To this day, it's a bit of an awkward fit.
As the Big 12 Conference was being formed in the mid-1990s, Nebraska opposed the league's stricter initial-eligibility academic standards and championship game. Fifteen years later, NU athletic director Tom Osborne expresses concern that the Big 12's "center of gravity has shifted south."
Many Husker faithful listen to Osborne, nod in agreement, and cuss almighty Texas.
So, perhaps I should've anticipated that many Nebraska fans seem downright excited to make the jump to the Big Ten, if the invitation comes.
With such monumental decisions, you take the emotion out of it. That actually seems easy for many Nebraska fans. Unless I'm reading the temperature wrong, many folks lack a strong emotional attachment to the Big 12. Their attachment is to the old Big Eight teams. But let's face it, Missouri is a decent bet to bolt to the Big Ten. And a trusted source told me Colorado could land an invitation from the Pac-10 by the end of June.
During times of uncertainty, when conference realignment of some sort seems inevitable, we trust leaders to make rational decisions, even as the public flails away with all sorts of wild notions, such as the creation of five superconferences that would break from the NCAA to form their own group with its own governing system.
Lawyerly scholars, such as Nebraska chancellor Harvey Perlman, provide a dose of reason.
"I am very skeptical that a split from the NCAA would happen and, if those thoughts were entertained, my hunch is that rational analysis would lead to rejecting such a split," Perlman maintains. "I think such a move would seriously risk the public support for intercollegiate athletics and would lead to a significant risk of political intervention."
By abandoning the NCAA, superconferences would in effect deprive smaller schools the revenue stream they currently enjoy, "and one suspects they might urge Congress to consider such issues as antitrust or looking at various tax exemptions," says Perlman, a member of the Big 12 board of directors and chairman of the NCAA Division I board of directors.
These are interesting times for Nebraska. For everyone. Could the Huskers get left behind in a race for riches? It's daunting, exciting, bizarre. Schools' current holding patterns have spawned new phrases such as "watchful waiting" and "active listening" as wheels presumably churn behind the scenes and our imaginations run wild.
Meanwhile, Nebraska fans should thank their lucky stars Perlman holds sway with a variety of power brokers in college athletics.
Husker fans also should be thankful Bo Pelini and Osborne have whipped the football program back into shape. Flash back to 2007, when Nebraska limped to a 5-7 record and tumbled from the national radar. Would the scuffling Huskers been nearly as attractive to the Big Ten as they are now?
Indeed, just as Nebraska is re-asserting itself as a consistent Big 12 power, perhaps ready to overtake the South Division bullies, the Huskers could be eyeing greener pastures in the Big Ten. And you know what I mean by "greener."
"We have to listen to anything," Osborne told me last week.
Not that anybody's starving in the Big 12. It was a conference that was formed with football success in mind, and it's produced a steady stream of national powers, including national champions in 2005 (Texas), 2000 (Oklahoma) and 1997 (Nebraska).
"I think the Big 12 has been very successful and has been a good fit for us," Perlman insists. "I know much is made of the Texas against the rest of us issue, but the facts are that at the presidential level, there has been good collegiality and the concerns at the time of the formation have largely been resolved. If you look at the quality of our athletic performance as a conference, it has been very successful. The revenue generated by the conference affiliation is significant and has been growing steadily."
The Big Ten's desire to widen the reach of its television network, and in turn grow revenue, essentially drives the realignment discussion. Although many assume Nebraska would almost double its annual revenue by joining the Big Ten, Perlman cautions that it might not be that simple -- that much depends on the conditions of acceptance.
For example, "I would guess it's unlikely that a new team coming into the conference would immediately qualify for a 'full share,'" he notes.
Osborne regrets that much of the decision-making is based on economics and wishes the discussion was more about the welfare of student-athletes. What a concept.
Perlman says leaving the Big 12 for the Big Ten "most likely" would enhance Nebraska's prestige as an academic institution. NU already is among 64 members of the Association of American Universities research consortium — something Big Ten presidents/chancellors want in all new members — "but overall I suspect the Big Ten has the better academic reputation," Perlman says.
If Big Ten presidents/chancellors settle on a three-team expansion, there seems a so-so chance Nebraska would be part of the package. If the Big Ten expands by five, well, Husker fans should prepare for massive change.
Many seem poised and ready.
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