So basically with all due respect the Aggies can go wherever they want
When its all said and done I will still watch Football on Saturday from my home or at work

SEC has long been known for the image of treating athletes more important than academics, while Pac-10 usually has the opposite image (especially when dealing with the likes of Stanford and California).shel311 wrote:Does anyone have a legit explanation as to why Texas would go to the PAC 10 over the SEC???
Seems like the money would be better with the SEC.
Travel would seemingly be easier as well.
Just weird that they're likely going to the PAC 10, IMO.
I believe the concern with A&M going their own way (sec) is that it would open up Texas recruiting to the SEC. If A&M is forced to follow Texas, they can maintain control of the state.kdog36 wrote:I don't care what the Aggies do. They can go to the SEC ACC or whatever they want. Texas does not need the Aggies, although the rivalry would have a hard time staying alive with all the teams Texas would have to play going to the PAC 24. It would have to be a pre-conference game I assume? I would think that Texas needs the Red River Rivalry to stay alive more than Texas needs the Aggie Rivalry.
So basically with all due respect the Aggies can go wherever they want
When its all said and done I will still watch Football on Saturday from my home or at work
Mtwasik wrote:SEC has long been known for the image of treating athletes more important than academics, while Pac-10 usually has the opposite image (especially when dealing with the likes of Stanford and California).shel311 wrote:Does anyone have a legit explanation as to why Texas would go to the PAC 10 over the SEC???
Seems like the money would be better with the SEC.
Travel would seemingly be easier as well.
Just weird that they're likely going to the PAC 10, IMO.
Texas is acting like they don't want any part of the SEC image, though, lets be honest, they might also be smart enough to realize the competition is a little easier in the Pac-10.
Dude, I clearly said the outside image of the conferences is that, didn't say the actual numbers backed it up. But there is no doubt that the Pac-10 thinks that of themsevles.BFiVL wrote:Mtwasik wrote:SEC has long been known for the image of treating athletes more important than academics, while Pac-10 usually has the opposite image (especially when dealing with the likes of Stanford and California).shel311 wrote:Does anyone have a legit explanation as to why Texas would go to the PAC 10 over the SEC???
Seems like the money would be better with the SEC.
Travel would seemingly be easier as well.
Just weird that they're likely going to the PAC 10, IMO.
Texas is acting like they don't want any part of the SEC image, though, lets be honest, they might also be smart enough to realize the competition is a little easier in the Pac-10.
Now I know we can spin this several different ways but the APR scores tell a different story.
AVG Pac 10=950.3 vs SEC 949.9. Both graduate about the same amount of athletes in football.
exactly. We're talking about the perception of the academic status of the overall schools in those leagues, not comparing the football players at each school, but the overall student body. And the SEC will always have that reputation since when the NCAA allowed conferences to accept non-qualifiers, almost every conference put some kind of limit on how many each team could have, but the SEC allowed their teams to take as many as they wanted, or something like that, so that helped build the idea of what was important to those schools.Uuaww wrote:Pac 10 academics are perceived to be better because like in everything else in college football, the top is all that matters. Put the SEC top 3 schools (guessing Vanderbilt, Florida, Georgia) against the Pac 10 top 3 (Stanford, Cal-Berkeley, UCLA) and you'd find few people who would say the SEC is better. Is LSU vs. Arizona State equal? who the hell knows. In general, certain schools are better at certain subjects and degrees. An engineering degree at Georgia or Virginia Tech means a hell of a lot more than an engineering degree at a liberal arts college.
Also, the schools may be thinking of sports other than football. After the money reason of course, and in that sense, the Pac 10 trumps the SEC.
That's exactly what I was hinting at with my post. I just didn't wanna say it and be called an SEC homer lol.Mtwasik wrote:Texas is acting like they don't want any part of the SEC image, though, lets be honest, they might also be smart enough to realize the competition is a little easier in the Pac-10.
This is just dumb and u know it.Hoos wrote:Yea, because playing Kentucky, Vandy, Ole Miss, Miss State, Arkansas, Auburn, and South Carolina are just terrifying to Texas.
We are talking about long held (as in the past 20 years and longer) perceptions of the overall universities that are in the 2 different leagues.BFiVL wrote:Why i said you can spin it how ever you want. Perception is what it is and they can think what they want but numbers wise based on APR tells a different story.
Mtwasik wrote:There's also talk that Texas still wants to create their own TV deal with a TV station ... the Pac-10 would allow them to still do so, the SEC does not allow their schools to ... so that could be a third reason.
You're welcome.Corndog311 wrote:Good stuff. That's the kind of things I was looking for but didn't know about.Hoos wrote:Post owning Shel again
shel311 wrote:Mtwasik wrote:There's also talk that Texas still wants to create their own TV deal with a TV station ... the Pac-10 would allow them to still do so, the SEC does not allow their schools to ... so that could be a third reason.
Good stuff. That's the kind of things I was looking for but didn't know about.
Texas, which wanted to start its own network, will have to compromise on that point if it opts for the Pac-10 or, for that matter, if it wanted to join the Big Ten. — Houston Chronicle