Minnesota_husker Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 https://bigten.org/news/2021/8/24/general-acc-big-ten-and-pac-12-announce-historic-alliance.aspx?fbclid=IwAR1XX4o4mpPcfIfj-PflqZVVXhe_1M6vDUTG0FvCLGZ9W8lN8Z24AxaP9gk 41 World-Class Institutions Across Three Autonomy 5 Conferences to Collaborate on the Future Evolution of College Athletics and an Inter-Conference Scheduling Alliance GREENSBORO, NC & ROSEMONT, IL & SAN FRANCISCO, CA – The ACC, Big Ten and Pac-12 today announced an historic alliance that will bring 41 world-class institutions together on a collaborative approach surrounding the future evolution of college athletics and scheduling. The alliance – which was unanimously supported by the presidents, chancellors and athletics directors at all 41 institutions – will be guided in all cases by a commitment to, and prioritization of, supporting student-athlete well-being, academic and athletic opportunities, experiences and diverse educational programming. The three conferences are grounded in their support of broad-based athletic programs, the collegiate model and opportunities for student-athletes as part of the educational missions of the institutions. The three conferences remain competitors in every sense but are committed to collaborating and providing thought leadership on various opportunities and challenges facing college athletics, including: Student-athlete mental and physical health, safety, wellness and support Strong academic experience and support Diversity, equity and inclusion Social justice Gender equity Future structure of the NCAA Federal legislative efforts Postseason championships and future formats The alliance includes a scheduling component for football and women’s and men’s basketball designed to create new inter-conference games, enhance opportunities for student-athletes, and optimize the college athletics experience for both student-athletes and fans across the country. The scheduling alliance will begin as soon as practical while honoring current contractual obligations. A working group comprised of athletic directors representing the three conferences will oversee the scheduling component of the alliance, including determining the criteria upon which scheduling decisions will be made. All three leagues and their respective institutions understand that scheduling decisions will be an evolutionary process given current scheduling commitments. The football scheduling alliance will feature additional attractive matchups across the three conferences while continuing to honor historic rivalries and the best traditions of college football. In women’s and men’s basketball, the three conferences will add early and mid-season games as well as annual events that feature premier matchups between the three leagues. The three conferences will also explore opportunities for the vast and exceptional Olympic Sports programs to compete more frequently and forge additional attractive and meaningful rivalries. The future scheduling component will benefit student-athletes and fans by offering new and memorable experiences that will extend coast-to-coast, across all time zones. The competition will bring a new level of excitement to the fans of the 41 schools while also allowing teams and conferences to have flexibility to continue to play opponents from other conferences, independents and various teams from other subdivisions. “The ACC, Big Ten and Pac-12 recognize the unique environment and challenges currently facing intercollegiate athletics, and we are proud and confident in this timely and necessary alliance that brings together like-minded institutions and conferences focused on the overall educational missions of our preeminent institutions,” said ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips. “The alliance will ensure that the educational outcomes and experiences for student-athletes participating at the highest level of collegiate athletics will remain the driving factor in all decisions moving forward.” “Student-athletes have been and will remain the focal point of the Big Ten, ACC and PAC-12 Conferences” said Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren. “Today, through this alliance, we furthered our commitment to our student-athletes by prioritizing our academics and athletics value systems. We are creating opportunities for student-athletes to have elite competition and are taking the necessary steps to shape and stabilize the future of college athletics.” “The historic alliance announced today between the Pac-12, ACC and Big Ten is grounded in a commitment to our student-athletes,” said Pac-12 Commissioner George Kliavkoff. “We believe that collaborating together we are stronger in our commitment to addressing the broad issues and opportunities facing college athletics.” The ACC, Big Ten and Pac-12 conferences include: World-leading academic institutions committed to the shared values of supporting the next generation of leaders. Innovative research that benefits communities around the world. 27 of the 34 Autonomy 5 members in Association of American Universities (AAU). 34 institutions ranked in the Top 100 national universities by US News & World Report. Broad-based athletic and academic programs. A long heritage of leadership in diversity, equity and inclusion. Over 27,000 student-athletes competing on 863 teams in 31 sports. A combined 1,019 NCAA Championships. Longstanding relationships across bowl partnerships, men’s and women’s basketball challenges and Olympic Sport events. 194 Olympic medals won in Tokyo by current, former and future student-athletes. Some of the most iconic and historic venues in college sports. Hundreds of millions of dollars in direct annual institutional support of student-athlete scholarships. Over $15 billion in annual federal research support, nearly one-third of the total across all colleges and universities. Quotes from the ACC, Big Ten and Pac-12 CEO chairs: Duke University President & Chair of the ACC Board of Directors Vincent E. Price “The alliance is first and foremost a statement about the vital connection of academic excellence to college athletics. Our members include 41 of the top public and private universities in the world which will soon have new ways to compete at the very highest levels in sports, and to collaborate in education, research and service to society. Together we will be able to use our strong voice and united vision to create the best possible experience for our student-athletes and institutions.” University of Wisconsin Chancellor and Big Ten Conference Council of Presidents/Chancellors (COP/C) Chair Dr. Rebecca Blank: “The Big Ten Conference has always prioritized academic excellence as well as athletic excellence for student-athletes. Today’s announcement reinforces the values of integrity, fairness and competitiveness among all members of this alliance and provides additional opportunities for our student-athletes to enhance their collegiate experience.” University of Oregon President & Chair of the Pac-12 Board of Directors Michael Schill "The Pac-12 is thrilled to join with so many world-class universities in a collaborative effort to support our student-athletes through an unwavering commitment to excellence in academics and athletics.Together we can help shape a future for college athletics where broad-based athletic programs in concert with educational opportunities allow us to support the next generation of leaders." 1 1 Quote Link to comment
MyBloodIsRed16 Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 I'm rooting to get Wake Forest, Duke or UNC on the schedule at some point. 1 Quote Link to comment
Stumpy1 Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 The Alliance to the SEC. 1 7 Quote Link to comment
nic Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 How do the remaining Big 12 feel now? To the SEC maybe? 41?.....Dang it, they let ND in. Edit:no signed contract either. Seems like the PaC12 and Big10 have done this dance before. Quote Link to comment
Notre Dame Joe Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 1 hour ago, nic said: How do the remaining Big 12 feel now? To the SEC maybe? 41?.....Dang it, they let ND in. right now we're the SEC's only link to finding the secret rebel base. Quote Link to comment
GSG Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 14 minutes ago, suh_fan93 said: "Too much uncertainty" Quote Link to comment
Notre Dame Joe Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 5 minutes ago, GSG said: "Too much uncertainty" Uncertainty about whether KU goes to the Big10 while WVU gets the ACC? or uncertain about if those are the only two schools that get rescued. Quote Link to comment
GSG Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 4 minutes ago, Notre Dame Joe said: Uncertainty about whether KU goes to the Big10 while WVU gets the ACC? or uncertain about if those are the only two schools that get rescued. 1 Quote Link to comment
nic Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 28 minutes ago, suh_fan93 said: I read this as a shot at the Big12 as it stands today....with Texas and OU. If they were to stay in the Big12 and provide stability....maybe they get invited to the party??? The problem is that with Texas there is never stability. Quote Link to comment
krc1995 Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 First I heard of this Hate it. Will copy a reason later. Quote Link to comment
Stone Cold Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 Anyone else feels like this is just like a used car we settle for but not the one we want. Feels like were setting ourselves up for the hot football prospects to go to the sec where you have a better shot getting into the pros but go into the alliance if you want to play football at a good institution while getting your education. 1 Quote Link to comment
B.B. Hemingway Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 I think it has potential to be a very clever, beneficial move. Possibly even making this alliance more important to the SEC, than the SEC would be to the three conferences in the alliance. It undoubtedly removes the stranglehold the SEC had on the future of CFB. 2 1 Quote Link to comment
Courtesy Flush Posted August 24, 2021 Share Posted August 24, 2021 15 minutes ago, B.B. Hemingway said: I think it has potential to be a very clever, beneficial move. Possibly even making this alliance more important to the SEC, than the SEC would be to the three conferences in the alliance. It undoubtedly removes the stranglehold the SEC had on the future of CFB. I agree. If they handle this correctly, they could show recruits they can play nationally, or they can stick to regional football with the SEC. they can also set up and control the governing body and playoff. They could extend 1 spot to a SEC team that wins the conference championship. How funny would that be? Quote Link to comment
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