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Mountain West, Conference USA to talk to Big East about joining forces
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John Locher/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Commissioners from the Mountain West Conference and Conference USA are scheduled to meet with the Big East Conference to discuss the formation of one 28- to 32-football team super conference. » Buy this photo
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LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Commissioners from the Mountain West Conference and Conference USA are scheduled to meet with the head of the Big East Conference today to discuss the formation of one 28- to 32-football team super conference in an effort to gain automatic Bowl Championship Series status.
The Mountain West and Conference USA already have agreed to merge by either next year or in 2013.
The Big East has automatic BCS status but is in danger of losing it after the 2013 season and has been exploring adding teams from the Mountain West and Conference USA in an attempt to salvage that standing.
But the two Mountain West members face hefty exit fees should they leave -- Boise State up to $21 million and Air Force up to $9.6 million -- that could dissuade them from jumping to the Big East.
Seeing an opportunity, Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson and Conference USA's Britton Banowsky will make the proposal to the Big East's John Marinatto in New York to create a megaconference.
According to a document obtained by the Review-Journal, UNLV could be in a division that includes Boise State, Fresno State, Hawaii, San Diego State, UNR and Utah State, with San Jose State a possibility if the conference includes 32 teams rather than 28.
"We would figure out some way -- four divisions of seven teams each, a playoff and then a conference championship game -- to come up with the (automatic qualifier)," UNLV athletic director Jim Livengood said. "Craig and Britton are going into this meeting in New York with one thing in mind, to make this happen with the Big East."
UNLV football coach Bobby Hauck said he has been too busy preparing for Saturday's game against Colorado State at Sam Boyd Stadium to give the proposal much thought.
"It's interesting," Hauck said. "I don't know what to think about it. It's a lot to analyze."
Attempts to reach Thompson and Banowsky for comment were unsuccessful.
Big East spokesman John Paquette said his conference had no comment.
Paquette, however, told other media outlets no meeting was scheduled, but Livengood said in a text message that the Review-Journal's report was "accurate."
The Big East has been in an aggressive, and perhaps desperate, mode to move forward after Pittsburgh and Syracuse announced they would leave for the Atlantic Coast Conference and Texas Christian reneged on an agreement to enter and instead will join the Big 12 Conference.
Reports surfaced Tuesday that Big East member West Virginia would enter the Big 12 should Missouri leave that league for the Southeastern Conference, which appears likely. Should the Mountaineers bolt, that would leave the Big East with five football-playing members, unless it attracted schools such as Boise State and Air Force.
Boise State president Bob Kustra met with Big East officials on Sunday, the Idaho Statesman reported.
But whether the Big East could lure Boise State or Air Force is questionable. Both schools agreed to steep exit fees. The minimum for leaving the Mountain West next year is $6.9 million, and the minimum in 2013 is $1.9 million. Exit fees are tiered depending on school and the conference bowl participation.
"Every president in the conference signed that agreement in June of this year," Livengood said. "It's not like those were put in last week. They all agreed to those (exit fees) when things began to heat up" with conference expansion.
Should Boise State and Air Force stay, that would increase the leverage by the Mountain West and Conference USA to make a deal with the Big East.
If the Big East agrees to this mega-merger, the three combined conferences could make a compelling argument for automatic BCS status. And having the Big East's powerful insider ties probably wouldn't hurt that effort.
"The old 16-team (Western Athletic Conference) was hard organizationally," Livengood said. "This is a different day and age. If you have 28 teams, with this kind of model, it would have to be included in any (postseason scenario). We would be in time zones across the country and in all sizes of television markets. That's very attractive. It would be good for UNLV. It would be good for all the teams involved."
Contact reporter Mark Anderson at manderson@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2914. Follow him on Twitter: @markanderson65.
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Whats the point? Still for the most part crappy teams except for a handful. The perception of this Super League will remain the same. And for UNLV, just go to FCS already in football. Join the Big Sky or Great West Conferences. Maybe, just maybe they would compete there. But being that they lost to powerhouse FCS 4-4 school S Utah it may be unlikely. Man UNLV football is sad. You know I saw a list of worst programs in college football and UNLV couldn't even make that list. They are so bad, or people don't even know UNLV has a football program. Just stick to basketball as the big time sport that represents the university.
So this is only for football? I think it would be exciting if it encompassed all sports.
Any merger doesn't change the quality of the individual teams which are second tier. This nothing but spin by the respective conferences to try to hide the fact that they are second level conferences. It won't fool the BCS. With an occassional exception these are second tier teams and no amount of spin is going to change that. I predict the BCS will soon drop the Big East and those Big East teams will migrate to the remaining 5 BCS conferences.
unlv should play in a high school league
Sorry to say this not a good move for the Mountain West Conference. The big continues to loose power school, and now is looking pick up a less powerful teams. The Mountain West should try to pick up the Big East school for football and a couple of conference USA teams. Thus it would keep Boise State and Air Force and and form a more powerful conference. Let's face it, Big east is dying in football!
So this could meen UNLV Footbal would never, ever see another winning season (not like they were anyhow.)
Maybe UNLV should join the Flag football league
WTH is the mission of public higher education?
BIG Sports is a complete DISTRACTION.
If out-of-state schools want to concentrate on
big-time sports, good luck to them. They should
forgo federal funds, but that's a subject for another
forum.
There is NO WAY that Nevada taxpayers should tolerate
a few wealthy sports boosters hijacking the applied science
*teaching* mission our of state universities so as to convert
them into taxpayer supported alternatives to the NFL.
If those boosters want to play Al Davis then let them pool
their money and petition the NFL for a local franchise.
The Boston Globe first reported the plan's details, but we are first reporting there is an actual meeting. If there's no meeting, doesn't matter what's in the plans. We also are the first to have someone comment on the record.
The Boston Globe broke this story last Friday night -- http://www.boston.com/sports/colleges/extras/colleges_blog/2011/10/big_east_mwc_c-.html -- and CBS Sports and ESPN also reported it Saturday. Glad to see it took the R.J. four days to catch up to the news.