
Couple questions on the BYU speculations - does anyone know if they were invited to the Pac 10 in the last go round and 2) why they turned that down if they were?
So if BYU really is tied with ND, the Big XII could either hit a grand slam or be ****ed. I don't see how this conference survives without at least adding BYU.
ND, BYU, Pitt = grandslam
If ND says no and BYU hedges... well damn then
Thanks for clarifying, that does sound right, so the liberal schools can't be tolerant, but the Catholics, Baptists and Ladder Day Saints can somehow see the green and go for it...interestingCan't comment on the other parts of your post, but from what I understand the P10(2) requires a unanimous yes vote to accept a new school. UC - Berkley and Stanford weren't comfortable with BYUs religious affiliation so they were not invited. At least, that's how I thought it went down, I could be wrong.
So if BYU really is tied with ND, the Big XII could either hit a grand slam or be ****ed. I don't see how this conference survives without at least adding BYU.
Agree and thinks this sums it up well as the story behind the story...hope the main story comes through...The BYU article is definitely interesting, puts it into perspective that it may perhaps be either ND/BYU (& Pitt?) or the end of the conference. I guess we could save the conference for a year or two by adding in someone like Houston or SMU, but they would definitely not stabilize the conference.
Guess it is time to take that A&M exit money and put it under the noses of ND to see if they'll bite...
I'd be ok with it.I highly doubt that BYU is actually tied to ND's decision in this. They're going to do what's best for BYU, and all signs point to that being the Big 12.
What does everyone think about WVU? I think if Pitt was interested and we couldn't BYU, we could bring WVU and Louisville along with Pitt. Take the Big East's top 3 programs and a couple of good sized markets.
History says 1 national championship, 13 conference titles, 30 bowl games, 667 wins to 450 losses.
Very good history overall. Now what is their history in their current conference? The point was made that Texas a&m would achieve at the same as Arkansas in the SEC. My point is that Arkansas hasn't performed great in the SEC. The past 3-4 years have been good but you can't ignore 20 years of conference history.
A&M will be an 8-5 team in the sec. Some years higher, some lower. But they won't be the next Alabama. And that will get the coaches run off.
They have played in the SEC championship game at least 3 times, IIRC. I would put them in a category similar to Iowa. Pretty good, but not LSU/Bama good.
That is a level of success that is pretty good, especially in the SEC. Frankly, that is a level that would be more successful than TAMy has been in the B12.
And if they got the right coach, that could build a program, they have all the infrastructure needed to elevate their program to a long lasting football powerhouse.
BYU was contacted by the BigXII in regards to conference membership yesterday.
BYU's intention is to align itself with both Texas and Notre Dame.
Notre Dame, however, is the pre-eminent focus of BYU's future. If BYU feels it can be better aligned with Notre Dame outside of the Big12, the Cougars may balk at the invitation. (It goes without saying, that an ND acceptance of a Big12 invite would make the Cougars decision a no-brainer)
BYU's wants to know Notre Dame's future plans. If these plans involve conference membership (whether Big Ten, Big East, or Big XII) the Cougars will be more willing to look more favorably toward accepting a Big 12 invitation. If they do not, and independence remains a long-term goal of the institution, BYU may find it better suited to remain an independent as well.
BYU does not want to be the only non-Service Academy Independent.
BYU wants a contractually stipulated agreement in place, guaranteeing Texas' commitment to the Big 12.
BYU's decision to join the Big12 is not as cut-and-dry as most have reported. BYU has not tacitly accepted nor explicitly rejected an offer from the Big 12.
BYU is very concerned about the repercussions of leaving the WCC high and dry. So much so, that unless proper care and consideration is taken by the Big12 regarding this issue, BYU may very well turn down an invitation to join the league. The WCC issue should not viewed in a vacuum. As an official representative of the LDS Church, BYU's role must be handled carefully. Church officials are worried about how a sudden move would affect Church credibility.
Texas abusing its power in the Big 12 - KansasCity.com
This is spot on, Texas has run off 3 teams of the top teams in the conference thus far with the "Do what is best for Texas" model. Its only fair to say Nebraska went along with it until they didn't which was also part of the issue. This model sounds good on paper and still could attract the likes of National names BYU and Notre Dame, but conference survival will require a reavluation of this philosophy and committment to the other institutions both financially but equally important are history, loyalty and trust. Plenty of national names could be doing the money grab right now but they aren't - why? Loyalty, History and Trust. Not Money and power.
There will be a backlash and I look for Iowa State to be used as an example of a Historical, Loyal and trustworthy partner that did nothing wrong other than not have enough population to feed the greedy that coincidently already had enough to sustain.
Texas abusing its power in the Big 12 - KansasCity.com
This is spot on, Texas has run off 3 teams of the top teams in the conference thus far with the "Do what is best for Texas" model. Its only fair to say Nebraska went along with it until they didn't which was also part of the issue. This model sounds good on paper and still could attract the likes of National names BYU and Notre Dame, but conference survival will require a reavluation of this philosophy and committment to the other institutions both financially but equally important are history, loyalty and trust. Plenty of national names could be doing the money grab right now but they aren't - why? Loyalty, History and Trust. Not Money and power.
There will be a backlash and I look for Iowa State to be used as an example of a Historical, Loyal and trustworthy partner that did nothing wrong other than not have enough population to feed the greedy that coincidently already had enough to sustain.