UCLA wasn’t Big Ten’s first choice to join USC in conference realignment (msn.com)
It seems as though the Big Ten wanted somebody else initially to leave the Pac-12 for the Big Ten with USC besides UCLA.
While USC and UCLA are leaving the Pac-12 for the Big Ten in 2024, there is a chance the Big Ten may have initially preferred Oregon over the Bruins in joining the Trojans in their revamped league.
University of Arizona president Robert Robbins spoke very candidly with CBS Sports' Dennis Dodd about all things Pac-12 and realignment. He said the Pac-12 is very close to securing a new media rights deal, but he is well aware that one more team leaving the conference could set in motion a domino effect. More importantly, Arizona and Arizona State are 100 percent a package deal in this.
Perhaps the craziest part in Robbins' interview with Dodd is this: The Big Ten wanted Oregon first!
Yes, an active university president in the Pac-12 spoke this candidly about USC, Oregon and UCLA.
From a brand and marketability standpoint, the Oregon addition over UCLA does make sense. The Ducks do not have the basketball history of the Bruins, but they have been a pillar in the college football realm throughout the 21st century. We all know that college football is the biggest money maker in college athletics. However, getting the Los Angeles market in its entirety was prioritized.
What we need to understand in all this is Robbins is right in that universities will partner up in the Pac-12. The Four Corners universities could unite and leave for the Big 12, but the Arizonas are in lockstep, as are the Rocky Mountain schools of Utah and Colorado. Cal and Stanford would partner up, as would Oregon and Washington, leaving Oregon State and Washington State in the rearview.
For now, the Pac-12 is definitely on life support. If the league is able to add Group of Five schools like San Diego State and SMU, maybe it can stay afloat in the expanded College Football Playoff era? Then again, once the Big Ten poached USC and UCLA, our minds immediately went to who else the league could add from the West Coast. Of course, Oregon and Washington are good fits.
Overall, I think the Four Corners schools are the ones to watch in this, particularly the Arizona schools. Robbins has had conversations with Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark about switching allegiances. U of A and Arizona State would be stellar fits in an even larger Big 12. They are a traditional power out west on the hardwood, but even the lowly football program is looking up.
Ultimately, Oregon and USC jumping ship for the Big Ten together would have been too brutal of a blow for the Pac-12 to realistically survive. The problem is those are not the right schools to pair with each other initially from a geographical sense. UCLA may adjust to life in the Big Ten easier than USC for all we know, but for Robbins to say they were a reluctant partner in this is shocking.
Simply put, the Pac-12 needs to get a reasonable media rights deal secure or the league will die.
The Ducks dont have the football history of the Bruins. The Bruins actually won !/2 a title
write this down:
conferences are no longer calling the shots
its the media companies
Pretty much. Fox Sports wanted to lock up the LA market. $$$ talks.
I don't buy a damn thing he said...I read these AD's say all kinds of BS during the TV deal negotiations...from no one talking to the Big12 when that hasn't turned out to be accurate...personally I would have preferred USC and UW to the Big 10. UW has a decent academic record, has a classy stadium and fans that aren't arseholes that attend games as well as UW has a decent record of putting out a decent program and looks to be on the rise.